MotoGP Germany Day 3: Martín Warns His Championship Lead Is at Risk
Jorge Martín admitted after Day 3 in Germany that his recent form on the Aprilia could cost him his MotoGP standings advantage if things do not improve.

Martín Sounds the Alarm at the Sachsenring
Jorge Martín did not mince words after the third day of the MotoGP German Grand Prix weekend. The Aprilia rider, currently holding the top spot in the world championship standings, admitted that his recent struggles on the bike are serious enough to threaten that position. According to reporting by Paddock GP, Martín stated plainly: "If I continue like this, I won't stay in the lead for long."
The comment is a rare public acknowledgment from a championship leader that something is genuinely wrong, not just a rough session or a setup tweak gone sideways. Martín, who carries the number 5 on his Aprilia, has been one of the defining riders of this MotoGP season, but the German weekend has exposed cracks that his rivals will have noted carefully.
What Is Going Wrong for the Aprilia Rider
The specific technical issues Martín is dealing with have not been detailed in full, but the broader picture is clear: he is not comfortable enough with the bike to extract the lap times his championship position demands. At a circuit like the Sachsenring, where rhythm and confidence through the long left-handers are critical, any disconnect between rider and machine tends to show up immediately in the timing sheets.
Martín's candid assessment suggests the problem is not isolated to a single session. His tone indicated a pattern he recognizes and is worried about. For a rider sitting at the top of the standings, that kind of self-awareness can be valuable, but it also signals that the Aprilia crew faces real work to turn the weekend around.
Championship Implications
The MotoGP title fight this season has been tight, and any points dropped at the Sachsenring could shift the dynamic significantly. Martín's rivals will be watching closely. A poor result in Germany would not just trim his lead in the standings, it would also hand momentum to whoever finishes ahead of him.
Riders chasing a championship lead rely on consistency above all else. Even a midfield finish, rather than a top-three result, can feel catastrophic when rivals are winning. Martín's public warning about his own form is, in that sense, a signal that he is treating this weekend with urgency rather than waiting to see how things unfold.
The Aprilia garage will need to find answers quickly. Sunday's race at the Sachsenring will determine whether Martín's alarm was a turning point or a preview of a difficult afternoon that shifts the title picture heading into the next round.
MotoGP Correspondent
Luca Moretti is 21.fun's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.










