Fabio Quartararo dominated the Sunday’s Italian MotoGP at a sombre Mugello Circuit shaken by the death of Swiss 19-year-old Moto3 rider Jason Dupasquier who succumbed to injuries sustained in a multi-bike qualifying crash.
Yamaha’s French world championship leader held up a Swiss flag on the podium in honour of a ‘friend’ whose promising young career was cut short in brutal fashion.
“This one’s for Jason,” said Quartararo.
The Swiss teenager’s death was announced around midday by MotoGP organisers.
“We’re deeply saddened to report the loss of Jason Dupasquier,” MotoGP said on Twitter.
“On behalf of the entire MotoGP family, we send our love to his team, his family and loved ones. You will be sorely missed, Jason. Ride in peace,” the statement added.
Dupasquier, in his second season in Moto3, fell and was struck by at least one bike, before sliding along the track, during qualifying, at turn nine, on Saturday. Doctors rushed to the scene and after attending to him for 40 minutes on the circuit had him airlifted to hospital.
The rider described as “a leading light of Swiss motorsport” passed away in hospital in Florence after suffering severe brain damage and undergoing chest surgery overnight.
Quartararo said: “It was a strange day, a lot of emotion, every time I passed turn nine I was thinking about Jason.
“It’s not a great feeling, you achieve a win but we lose one of our friends.”
Quartararo crossed the line with over two and a half seconds of daylight back to Portugal’s Miguel Oliveira in second, with reigning world champion Joan Mir completing the podium.
The sixth leg of the season was preceded by a minute’s silence for the sport’s first fatality since Luis Salom died in practice at the Catalonia Moto2 Grand Prix in Barcelona in 2016.
As the MotoGP roadshow persevered despite the tragic circumstances, it was Quartararo, who had set a new lap record when securing pole on Saturday, who emerged with his third win of the season to tighten his grip on the riders’ standings.
He now has a 24-point cushion over Zarco with Francesco Bagnaia, an early faller Sunday, a further two points back in third and Australian Jack Miller, winner of the two races before Mugello, in fourth.
‘Incompatible with life’: Miller was among a legion of the sport’s leading figures to pay tribute to Dupasquier, the Australian Ducati rider posting on twitter: “Rest In Peace Jason, thinking of his family and team” alongside a red heart.
The Careggi hospital in Florence treating Dupasquier confirmed to that the teenager had suffered brain injuries “incompatible with life”.
Motorcycling’s governing body the FIM, the team’s IRTA umbrella association, and the sport’s commercial rights holder DORNA issued a joint statement on the tragic news.
“Following a serious incident in the Moto3 Qualifying 2 session at the Gran Premio d’Italia, it is with great sadness that we report the passing of Moto3 rider Jason Dupasquier,” it read.
“Despite the best efforts of circuit medical staff and all those subsequently attending to the Swiss rider, the hospital has announced that Dupasquier has sadly succumbed to his injuries,” the statement continued.
Agence France-Presse