2012 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix

The 2012 Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix was the fifth round of the 2012 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season and the 17th Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix. It took place on the weekend of 1–3 June 2012 at the Circuit de Catalunya in Montmeló, Barcelona, Spain. The three classes of motorcycle racing which took place during the weekend were MotoGP, Moto2 and Moto3.

Catalonia  2012 Catalan Grand Prix
Race details
Race 5 of 18 races in the
2012 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season
Date3 June 2012
Official nameGran Premi Aperol de Catalunya[1]
LocationCircuit de Catalunya
Course
  • Permanent racing facility
  • 4.727 km (2.937 mi)
MotoGP
Pole position
Rider Australia Casey Stoner Honda
Time 1:41.295
Fastest lap
Rider Spain Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha
Time 1:42.642
Podium
First Spain Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha
Second Spain Dani Pedrosa Honda
Third Italy Andrea Dovizioso Yamaha
Moto2
Pole position
Rider Spain Marc Márquez Suter
Time 1:46.187
Fastest lap
Rider Switzerland Thomas Lüthi Suter
Time 1:46.631
Podium
First Italy Andrea Iannone Speed Up
Second Switzerland Thomas Lüthi Suter
Third Spain Marc Márquez Suter
Moto3
Pole position
Rider Spain Maverick Viñales FTR Honda
Time 1:52.160
Fastest lap
Rider Spain Álex Márquez Suter Honda
Time 1:52.583
Podium
First Spain Maverick Viñales FTR Honda
Second Germany Sandro Cortese KTM
Third Portugal Miguel Oliveira Suter Honda

Casey Stoner qualified on pole position in MotoGP, but it was his Repsol Honda teammate, Dani Pedrosa, who started in fifth place that took the lead at the first corner. Ben Spies was in second place for the first three laps, but slid off the track when challenging for the lead. This allowed the other factory Yamaha rider and championship leader Jorge Lorenzo to move up into second place and engage in a race long battle for the win with Pedrosa. Meanwhile, Stoner was behind the Tech 3 Yamaha of Andrea Dovizioso, and was battling with the other of Cal Crutchlow. He eventually beat Crutchlow to take fourth place whilst Dovizioso took the first podium of the year for the Tech 3 Yamaha team. As a consequence of the race, Lorenzo increased his lead in the riders' standings to 20 points over Stoner. Pedrosa remained third in the standings, with 30 fewer points than Lorenzo.

In Moto2, Marc Márquez took his fourth consecutive pole position by beating championship leader and fellow Spaniard Pol Espargaró by two-tenths of a second. Thomas Lüthi completed the front row with Andrea Iannone in fourth place; it was these four riders who dominated the race, staying in close company for the majority of it too. Iannone led almost every lap to take the victory, but had to resist pressure in the closing laps to take his first win of the season. Lüthi finished second and Márquez finished third after winning an appeal against a one-minute penalty issued by the FIM for a collision between himself and Espargaró, which had resulted in retirement of the Kalex rider with three laps remaining. The result rearranged the order in the riders' standings with Lüthi now leading the way on 88 points with Márquez only 2 behind. Not far behind them were Espargaró and Iannone, still firmly in contention, on 71 and 70 points respectively, the reduced gap down to the Italian's victory.

The Moto3 race was not as close as the one in the other two categories as Maverick Viñales won his home race from pole position. It was his second victory of the season. Zulfahmi Khairuddin's first front-row for any Malaysian rider, second place, failed to translate into a great result and he finished down in eighth. It was a close eighth though, as he and the six riders in front of him had squabbled in close proximity for the majority of the race allowing Viñales to break away. Sandro Cortese and Miguel Oliveira emerged victorious in the tight battle to the line to take second and third place to complete the podium. Álex Márquez set the fastest lap of the race. As a consequence of the race, Cortese was still leading the riders' standings on 87 points but, with victory, Viñales was now just 7 points behind him. Luis Salom remained third in the standings, but was now on a fairly distant 55 points, 32 fewer than Cortese.

