Perfect conditions greeted the MotoGP paddock for the opening practice at Le Mans, with Suzuki’s Rins pertinently setting the early pace on the team’s first race weekend since the shock news of its decision to quit the series at the end of 2022.
With track conditions already at a good level, lap times continued to tumble across the session as Rins improved to a 1m32.545s 10 minutes in.
Maverick Vinales – winner at Le Mans in 2017 with Yamaha – took over from Rins with a 1m32.418s moments later on his Aprilia, before Jack Miller went faster on his Ducati.
Last year’s Le Mans race winner Miller would regain the top spot from Fabio Quartararo with 25 minutes remaining with a 1m32.101s, before he beat his own lap in the final five minutes with a 1m31.961s.
Most of the field elected against fitting fresh rubber for the closing moments of FP1, but lap times remained strong despite this.
Home hero Quartararo shot to the top of the order on his Yamaha with a 1m31.912s, but would be denied ending FP1 fastest of all by Honda’s Espargaro.
Espargaro guided the Honda – which typically works well in high-grip conditions – to a 1m31.771s, while Rins shadowed him 0.109 seconds behind in second.
Spanish GP winner Francesco Bagnaia completed the top three on the factory Ducati ahead of Quartararo and Aprilia’s Aleix Espargaro, who debuted a new shoulder onboard camera this morning.
Mir was sixth on the second of the Suzukis ahead of Miller and Vinales, with another home favorite in Johann Zarco ninth on his Pramac Ducati.
VR46 Ducati rider Luca Marini rounded out the top 10 from Takaaki Nakagami on the LCR Honda and Gresini Ducati’s Enea Bastianini, who was one of five riders to crash in FP1.
Bastianini slid off his bike in the opening stages, but remounted to complete 18 laps, while KTM endured a bruising 45 minutes.
Brad Binder took a tumble at Turn 3 just under 15 minutes into FP1, while factory teammate Miguel Oliveira had two tumbles – once at Turn 10 with 17 minutes to go, with the second at Turn 6 10 minutes later.
Compounding KTM’s misery was Tech 3 rookie Raul Fernandez, who fell from his RC16 at Turn 10 with 15 minutes remaining as he makes his return from the wrist injury which ruled him out of the last two races.
Yamaha’s Franco Morbidelli was the final faller in FP1, with the Italian left down in 20th ahead of Oliveira, Tech 3 duo Remy Gardner and Fernadez, with Binder ahead in 18th.
Marc Marquez had a low-key start to his French GP weekend in the 13th, though was only 0.495s off the pace and managed a remarkable save at the Turn 8 right-hander when he ran wide on the kerb and tucked the front-end of his Honda.
FP2 for the 2022 French GP will get underway at 2:10pm local time.
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