The Spanish Fermín Aldeguer (Boscoscuro) finished the leader in the last second of the first row of the freestyle. to him Indonesian Grand Prix of Moto2 which was held in the Mandalika region, running at 1:33.955. Aldeguer was the only driver to break into that second, which was very close to the team record set by Spaniard Arón Canet (Kalex) from last year at 1:33.847.
As happened to David Munoz in Moto3, the American Joe Roberts (Kalex) was the first protagonist of the accident Moto2, when he rolled down ten consecutive times after stepping on the dirt area of the track, although equally without results. because of his loyalty.
The Italian Tony Arbolino (Kalex) was the first leader, who was soon replaced by the Spanish Arón Canet (Kalex), already with a time of 1:35.362, under a second and a half from the actual record, 1:33.847. But as it happened in Moto3, the records were going down very quickly, almost always Tony Arbolino as the ‘most active’ rider, because after several rounds of Canet took the first place from him, he regained it in 1: 35.029 and He was no longer the dominant leader, also removed by Spain, 1:34.990.
The opening minutes were ‘hand in hand’ between Arbolino and Canet, who followed each other at the top of the group, with Spanish Fermín Aldeguer (Boscoscuro), British Jake Dixon (Kalex) and Thai Somkiat Chantra (Kalex) close behind. It was Arbolino who set the next team mark, 1: 34.722, in the last quarter of an hour with many riders in their workshops to ‘fine tune’ the setup of their bikes.
In the last laps of the track, Thai Somkiat Chantra, who knows what it is to win in Mandalika (he did it in 2022), set a time of 1:34.474, but all the drivers came out ready to advance. their good times. Aldeguer took first place from Chantra with a time of 1:34.433 which lasted until the Thai crossed the finish line to set a 1:34.239, after which he won, first with Arbolino (1:34.229) and then with the Spanish (1:34.174).
With time already running out at the wave of the flag, Arón Canet regained the lead by climbing into first place with a 1:34.005, despite Fermín Aldeguer slowly moving up to become the only driver in the middle class to drop a minute. and 34 seconds, 1:33.955.
Aldeguer finished in the lead, ahead of Canet, Arbolino, Chantra, Manuel GonzálezAi Ogura, Deniz Öncü, Alonso López, Jake Dixon and Albert Arenas in the top ten. The former leader of the world, the Spanish Sergio García Dols (Boscoscuro), was able to change his career somewhere to finish sixteenth, but second and a half behind the leader.