Report

Background and qualifying

Jorge Lorenzo entered the event leading the Riders' standings following his win at the preceding event – the French Grand Prix.[2] Reigning world champion Casey Stoner was second in the standings, eight points behind Lorenzo, whilst his Honda teammate, Dani Pedrosa, was seventeen points behind him.[3] Yamaha led the way in the Manufacturers' standings, all 90 of their points courtesy of Lorenzo. Honda were 4 points behind them, and Ducati remained in third place after Valentino Rossi scored their first podium of the season in Le Mans. Colin Edwards returned to his CRT ride after breaking his collarbone at the Portuguese Grand Prix four weeks previously; he had been replaced with Chris Vermeulen for the French Grand Prix.[3] Bridgestone took asymmetric tyres to the race for the bikes to compensate for the large number of long, right-handed corners on the track.

Stoner took pole position in qualifying for the event, his second of the season, and the third for his team.[4] Lorenzo qualified in second position, one tenth slower than the pole time. Crutchlow completed the front row by qualifying third for the third time in the season for the Tech 3 Yamaha team. A resurgent Ben Spies set a time fast enough for fourth position, but was still only the third fastest Yamaha on the grid. Stoner's teammate Pedrosa, the polesitter from the previous race, qualified fifth, after he ran off the track on his final timed run. He was in front of the other Tech 3 Yamaha of Andrea Dovizioso, who completed the closely matched top six with a time just fourth tenths slower than Stoner's. The first Ducati rider was Nicky Hayden, who started the third row of the grid. He was followed by the LCR Honda of Stefan Bradl, who took his best qualifying position of the season so far, and then Valentino Rossi. Álvaro Bautista was accompanied by Barberá and Karel Abraham on the fourth row of the grid. Behind them, in thirteenth, Randy de Puniet was the highest qualifying CRT rider. Colin Edwards was fourteenth behind him on his return alongside Aleix Espargaró, de Puniet's teammate. Michele Pirro, James Ellison, Mattia Pasini, Yonny Hernández, Danilo Petrucci and Iván Silva were sixteenth to twenty-first respectively, completing the grid on the final two rows.[5]

Cal Crutchlow set the fastest time in the warm-up session for the event in slippery conditions on the morning of the race, with Stoner second fastest and Rossi third, narrowly ahead of an impressive Bautista. The conditions lead to crashes from some riders, including falls from Pedrosa, James Ellison and Héctor Barberá.[6]

Race

The conditions at the start of the race were warm and humid, with an ambient temperature of 27 °C (81 °F) and a track temperature of 38 °C (100 °F). All the riders chose to race on the softer tyre on both the front and rear, except from the two Repsol Hondas of Stoner and Pedrosa, who started with the harder tyre on both front and rear.[7]

At the start of the race, Pedrosa took the lead at the first turn, despite his fifth place starting spot.[8] Ben Spies, who had moved up into second, attempted to overtake Pedrosa around the outside of turn 3, but had to give best. His teammate, Lorenzo, had dropped down to third in front of polesitter Stoner.[9] The two Tech 3 Yamahas were fifth and sixth, with Dovizioso ahead of Crutchlow. Later on in the first lap, Dovizioso overtook Stoner for fourth place while Nicky Hayden dropped from seventh to tenth – first behind Stefan Bradl, then behind teammate Rossi and next behind Álvaro Bautista. Stoner then ran slightly wide, allowing Crutchlow to take fifth place. On the third lap, Spies once again tried to take the lead from Pedrosa at Turn 3, and temporarily did. However, he continued to run off into the gravel before falling off his bike and having to rejoin the track down in last place.[9][10]

The order then began to settle down, and the top five of Pedrosa, Lorenzo, Dovizioso, Crutchlow and Stoner began to pull out a gap to the rest the field. Behind them, Bautista, Bradl, and the Ducatis of Rossi and Hayden continued to fight over the following four places. Lorenzo took the lead from Pedrosa at the first turn on the sixth lap of the race, and started to build a gap immediately.[9] Meanwhile, Stoner overtook Crutchlow to regain the position he had lost on the first lap, but the pair had already fallen two seconds behind the leading three bikes by this point.

