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Mugello best weekend of my career, says Bagnaia

Francesco Bagnaia terms Mugello Moto3 race weekend as his best of his career till now having notched up his and the Indian manufacturer's third podium of the season.

Third place Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3

Third place Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3

Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3
Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3
Podium: race winner Brad Binder, Red Bull KTM Ajo, second place Fabio Di Giannantonio, Gresini Racing Moto3, third place Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3
Brad Binder, Red Bull KTM Ajo
Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3
Tatsuki Suzuki, CIP-Unicorn Starker
Karel Hanika, Platinum Bay Real Estate
John McPhee, Peugeot MC Saxoprint
Lorenzo Petrarca, 3570 Team Italia
Francesco Bagnaia, Aspar Team Mahindra Moto3

The Italian took his career's fourth podium, after finishing third in a hard fought race behind eventual winner Brad Binder and second placed rookie Fabio di Giannantonio.

On the last lap, Bagnaia was among the four riders chasing Binder for the win, but in a fierce competition, the South African took victory while di Giannatonio edged past Bagnaia by 0.031s.

Bagnaia himself had a photo finish with Niccolo Antonelli on his tail, finishing 0.006s behind as the top five were covered by a mere 0.077s.

"A great weekend for me and the team – I think my best in the World Championship so far," said an elated Bagnaia.

"We’ve been consistently in the top five, and finishing third at Mugello is amazing. It’s a great result.

"I pushed to the limit in the last lap to try to close the gap to Brad, and maybe if Quartararo had been further away from me I could have fought for the win," he explained.

"But third is a good result. It was an amazingly close race, and you could go from first to eighth in one lap – which is not easy.

"It’s difficult to stay calm with bikes all around you. I tried to stay at the head of the group on every lap, but I went wide at the first corner with a few laps to go but I manage to claw back to the podium," he added.

The Italian teen was fast all through the weekend finishing third, second and fifth in the three practice sessions.

The only blip was the track limit infringement in qualifying which demoted him from second to eighth for the start of the race.

Gear changes cost Martin

Teammate Jorge Martin having started 14th was up to fourth at one stage but issues while changing gears limited his performance in the second half, as he finished 14th.

"I started calmly, sitting in eighteenth at first, but from there I slowly I managed to climb to fourth," he said.

"The only downer is that we had a couple of hiccups with the gear changes on the key laps."

Behind the two factory riders, CIP's Tatsuki Suzuki was 19th, whose two race points scoring run came to an end in Italy.

The Japanese was followed by Platinum Bay's Karel Hanika in 20th, Peugeot's John McPhee 23rd while Team Italia's Stefano Valtulini and Lorenzo Petrarca were 24th and 25th.

Fabio Spiranelli (CIP), Darryn Binder (Platinum Bay) and Alexis Masbou (Peugeot), the other Mahindra riders retired from the race.

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