Six-time MotoGP world champion Marquez was forced to sit out last Sunday’s Mandalika race after suffering a concussion on a violent highside crash in the warm-up session.
Aleix Espargaro was following the Honda rider at the time of his Turn 1 crash and got “really scared”.
On the Saturday, Espargaro had two similarly big rear-end scares and decided to stiffen his Aprilia’s rear brake so that it basically did nothing when he stepped on it to avoid the rear coming round on him in a similarly spectacular fashion.
“I was two seconds behind him and I saw him fly,” Espargaro told DAZN of Marquez’s horrifying accident.
“I got really scared and actually cut the gas because I saw him on the ground like a dummy.
“When I got back to the box I told my guys that I had never seen a crash like that in my life.
“On Saturday I had two very big scares at that same point.
“And that's why I decided to play with the rear brake spring [I stiffened it], so that when I stepped on it, it practically didn't act; it was false.
“When I saw Marc's crash I remembered that.”
Honda riders had suffered rear grip problems all throughout the Indonesia weekend, as concerns about tyre safety in February’s Mandalika pre-season test prompted Michelin to bring a construction from 2018 to the event.
The old tyre carcass was designed to better manage extreme temperatures, but some manufacturers suffered horribly from a lack of rear traction.
As a result, Honda’s Pol Espargaro admitted on Saturday after qualifying 16 – having topped the February test – that he wasn’t sure he would even finish the race, because the lack of rear grip was forcing him to over-stress the front.
In the wet Indonesian GP, Pol Espargaro struggled to 12th, while his brother Aleix was ninth on the Aprilia having had early contact with LCR’s Alex Marquez.