On lap 11, Pedrosa retook the lead from Lorenzo on the main straight, while Dovizioso remained close behind the pair. On the following lap, whilst trying to regain the position, Lorenzo overshot at the corner and was forced to ride across the kerbs to avoid the gravel.[9] Dovizioso fell back to the ongoing battle between Stoner and Crutchlow on lap 15, whilst another battle between Bautista (sixth) and Rossi (seventh) began to catch up.[11] After numerous attempts, Lorenzo managed to pass Pedrosa again to take the lead of the race with 6 laps remaining with a manoeuvre down the inside of turn 10.[12] Pedrosa had a large, unintentional wheelie entering the corner due to problems with his bike, possibly allowing the pass to happen.[13] The two riders now had a large lead over everyone else, but Pedrosa began to fall back from Lorenzo in the final three laps. On the 23rd and penultimate lap, Ben Spies managed to return into the top 10 by overtaking Héctor Barberá (Spies had been running in eleventh since lap 12, half-way through the race).[10] On the final lap, Stoner managed to pull away from Crutchlow and catch up with Dovizioso; however, he wasn't able to make a pass and take a podium place.[7]

Jorge Lorenzo won the race to take his third victory of the season in front of his home fans, extending his championship lead over Stoner to 20 points.[8][14] Lorenzo also set the fastest lap of the race. Dani Pedrosa finished second, a result he was disappointed with because he felt he could have won the race.[13] He remained in third place in the standings, 30 points adrift of Lorenzo.[12] Andrea Dovizioso completed the podium, taking Yamaha Tech 3's, and his, first podium of the season. Dovizioso described the good result as a "beautiful" moment.[15] He was closely pursued by Stoner at the end of a race, whose fourth-place finish was his first off the podium in 2012. Stoner conceded that the decision to use the harder tyres instead of the soft was a wrong one because it cost him too much time at the start of the race.[7] Cal Crutchlow's fifth place left him behind his teammate in the championship, but was a good result nonetheless. Crutchlow said the result could have been better if a "lack of experience" hadn't lead to him being conservative at the beginning of the race.[16] Álvaro Bautista finished the race in sixth position, ahead of Valentino Rossi on the improving Ducati bike.[11] Stefan Bradl finished eighth, where he had started, and Nicky Hayden finished ninth. The Yamaha team stated that they were pleased with Ben Spies' performance, despite his fall near the start of the race – he finished in tenth place.[10] The Ducati riders of Barberá and Abraham finished in eleventh and twelfth, ahead of the top finishing CRT rider of Aleix Espargaró (who simultaneously became the highest ranking CRT rider in standings). Michele Pirro and Randy de Puniet, Espargaró's teammate, completed the points in fourteenth and fifteenth. The other five classified riders were Ellison, Pasini, Hernández, Petrucci and Silva; Edwards was not classified as he finished in the pitlane, one lap down.[17]

Moto2

[18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26]

Moto3

KTM rider Sandro Cortese entered the event leading the Riders' standings on total of 67 points. 12 points behind him was his championship rival, the FTR Honda of Maverick Viñales. The Kalex KTM of Luis Salom was third in the standings, six points behind Viñales. In the Manufacturers' standings, FTR and KTM were joint in the lead, each with a total of 68 points. Kalex had accumulated the third highest total of 56 points.[27]

In qualifying for the race, Maverick Viñales took his second pole position of the season, and his second in succession, by setting a time nearly three-tenths faster than the rest of the field.[28] Zulfahmi Khairuddin became the first Malaysian to ever achieve a front row start in a motorcycle Grand Prix, when he set the second fastest time for KTM. The winner of the previous race, and Viñales' FTR Honda teammate, Louis Rossi, took the final front row spot of third place.[29] Sandro Cortese qualified fourth after suffering a heavy crash in that morning's practice session. He suffered heavy bruising to his right hand, and had to have blood drained during the session. Fifth place went to Miguel Oliveira, the Suter rider, who was at the centre of drama late on in the session, as his swift move across the track took out Alan Techer and Brad Binder. None of the riders were hurt in the incident. The second row was completed by Binder's teammate Luis Salom, who like Viñales and various other riders, was in front of his home crowd. Alexis Masbou qualified seventh for his 100th Grand Prix start. Efrén Vázquez, Héctor Faubel and Álex Márquez completed the top ten. Romano Fenati, winner of the Spanish Grand Prix earlier in 2012, had a disappointing session, and could only manage thirteenth.[30] All 34 riders successfully set a lap time, and all started the following day's race.[31]

