Tag: Quiles

  • Quiles Triumphs in Chaotic Goiânia Thriller as Pratama Makes History

    Quiles Triumphs in Chaotic Goiânia Thriller as Pratama Makes History

    Moto3 endured a turbulent build-up in Goiânia, with practice and qualifying littered with both highside and lowside crashes as riders struggled to find consistency. Many in the paddock noted the unusual grip levels, even suggesting the circuit felt more predictable in wet conditions than in the dry. That set the stage for an unpredictable Sunday, and with a rookie lining up on the front row, the ingredients were all there for a dramatic and wide-open race.

    Gold & Goose / Red Bull Content Pool

    The race itself mirrored the chaos of the weekend which was packed with bold overtakes, but also interrupted by a string of crashes. Proceedings were eventually halted with a red flag after a fall for Scott Ogden (CIP Green Power) left his bike in a position that couldn’t be cleared safely. He wasn’t alone in hitting trouble, with Leo Rammerstorfer (SIC58 Squadra Corse), Joel Esteban (LEVEL UP – MTA) and David Almansa (Liqui Moly Dynavolt Intact GP) all crashing out, the latter unfortunately sustaining a fractured elbow.

    The race restarted with a 5 lap dash to the chequered flag and Máximo Quiles (CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team) grabbed the holeshot and took victory in Goiânia, the 18-year-old emerging on top after a dramatic contest. Two rookies took the next two spots with Quiles teammate, Marco Morelli having pushed him all the way settled for second, securing his maiden Moto3 podium, while Veda Pratama (Honda Team Asia) etched his name into the history books with a breakthrough third-place finish—Indonesia’s first podium in Grand Prix racing.

    Pirelli Press office

    Quiles made no mistake on the restart, grabbing the holeshot once again as Carpe, Fernandez and Pini battled fiercely behind. There was more drama at Turn 4 when Jesus Rios (Rivacold Snipers Team) collided with Matteo Bertelle (LEVEL UP – MTA), both riders escaping unhurt. Morelli capitalised to move into second, while Salmela remained firmly in contention inside the top five. Also unclassified was Ruche Moodley who received the black and orange flag (aka meatball) and pulled off the track.

    On the final lap, Morelli closed rapidly on his teammate and was right on Quiles’ rear wheel heading into the final sector. Despite the pressure, Quiles held his nerve to seal victory and take over the championship lead. It was a dominant 1-2 for Aspar, with Morelli second, while Pratama secured a historic third for Indonesia. Carpe and Pini completed the top five, with Salmela sixth—marking Finland’s best Moto3 result since 2014. Perrone, Fernandez, Casey O’Gorman (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Danish rounded out the top ten.

    Pirelli Press office

    Brian Uriarte (Red Bull KTM Ajo) took eleventh place comfortably with Joel Kelso (GRYD – MLAV Racing), Adrian Cruces (CIP Green Power), Ryusei Yamanaka (AEON Credit – MT Helmets – MSI) and Eddie O’Shea (GRYD – MLav Racing) battled it out – all finishing within a second of each other to round out the points scoring positions.

    Moto3 – Goiânia (Race 2)

    Pos Rider Team Time/Gap Pts
    1 Máximo Quiles CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team 7:19.821 25
    2 Marco Morelli CFMOTO Gaviota Aspar Team +0.143 20
    3 Veda Pratama Honda Team Asia +1.650 16
    4 Alvaro Carpe Red Bull KTM Ajo +1.741 13
    5 Guido Pini Leopard Racing +1.786 11
    6 Rico Salmela Red Bull KTM Tech3 +1.842 10
    7 Valentin Perrone Red Bull KTM Tech3 +1.949 9
    8 Adrian Fernandez Leopard Racing +2.522 8
    9 Casey O’Gorman SIC58 Squadra Corse +2.894 7
    10 Hakim Danish AEON Credit – MT Helmets – MSI +3.083 6
    11 Brian Uriarte Red Bull KTM Ajo +3.158 5
    12 Joel Kelso GRYD – MLav Racing +3.791 4
    13 Adrian Cruces CIP Green Power +4.001 3
    14 Ryusei Yamanaka AEON Credit – MT Helmets – MSI +4.374 2
    15 Eddie O’Shea GRYD – MLav Racing +4.750 1
    16 Zen Mitani Honda Team Asia +6.438
    17 Nicola Carraro Rivacold Snipers Team +6.595
    18 Cormac Buchanan CODE Motorsports +12.823
  • Maximo Quiles wins a Mugello classic to claim first Moto3™ victory

    Maximo Quiles wins a Mugello classic to claim first Moto3™ victory

    Rookie sensation Maximo Quiles (CFMOTO Valresa Aspar Team) delivered a final-corner masterclass at the Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello, storming to his first Grand Prix victory in a Moto3™ thriller. The 17-year-old battled from the third row to lead home a rookie 1-2, fending off Alvaro Carpe (Red Bull KTM Ajo) in a drag to the line, while Dennis Foggia (CFMOTO Valresa Aspar Team) returned to the podium in front of his home crowd for the first time since 2022.

    Photo credit: Pirelli Press Office

    The early chaos and charge
    Polesitter Carpe grabbed the holeshot and kept things tidy early, with front-row starters briefly forming the top three. Behind them, it was action immediately, as Jose Antonio Rueda and Scott Ogden rubbed elbows on Lap 1. On Lap 2, drama struck as Vicente Perez, Riccardo Rossi, and Ruche Moodley all crashed exiting Turn 5. Then on Lap 3, David Almansa was eliminated in contact with Ogden, ending another promising charge early.

    While Carpe and Rueda duked it out with Quiles at the front, Guido Pini (LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP) put on a sensational show, slicing from 20th to P4 by Lap 6 and battling for the podium on home turf. Also on a flyer was Valentin Perrone (Red Bull KTM Tech3), joining the lead group after starting from the back of the grid.

    But it wouldn’t last. Lap 7 saw more heartbreak for the home fans as Adrian Fernandez and Luca Lunetta crashed out at Turn 1. A few corners later, the dream run for Pini ended after contact with Joel Kelso sent him down at Turn 12.

    Photo credit: Pirelli Press Office

    The final lap showdown
    The final lap was a Mugello classic. Foggia led into Turn 1, but as the group blasted through Arrabbiata 1 and 2, the top three went full attack mode. Carpe and Foggia swapped positions, allowing Quiles to slide back into P2 by Turn 12. Into Bucine, the last corner, Quiles hit the front—and despite Carpe’s late lunge in the slipstream, the #28 held his nerve to cross the line just ahead.

    “That was chaos—but incredible,” said Quiles. “I didn’t expect the win to come this soon, especially here. Mugello is special. I can’t believe it.”

    Carpe took his third podium of the year in P2, while Foggia celebrated an emotional return with a home podium in P3.

    Title implications
    Championship leader Jose Antonio Rueda finished fourth after briefly dropping to 15th mid-race, salvaging valuable points in a wild one. David Muñoz crossed the line fifth, just ahead of Taiyo Furusato, who was shuffled back late in the lap.

    Angel Piqueras fought to P7, narrowly ahead of Perrone in P8, with Joel Kelso and Ryusei Yamanaka completing the top ten—just 0.9s from victory. Nicola Carraro was 11th in a photo finish.

    Main Photo credit: Pirelli Press Office