Jack Miller handed penalty after Maverick Vinales incident

Ducati rider Francesco Bagnaia will start Sunday’s Dutch MotoGP in pole position after the Italian again topped qualifying in Assen ahead of reigning world champion Fabio Quartararo.

The Frenchman, who leads the standings by 34 points after 10 of 20 races this season, sets off second on his Yamaha with Spain’s Jorge Martin (Ducati-Pramac) completing the front row.

Australia’s Jack Miller was six-tenths of a second behind Bagnaia, quick enough for sixth.

However, he’s been hit with a single long-lap penalty after he fell and inadvertedly blocked Maverick Vinales after remounting.

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“I didn’t do anything wrong,” Miller said before the sanction was confirmed. “I did everything I could right – I pulled over to the left, I was sidesaddle from bump-starting it, I had a (damaged) footpeg, and I was just trying to load my foot up to make sure it wasn’t going to snap as I put all my weight on it to swing my other leg over.

“I got over, and I was already partly on the left-hand side of the track. I looked to make sure that I wasn’t in anyone’s way or anything and Vinales was just there. There wasn’t much I could do. There’s a lot of track there but I understand the racing line sort of pulls you out that way. But there’s not much more I could do.

“I went to apologise simply because I know it was s**t, but there’s nothing I can do.”

Meanwhile, it is the fourth time in six races Bagnaia has claimed pole, but he has failed to finish in three of his past four outings.

“Pole position on a track like this, which is for sure not the best for our bike, is great, so I’m very, very happy,” said Bagnaia.

He has won his last two completed races — at Jerez and Mugello — but was visibly angry last weekend after crashing out of the German MotoGP, where Quartararo took the chequered flag.

“This time I would like to have a battle, to have a normal race and finish the race because it will be the main objective,” added Bagnaia.

Ducati bikes have been fastest in eight of the 11 final qualifying sessions this season, but the Italian manufacturer has struggled to get its riders to the line.

Bagnaia, runner-up to Quartararo last year, had looked poised to challenge for the title just a few weeks ago, but has since slipped to 91 points off the pace.

He took pole a week ago too but lost the lead to Quartararo at the first corner before suffering his fourth retirement of the campaign.

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Quartararo was quickest in Saturday’s final practice session, but Bagnaia pulled back in front in qualifying as he set another new lap record of 1min 31.504.

“Pecco has just been incredible, like usual in qualifying,” said Quartararo. “I did my best so I’m happy, our rhythm is good for tomorrow.

“It won’t be as important to get away first because we know we can also attack at the end of the race.”

Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia) and France’s Johann Zarco (Ducati-Pramac), second and third in the championship respectively, will set off in fifth and seventh place on Sunday.

After victories in Barcelona and Germany, Quartararo is chasing a third consecutive triumph heading into the summer break.

The 23-year-old has managed just one pole position in the first half of the season but is the only rider to place in the top 10 of every race so far.

Quartararo won at Assen last year and finished third in 2019.