In the warm up session, on the day of the race, Viñales once again set the fastest time, with Rossi second and Vázquez third, albeit seven-tenths off the pace.[32][33][34][35][36]

Classification

Dani Pedrosa and Jorge Lorenzo, battling for the lead in the MotoGP race. Lorenzo went on to win, with Pedrosa finishing in second place.

MotoGP

Pos. No. Rider Team Manufacturer Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 99 Spain Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha Factory Racing Yamaha 25 43:07.681 2 25
2 26 Spain Dani Pedrosa Repsol Honda Team Honda 25 +5.003 5 20
3 4 Italy Andrea Dovizioso Monster Yamaha Tech 3 Yamaha 25 +9.361 6 16
4 1 Australia Casey Stoner Repsol Honda Team Honda 25 +9.544 1 13
5 35 United Kingdom Cal Crutchlow Monster Yamaha Tech 3 Yamaha 25 +12.506 3 11
6 19 Spain Álvaro Bautista San Carlo Honda Gresini Honda 25 +13.948 10 10
7 46 Italy Valentino Rossi Ducati Team Ducati 25 +17.555 9 9
8 6 Germany Stefan Bradl LCR Honda MotoGP Honda 25 +23.478 8 8
9 69 United States Nicky Hayden Ducati Team Ducati 25 +30.410 7 7
10 11 United States Ben Spies Yamaha Factory Racing Yamaha 25 +32.897 4 6
11 8 Spain Héctor Barberá Pramac Racing Team Ducati 25 +36.144 11 5
12 17 Czech Republic Karel Abraham Cardion AB Motoracing Ducati 25 +56.229 12 4
13 41 Spain Aleix Espargaró Power Electronics Aspar ART 25 +1:08.054 15 3
14 51 Italy Michele Pirro San Carlo Honda Gresini FTR 25 +1:08.775 16 2
15 14 France Randy de Puniet Power Electronics Aspar ART 25 +1:10.483 13 1
16 77 United Kingdom James Ellison Paul Bird Motorsport ART 25 +1:13.090 17
17 54 Italy Mattia Pasini Speed Master ART 25 +1:20.903 18
18 68 Colombia Yonny Hernández Avintia Blusens BQR 25 +1:21.235 19
19 9 Italy Danilo Petrucci Came IodaRacing Project Ioda 25 +1:41.207 20
20 22 Spain Iván Silva Avintia Blusens BQR 25 +1:41.888 21
NC 5 United States Colin Edwards NGM Mobile Forward Racing Suter 24 +1 lap 14
Sources: [37][38][39]

