Ducati Team rider Marc Marquez secured his first grand prix victory of the 2026 season at the Hungarian Grand Prix on June 7, 2026. The Spaniard overcame a fierce challenge from Pedro Acosta at the Balaton Park Circuit to complete a double win following his sprint race success on Saturday.
This victory marks a significant milestone for Marquez, coming just one month after he underwent double surgery to address a persistent right shoulder injury.
The race was immediately impacted by a major collision at Turn 1 involving the Aprilia Racing factory riders. Jorge Martin lost control of his bike under braking and struck teammate Marco Bezzecchi, an incident that also collected Gresini Racing’s Fermin Aldeguer and Trackhouse Racing’s Raul Fernandez.
While Fabio di Giannantonio was able to remount his bike after being tagged, the three Aprilia machines and Aldeguer were forced into immediate retirement. This marked a repeat of intra-team friction, following a similar clash between the factory duo during the Motegi sprint last year.
Following the opening-lap chaos, Marquez and Acosta broke away from the field to engage in a private duel for the lead. Acosta, representing Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, seized the advantage on lap five by overtaking Marquez at Turn 5.
The rookie maintained a gap of over one second for several laps, but Marquez gradually whittled down the deficit, bringing the margin to just three tenths by the midpoint of the 26-lap race.
Marquez secures victory after intense mid-race battle
The contest for the lead intensified on lap 14 when Marquez lunged into the Turn 9-10 chicane to pass Acosta. The KTM rider responded immediately at Turn 12 to reclaim the position, and the pair made contact at the final corner as Marquez attempted another move.
On the following lap, Marquez successfully repeated the pass at the chicane, focusing on a cleaner exit to prevent a counter-attack. The 1.3-second victory margin reflects his control over the final stages.
Behind the lead duo, Francesco Bagnaia finished five seconds adrift in third place to secure his third consecutive podium. Ai Ogura, riding for Trackhouse, claimed fourth after starting 11th on the grid.
Ogura made a decisive move on Honda’s Luca Marini on the penultimate lap to finish as the highest-placed rider for the Noale factory on a difficult day for the brand. Much like how com/manchester-united-100m-transfer-agreement-analysis-2026/”>Manchester United invested heavily to reshape their defense, competitive teams often look for consistency in their core lineups to avoid the kind of errors seen in the T1 collision.
Further down the order, LCR rider Diogo Moreira took sixth place, followed by Iker Lecuona in seventh. The race for the lower points positions was complicated by a disciplinary incident involving Enea Bastianini. While fighting for seventh, the Tech3 rider ran wide at Turn 1 and clipped Joan Mir upon his return to the line.
Bastianini was assessed a long-lap penalty for the infraction, eventually finishing in ninth place behind Pramac’s Jack Miller.
Closing standings and retirement tallies in Hungary
Brad Binder rounded out the top ten, while Toprak Razgatlioglu finished 11th for the Pramac squad. Fabio di Giannantonio managed to recover from the first-lap incident to finish 12th, leading home Alex Rins and Franco Morbidelli.
The result showcased the slim margins for error at the top level, a theme echoed in other fields such as the recent high-stakes duel involving Gerwyn Price and Luke Littler. Maverick Vinales picked up the final point in 15th, ahead of substitute rider Cal Crutchlow.
Several riders failed to finish the 26-lap distance. Joan Mir crashed at Turn 11 on lap 15 while pursuing a top-ten finish, and Fabio Quartararo retired after pulling into the pits for unspecified reasons. The retirements of Martin, Bezzecchi, Aldeguer, and Fernandez on the opening lap set the tone for a race of attrition.
Marquez’s win, his first since the San Marino GP last September, establishes him as a primary title contender as the 2026 season progresses.
The championship now moves forward with Marquez proving his physical recovery is complete. For Acosta, a second-place finish provides a significant points haul, confirming his KTM’s ability to challenge the dominant Ducatis.
As the paddock analyzes the fallout from the Aprilia collision, the focus shifts to whether the factory can resolve the recurring issues between its lead riders. The 2026 season continues to provide unpredictable outcomes across the grid.