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Marc Marquez MotoGP Victory: 'I Hope This Is My Last Comeback'

Marc Marquez claimed a landmark MotoGP victory and said he hopes he will never need to mount another comeback, reflecting on a career defined by injury and resilience.

MotoGP Correspondent · · 2 min read
A MotoGP rider celebrates a race victory on the podium, helmet raised in the air
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Marquez Takes Landmark MotoGP Win

Marc Marquez has won a landmark MotoGP race and followed it with a candid admission: he hopes this is the last time he ever has to claw his way back to the top. The statement, made after the victory, captures something that numbers alone cannot, a rider who has spent years rebuilding himself physically and mentally, and who is acutely aware of how much each comeback has cost him.

According to reporting by Motorsport Week, Marquez reacted to the win by expressing hope that the cycle of injury, recovery, and return is finally behind him. "I hope this is my last comeback," he said, words that land with weight given everything he has been through since a catastrophic arm injury in 2020 derailed what had been one of the most dominant stretches in the sport's modern era.

A Career Interrupted, Then Rebuilt

Marquez's record before that 2020 crash at Jerez was extraordinary. Six premier class world titles, extraordinary win rates, and a reputation as arguably the most naturally gifted rider of his generation. The injury to his right humerus, and the series of surgical procedures that followed, kept him sidelined for extended periods and visibly affected his form for seasons afterward.

His move to the Gresini Ducati team ahead of the 2024 season was widely read as a reset, a chance to rediscover his feel for racing away from the pressure and politics of a factory squad. The bet appeared to pay off. Results steadily improved, and the landmark win represents the clearest sign yet that he has, at least competitively, returned to the level that once made him untouchable.

What makes his post-race comment striking is its honesty. Most riders in victory speak about momentum and future targets. Marquez instead acknowledged the toll that comebacks take, framing the win not just as a result but as a potential line drawn under years of difficulty.

What the Victory Means for the Championship

A Marquez operating at close to his peak is a complicated development for the rest of the MotoGP field. Ducati machinery has dominated the grid in recent seasons, and Marquez now adds himself to the list of genuine title threats at a time when the championship picture is far from settled.

His rivals will have noted the manner of the win as much as the result itself. Riders who had grown accustomed to a Marquez who was still finding his feet after surgery now face a version who appears to have shaken off those limitations. Whether this signals a sustained run of competitiveness or remains an isolated peak will become clearer over the coming rounds.

For Marquez personally, the result carries meaning that extends beyond points and standings. He is 31 years old, no longer the youngest disruptor in the paddock. Each season lost to injury is a season that cannot be recovered. A win that arrives with the comment "I hope this is my last comeback" suggests a rider who understands exactly what is at stake, and who is determined not to squander the time he has left at the front.

Luca Moretti

MotoGP Correspondent

Luca Moretti is 21.fun's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.

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