Moto2

Pos No Rider Manufacturer Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 29 Italy Andrea Iannone Speed Up 23 41:16.852 4 25
2 12 Switzerland Thomas Lüthi Suter 23 +0.083 3 20
3 93 Spain Marc Márquez Suter 23 +1.137 1 16
4 80 Spain Esteve Rabat Kalex 23 +12.516 9 13
5 3 Italy Simone Corsi FTR 23 +14.226 5 11
6 30 Japan Takaaki Nakagami Kalex 23 +15.072 12 10
7 77 Switzerland Dominique Aegerter Suter 23 +16.255 6 9
8 4 Switzerland Randy Krummenacher Kalex 23 +16.354 20 8
9 36 Finland Mika Kallio Kalex 23 +16.606 19 7
10 45 United Kingdom Scott Redding Kalex 23 +16.793 7 6
11 5 France Johann Zarco Motobi 23 +17.298 14 5
12 38 United Kingdom Bradley Smith Tech 3 23 +22.242 13 4
13 71 Italy Claudio Corti Kalex 23 +23.763 16 3
14 15 San Marino Alex de Angelis Suter 23 +24.069 10 2
15 18 Spain Nicolás Terol Suter 23 +27.039 15 1
16 81 Spain Jordi Torres Tech 3 23 +32.158 11
17 76 Germany Max Neukirchner Kalex 23 +34.389 26
18 14 Thailand Ratthapark Wilairot Suter 23 +35.387 27
19 88 Spain Ricard Cardús AJR 23 +35.501 25
20 47 Spain Ángel Rodríguez Bimota 23 +35.623 21
21 72 Japan Yuki Takahashi Suter 23 +35.803 22
22 49 Spain Axel Pons Kalex 23 +36.903 28
23 7 Sweden Alexander Lundh MZ-RE Honda 23 +1:16.309 30
24 10 Switzerland Marco Colandrea FTR 23 +1:18.573 31
25 82 Spain Elena Rosell Moriwaki 23 +1:35.551 32
DSQ 95 Australia Anthony West Moriwaki 23 (+52.636)[40] 29
Ret 40 Spain Pol Espargaró Kalex 20 Collision 2
Ret 44 Italy Roberto Rolfo Suter 20 Retirement 18
Ret 24 Spain Toni Elías Suter 19 Retirement 8
Ret 60 Spain Julián Simón Suter 0 Collision 17
Ret 8 United Kingdom Gino Rea Suter 0 Collision 23
Ret 63 France Mike Di Meglio Speed Up 0 Collision 24
OFFICIAL MOTO2 REPORT

Moto3

Pos No Rider Manufacturer Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 25 Spain Maverick Viñales FTR Honda 22 41:50.965 1 25
2 11 Germany Sandro Cortese KTM 22 +7.752 4 20
3 44 Portugal Miguel Oliveira Suter Honda 22 +7.853 5 16
4 96 France Louis Rossi FTR Honda 22 +8.007 3 13
5 10 France Alexis Masbou Honda 22 +8.075 7 11
6 12 Spain Álex Márquez Suter Honda 22 +8.267 11 10
7 55 Spain Héctor Faubel Kalex KTM 22 +8.355 9 9
8 63 Malaysia Zulfahmi Khairuddin KTM 22 +8.480 2 8
9 5 Italy Romano Fenati FTR Honda 22 +8.600 13 7
10 39 Spain Luis Salom Kalex KTM 22 +16.023 6 6
11 84 Czech Republic Jakub Kornfeil FTR Honda 22 +16.127 12 5
12 27 Italy Niccolò Antonelli FTR Honda 22 +16.222 10 4
13 89 France Alan Techer TSR Honda 22 +16.792 21 3
14 23 Spain Alberto Moncayo Kalex KTM 22 +30.132 17 2
15 8 Australia Jack Miller Honda 22 +30.132 20 1
16 53 Netherlands Jasper Iwema FGR Honda 22 +30.304 25
17 26 Spain Adrián Martín FTR Honda 22 +30.663 28
18 21 Spain Iván Moreno FTR Honda 22 +30.970 23
19 17 United Kingdom John McPhee KRP Honda 22 +31.042 15
20 52 United Kingdom Danny Kent KTM 22 +43.738 14
21 31 Finland Niklas Ajo KTM 22 +43.765 24
22 61 Australia Arthur Sissis KTM 22 +44.119 19
23 15 Italy Simone Grotzkyj Suter Honda 22 +1:02.007 26
24 32 Spain Isaac Viñales FTR Honda 22 +1:11.320 27
25 51 Japan Kenta Fujii TSR Honda 22 +1:19.060 33
26 3 Italy Luigi Morciano Ioda 22 +1:19.314 34
27 30 Switzerland Giulian Pedone Suter Honda 22 +1:19.331 32
28 19 Italy Alessandro Tonucci FTR Honda 21 +1 lap 18
Ret 99 United Kingdom Danny Webb Mahindra 16 Accident 31
Ret 77 Germany Marcel Schrötter Mahindra 16 Retirement 30
Ret 42 Spain Álex Rins Suter Honda 15 Accident 16
Ret 7 Spain Efrén Vázquez FTR Honda 15 Accident 8
Ret 41 South Africa Brad Binder Kalex KTM 6 Collision 22
Ret 94 Germany Jonas Folger Ioda 4 Retirement 29
OFFICIAL MOTO3 REPORT

