Marc Marquez wins Dutch MotoGP from Marco Bezzecchi at Assen

Marc Marquez beats Marco Bezzecchi in a drama-filled race that claimed his brother Alex, who crashed out of the contest.

Marc Marquez of the Ducati Lenovo Team celebrates after winning the MotoGP race at the Grand Prix of the Netherlands at the TT Circuit in Assen, Netherlands, on June 29, 2025 [Peter Dejong/AP Photo]

Published On 29 Jun 202529 Jun 2025

Marc Marquez delivered a clinical masterclass at MotoGP’s Cathedral of Speed to claim victory at the Dutch Grand Prix, while his brother and closest contender, Alex, suffered a race-ending crash that left him with a fractured hand.

As Assen celebrated its centenary of motorcycle racing, the elder Marquez seized control on the second lap on Sunday and did not look back as he extended his championship advantage to a commanding 68 points over Alex, seeking his seventh title.

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Aprilia’s Marco Bezzecchi finished second while Ducati’s Francesco Bagnaia came third, with the two-time champion now staring at a daunting 126-point gap to his teammate after 10 rounds.

Bagnaia had won the last three races in Assen, but despite taking the lead early on, he was pushed down to fourth place before recovering to finish on the podium ahead of KTM’s Pedro Acosta.

Marc, who crashed hard twice on Friday, also equalled motorcycling great Giacomo Agostini with 68 premier-class victories and now sets his sights on his former rival Valentino Rossi, who finished his career with 89 wins.

Yamaha’s Fabio Quartararo had claimed pole position but crashed in Saturday’s sprint, where Marc claimed his ninth victory of the season, and the Frenchman was slow off the line while Bagnaia made the perfect start.

Gresini Racing’s Alex was in second place, but on turn one of the next lap, Marc made his move to overtake his brother and slot in behind his teammate, waiting patiently to pounce with 24 laps left in the race.

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Alex briefly lost his concentration, and Bezzecchi, sporting a new aero package on his Aprilia, squeezed his way past the Gresini rider while Acosta also made an overtake stick to push the younger Marquez down to fifth.

Gresini Racing MotoGP’s Alex Marquez (#73) in action before his crash on lap six at the Dutch MotoGP [Yves Herman/Reuters]

Alex Marquez crashes out

Up front, Marc found a gap before the final chicane on lap five to overtake Bagnaia and take the lead, while his brother Alex crashed heavily when he leaned into Acosta and lost his balance when they made contact in a battle for fourth.

Alex appeared to lock his front tyre in the incident, which gave a puff of smoke as the bike tipped its rider straight onto the ground.

He was immediately taken to the medical centre where a left-hand fracture was confirmed, with Gresini saying the 29-year-old would fly to Madrid for surgery later on Sunday. More information about Alex’s recovery timeline is expected to emerge on Monday.

Bagnaia seemed to be losing pace as Bezzecchi and Acosta moved into podium positions. But the Italian Ducati rider snatched third place back from Acosta at the end of lap 14 to set his sights on Bezzecchi.

But whatever Bezzecchi did to put pressure on Marc, the six-time MotoGP champion did not budge as he managed his tyres and maintained his pace until he took the chequered flag.

The MotoGP calendar has a weekend off before they reunite for the German Grand Prix in two weeks.

Marc Marquez celebrates after winning the Grand Prix of the Netherlands, his 68th career MotoGP victory [Yves Herman/Reuters]
Source: News Agencies