After couple of laps he was leading and was the fastest. He continued to push super hard for no good reason and lost the bike, some how he saved it but lost many places. Then he started to push even more, and with 5 laps to go he was P3 behind Vinales. Quartararo had a 5s lead so there was no chance he would catch him. P2 was his maximum and he had 5 laps to do it and was faster than Vinales. "Normal person" would be happy with this situation after throwing away easy win with lap4 mistake. Even commentators started to speculate about his tires at that stage.rscsr wrote: ↑21 Apr 2022, 13:16That is an error that happens very often. Even on the Moto3 bikes it happens. Especially there it seems that the traction control just gave it all. At least I remember Cal Crutchlow saying something with that gist.sosic2121 wrote: ↑21 Apr 2022, 12:57No it could not, that's the point. I think you should rewatch that race. What was he trying to achieve there!?silver wrote: ↑21 Apr 2022, 11:55It's always a package that wins. Most successful riders have had their fair share of regrettable moments. But without them, they wouldn't have won anything. Marquez had one really bad moment out of, what became a natural scene of him, many crashes. Until that point, he failed to win just one season and that was due to an extremely uncompetitive bike. Well, he did manage to dictate to eventual winner. A bad moment like that of his crash in 2020, could have happened to any rider at any point in their career, but it's amazing that he won so many before that unfortunate moment arrived. I don't think he would have won anything if not for everything that he is. I don't consider him to reckless or overtly aggressive. He was just mesmerizingly quick and he won with bikes that so many talented riders, including another multiple world champion failed to master. That would be his legacy.
But it looked like Marc was still trying to win...