Fabio Quartararo: Sad end to a memorable MotoGP season
'Dream start, nightmare finish' is one way to sum up Fabio Quartarar🅘o's 2020 MotoGP campaign.
Quartararo began the delayed season wit🧔h his first-ever MotoGP wins, at Jerez, continued leading the championship for the opening six rounds and r🐈eturned to the top of the world after a further victory in Catalunya.
But the Petไronas Yamaha rider's title challenge collapsed over the following&nꦛbsp;six rounds.

'Dream start, nightmare finish' is one way to sum up Fabio Quartararo's 20🔯20 MotoGP campaign.
Quartararo began the delayed season with hiꦛౠs first-ever MotoGP wins, at Jerez, continued leading the championship for the opening six rounds and returned to the top of the world after a further victory in Catalunya.
But the Petronas Yamaha rider's title challenge collapsed over the following&nꦅbsp;six rounds.
A best of just eighth place and 19 out of a possible 150 points (team-mate Franco Morbidelli 🌜claimed 81) meant Quartararo slipped all the way to seventh in the final championship classification.
"When you finish the last six races so bad, it's difficult to say I'm happy about the season," Quartararo admitted. "But I can say that yes, it will be a s⭕eason to remember, it brought me three victories.
"S🦄ome riders never win in MotoGP and I have three wins already. So I think looking back at this is really positive. In s𒅌ome ways it was a great season, but unfortunately, not such a great end. So a bit sad."
Quartararo's last three races were his worsℱt of the season, crashes in Valencia being fol🌃lowed by 13th place at Portimao.
"I had an issue with the holeshot device for the start, so I made a terrible start, lost positions," Quartararo e♐xplained of the season finale. "I thought that I could make a really good pace, but unfortunately from a bit be𓃲fore mid-race I had arm pump.
"So quite strange, I heard also some other riders had arm pump. So really sad, we had an opportunity to finish I 🍷think between P5 and P8. I wanted to do much better."
But Quartararo must now turn the page as he moves on to the Factory Yamaha🌄 team for 2021, posting a moc🌸k-up of how he might look next year on social media:
What do you think ?!
— Fabio Quartararo (@FabioQ20)
It certainly wasn't just Quartararo that suffered at the end of this season, all of the Factory-spec M1 riders were left in Franco Morbidelli's A-spec (2019 based) shadow from Aragon onwards, meaning all eyes are now on Yama🐠ha to identif🐲y and correct the mistakes seemingly made.
"I think that looking at the data of Franco, it's quite clear that we are missing turning an❀d rear grip," Quartararo said. "So they [Yamaha] just need to work on that, and to analyse.
"But I think that Yamaha is really motivated because they see that the 2020 [Factory] bike, the last races were a disaster𝄹 for everyone. Maverick and Vale finished 11th and 12th [at Portimao].
"So, we don'tꦬ need to tell them all the time th💎at the bike is not working. They can see, and they are working hard.
"So they will find something and I hope that we can start the [2021] tests in a really good way. Also with Cal [Crutchlow arriving as t🎃est rider]. So I hope that they are motivated and ready to find the problem. "
The young Frenchman added: "I think that we should have confidence in [Yamaha],🌸 te✃ll them our ideas and then I think it will be important for us to believe in the project.
"I think it will be a benefit to be a Factory rider, and can't wait to be there and to have 𓆏kind of a meeting to ꦓgive my ideas."
Morbidelli's late surge saw him snatch second in the world championship, just 13 points from Suzuki's Joan Mir. Vinales finished as the top Factory-spec Yamah🅺a rider in sixth overall, 26 points behind Morbidelli and five ahead of Quartararo.
Morbidelli will cont💜inue on the💮 A-Spec bike next season, when Valentino Rossi drops down from the Factory team and joins Petronas.

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 story and Marc Marquez’s inj🦄ury issues.