Jorge Martin: Indonesia, Australia where MotoGP championship was lost

The Pramac Ducati rider’s second half charge saw him snatch the title lead on Saturday at Manda🍌lika. He then looked set to🌸 land another heavy blow on Bagnaia when he disappeared into a healthy lead in the Sunday race.
But a minor off-line moment saw a shocked🔯 Martin lowside from the lead.
It was his first major mistake in eleven GPs but was followed just a week later by an unnecessary tyre gamble in Australia, leaving Martin 🎃to plummet f🦋rom first to fifth place on the very final lap.
Martin’s 7-point lead after the I𓄧ndonesian Sprint thus became a 27-point deficit after Australia.
“We made history with what we achieved in a satellite team this season. I'm happy about the 13 wins, all the podiums and laps in the lead. I think it was an outstanding job,” Martin said. “The target was to be in the title top three✤ and we did much m♏ore than that. But for sure when you are so close to [the title], you don't want to lose it.
“But I think we didn't lose the championship [at V🦩ale༺ncia]. Arriving at the final round 21 points behind [after Qatar] was a big problem.”
Martin reflected: “I would say there was not just one race [where I lost the title], but maybe two. ♊Maybe Indonesia and Australia, wh𝐆ere the balance changed from me leading to being 27 points behind.
“May⛦be being too [fast] at that point gave me overconfidence and I said, ‘OK, I can pull away by five seconds. I can win with another tyre. I canꦐ do whatever I want’.
“We are in MotoGP; you cannot do that. You hav🃏e to always be with the same tools [tyres] as your rivals. And if you win a race by one tenth or 10 seconds, it's the same points. I think this is the main lesson I got for the fu♌ture.”
Martin didn’t mention the tyre per🐓formance issue in Qatar, which at the time he had said ‘decided the championship’, perhaps accepting with hindsꦏight that Bagnaia suffered similar problems on multiple occasions this season.
But Martin did admit the unfami💦l𓃲iar pressure of being in a MotoGP title fight had been tough to handle.

“I think Misano was when I said ‘OK, I’m the best at the moment’. Winning in Italy, in their [factory Ducati team] home, was unbelievable. I t♛hink the best feeling ever," he said.
“Then we went to India, I won the ♈Sprint and was second with the wrong tyre [in the GP]. I said ‘OK, now we are only 14 points [behind]’. It’s time. Then in Japan I won both races, so I think Japan was maybe the point where I said ‘we can win the championship’.
“Then the pressure arrived. I didn't enjoy from Thailand until Qa🧸tar. I struggled a lot mentally. It was my first time feeling this kind of pr๊essure.
“I think when I’m enjoy𝐆ing like [Valencia], I am the fastest. So hopefully next season I can learn from this experience and can enjoy from the first race.”
Ther﷽e was little to separate Martin and Bagnaia in terms of highs and lows this season:
Bagnaia won a combined 11 races with Martin victorious 13 times. However, Bagnaia toꦇok victory in more GPs (ꦆ7-4) and Martin Sprints (9-4).
Their non-score tally w🐷as roughly similar, with 6 for Bagnaia and 4 for 𒁏Martin.
But an area of substantial difference was in terms🙈 of weekends where each scored less than 20 out of the maximum 37 points.
While Bagnaia walked away with less than 20 points at just 5 out of 20 events, Martin did so on 💧11 occasཧions, over half of the season, despite the lower DNF tally, suggesting Pecco dealt with damage limitation better.
Nonetheless, Martin made a massive jump from nint🐼h overall in his previous seasons and was on the brink of becoming the first satellite rider to win the MotoGP crown.
“I made only three mistakes on Sunday [until Valencia], so I think we did a great job. Next season the target 🧔is to make 𒀰zero mistakes and [if we do that] for sure we will bring that championship,” he said.
“I promis🍸ed my team that we will be world champions someday. It wasn’t [this year]. Maybe it's not next year. But I feel like I can do it. So hopefully ꦅit will be soon…”
Martin will remain with Pramac Ducati, on the latest Desmosedici machinery, in 2024, but his sights rema🃏in set on a factory seat fo🦩r 2025.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Su🔯zuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.