Spanish MotoGP: Marquez: To understand limit, you need to crash
The fastest lap time and a fall (or at least a gravity-defying save) - it's a pattern seen many times over the years🐠 from reigning MotoGP champion Marc Marquez.
It wa🍒s repeated on day one of the 2020 season-opener at Jerez, where the Repsol Honda star set the best🐼 time of the day during the morning session, then fell on his way to a close fourth (+0.244s) in the afternoon heat.
The only other rider to tumble was rookie tea🍸m-mate and younger brother Ale🙈x.

The fastest lap time and a fall (or at least a gravity-defying save) - it's a pattern seen many times over the year♏s from reigning MotoGP champion Marc Marquez.
It was repeated on day one of the 2020 season-opener at Jerez, where the Repsol Honda star set the best ✤time of the day during the morning session, then fell on his wꦏay to a close fourth (+0.244s) in the afternoon heat.
The only🍸 other rider to tumble was rookie team-mate and younger brother Alex.
"I alr✨eady said a few times, it's a bike which is quite difficult to understand where the limit is, and it's difficult to learn," said Marc.
"It's what I said last year when Jorge [Lorenzo] started to complain, it's a bike that if you want to understand where tꦅhe limit is, you need to crash many times.
"How many times h🔯ave I crashed during my career with a Honda? But then I keep🐎 my style. I try to understand the limit in practice, and find the limit, the lines for the race."
Maximising the front-end is essential for a fast lap on the RCV, but has b👍een complicated by the new, grippier, Michelin rear t⛄yre.
"Better grip can be good in the exit of the corner, but in the entry of the corner, it is pushing the front more," Marquez said. "Normally better grip on the rear is better for ✤Yamaha or Suzuki, because they are riding more with the rear tyre, but we are trying to adjust the setup."
Nonetheless, Marc's latest spill - at the turn two hꦯairpin - wasn't simply a case of pushing his front tyre over the edge.
"The crash was a bit strange, because it was not really that I was pushing too much. If you see the front 'jumped' because I lost the front a little bit, but 🧔then I missed the grip with the b✱oot and my foot slid, and for that reason the bike jumped," he said.
"Lucki𒊎ly, I was able to pick up the bike and continue, because it was a very slow crash."
Marquez confirmed he is not only using last year's fair💟ing, 𓃲but also a 2019 chassis.
"We have some evolution in a few parts, for exam𝐆ple the engine... My fastest lap today came wi🌼th the current bike, with the current chassis. Of course we are trying to understand the different chassis. It's difficult in a race weekend, especially after a long time [away], because my feeling with the bike is still not the best one. So it's better to maybe continue with our current chassis."

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit sto🐽ry and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.