Championship standings after the race (MotoGP)

Below are the standings for the top five riders and constructors after round five has concluded.[41]

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

References

  1. "2012 Catalan MotoGP". Motorsportmagazine.com. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 22 May 2018.
  2. Rej, Arindam (20 May 2012). "MotoGP: Jorge Lorenzo wins in France ahead of Valentino Rossi". Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  3. "MotoGP: Colin Edwards back for Barcelona after injury". 29 May 2012. Retrieved 30 May 2012.
  4. "MotoGP: Casey Stoner takes pole from Jorge Lorenzo in Catalunya". 2 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  5. "MotoGP Qualifying Practice Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  6. "MotoGP Warm Up Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  7. "Stoner admits tyre choice didn't work". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  8. Rostance, Tom (3 June 2012). "MotoGP: Jorge Lorenzo beats Dani Pedrosa to Catalunya win". BBC Sport. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
  9. "MotoGP: Jorge Lorenzo wins Catalunya race". BBC Sport. 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  10. "Yamaha pleased with Spies despite fall". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  11. "Rossi: Catalunya best dry Ducati ride". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  12. "Motorcycling-Lorenzo boosts title bid with win in Catalunya". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  13. "Pedrosa frustrated with second". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  14. "Lorenzo wins Spanish Catalunya battle". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  15. "Dovizioso thrilled with underdog podium". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  16. "MotoGP: Cal Crutchlow admits to 'lack of experience' in Barcelona". BBC Sport. 3 June 2012. Retrieved 6 June 2012.
  17. "MotoGP Race Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  18. Tremayne, Sam (2 June 2012). "Marc Marquez grabs another Moto2 pole at Catalunya". AUTOSPORT. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  19. "Moto2: Marquez grabs another pole". 2 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  20. "Moto2: Iannone takes first win of 2012". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  21. "Moto2: Stewards cancel Marquez's penalty". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  22. "Moto2: Stoner, Rossi slam Marquez penalty". 3 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  23. "2012 Catalunya Moto2 | Results". 4 June 2012. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  24. "Moto2 Race Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  25. "Moto2 Warm Up Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  26. "Moto2 Qualifying Practice Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  27. "FIM Classification: Moto3". FIM. Archived from the original on 16 June 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  28. Tremayne, Sam (2 June 2012). "Vinales captures second consecutive Moto3 pole in emphatic fashion at Catalunya". Autosport. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  29. "Moto3: Rossi carries form to Catalunya". Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  30. "Second of the season for Viñales". 2 June 2012. Archived from the original on 16 June 2012. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  31. "Moto3 Qualifying Practice Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  32. "Moto3 Warm Up Classification 2012". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  33. "Vinales prevails in Barcelona". 3 June 2012. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2012.
  34. "Moto3 Race Classification". motogp.com. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  35. Lewis, Lisa (3 June 2012). "Moto3: Vinales cruises to Catalan home win". www.crash.net. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  36. Tremayne, Sam (3 June 2012). "Maverick Vinales escapes to Catalunya Moto3 win". Autosport. Retrieved 5 June 2012.
  37. "2012 Catalan MotoGP - Motor Sport Magazine Database". Motorsportmagazine.com. 13 June 2017. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  38. "motogp.com · GRAN PREMI APEROL DE CATALUNYA · MotoGP Race Classification 2012". Motogp.com. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  39. "CATALAN GRAND PRIX : Race Classification" (PDF). Resources.motogp.com. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
  40. "Doping – Decision of the Court of Arbitration for Sport in the case of rider Anthony West" (PDF). v2-fim-live.com. Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme. 28 November 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 February 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2015. [...] all the sporting results obtained by Anthony West from 20 May 2012 up to the expiry of the period of ineligibility (i.e. 19 October 2013) will be invalidated.
  41. "Standings" (PDF). resources.motogp.com. 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2019.
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