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Márquez secures second row start at wet Silverstone

The Repsol Honda team rider will start from fifth position on the grid, after a day interrupted by rain. Dani Pedrosa, sixth in Q1, will start from the sixth row.

Marc Márquez placed ninth in FP3 and third in FP4, a session that was brought to an early conclusion less than two minutes from the end due to intense rain.

In Q2, the reigning World Champion looked for a spot on the front row – and was second in several stages of the session – although he eventually finished fifth.

Dani Pedrosa -sixteenth in FP3 and nineteenth in FP4- had to contest Q1 and finished sixth in that session, taking sixteenth on the grid.

MARC MÁRQUEZ | 5th 2’11.083

“I’m satisfied with the result because the conditions were very special today, in that it wasn’t as a ‘flag-to-flag’ situation, with the track passing from dry to wet or vice-versa. Here, we had one part of the track completely wet and the other part completely dry. I struggled a bit, maybe because my riding style is somewhat aggressive, or maybe I wasn’t able to find the right balance. Anyway, we saved the day and we’re on the second row, just a few metres from the front, which is positive. It looks like tomorrow could be another tricky day, possibly with heavy rain, so it will be important to analyse the track conditions and try to stay up there. We also must consider that if the conditions are like what we had at the end of FP4, we cannot race. The aquaplaning was very dangerous; I nearly crashed, and many other riders fell almost one after the other. Depending on the situation, Race Direction needs to evaluate what to do, but they have a lot of experience and I’m sure they’ll make the best decision.”

DANI PEDROSA | 16th 2’14.866

“I missed the passage to Q2, and it was my mistake; the team had done a great job. I was feeling good because when the track is half and half, the tyres warm up a lot in the dry sector and get into a good temperature by the time you hit the wet part. Actually, they even had too much temperature, and that’s why I slowed down before going for a final flying lap. Watching the big screen, I calculated that I could make it, but I missed it by just a fraction—my fault completely. Now we’ll see what happens tomorrow. Forecasts are for steady rain, and that can be a problem. I wasn’t on track at the end of FP4 when the aquaplaning problem arose, but I saw what happened and Marc said it was very dangerous out there. We must wait and see what conditions there are tomorrow.”

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