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Marc Márquez Says He’s Slowing Down, The Results Say Otherwise

Marc Márquez just said he’s in his “last dance” phase, with contract talks with Ducati moving along and another MotoGP season already throwing curveballs his way. The comments come from an interview picked up by Spanish outlet Motociclismo during a sponsor event in São Paulo.And honestly, the biggest takeaway here isn’t the results, the bike, or even the championship talk. It’s the tone.

Márquez isn’t talking like a guy planning a long runway anymore. He’s talking like someone who knows exactly how much runway he has left. In that interview, he lays it out pretty clearly. He says everything needs to be evaluated, that he’s “only 33,” but also admits the physical side is getting harder to manage day to day after multiple surgeries. Clearly, that's a big deal. Because on one hand, he’s still in his early 30s, still very much in his prime in terms of numbers. But on the other, his body has mileage that most riders never even come close to.

Then there’s the Rossi comparison. When asked if he sees himself racing into his 40s like The Doctor, he laughs it off and says not to worry, he won’t even make it to 40. It sounds like a joke, but it’s also one of the most honest lines in the whole interview. Not for us, but for himself.

Because here’s the thing. Márquez is still fast. In fact, he's arguably still one of the fastest guys on the grid. And now he’s on a Ducati Desmosedici GP26, which is basically the best tool in the paddock right now. He also confirms that renewal talks with Ducati are progressing well, even if there’s nothing finalized yet. That alone is interesting. If he really felt like the end was right around the corner, you wouldn’t expect active negotiations. So clearly, he still sees a short-term future worth committing to.

And then you look at what just happened in Brazil.

He wins the Sprint, beats Fabio Di Giannantonio straight up. Then comes Sunday, and he still brings it home in P4. Just off the podium, in a race where Aprilia locked out the top spots and the fight at the front was stacked. That matters because if this was really a rider on the way out, you wouldn’t be seeing that kind of consistency across a weekend. Sprint win, strong Grand Prix pace, right in the mix for the podium. That’s not nostalgia. That’s current form.

So this isn’t a decline story in the traditional sense. He’s not falling off a cliff. If anything, he’s put himself back in a position where winning is very real, and very important, again.

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At the same time, it’s also not 2014 anymore.

Back then, Márquez could crash on Friday, bounce back on Saturday, and win on Sunday like nothing happened. This version is different. Now, he's smarter, more measured, and very aware that every crash has a cost. That’s a big shift from the old “send it and sort it out later” Márquez.

So when he calls this his last dance, it’s not him saying he’s done winning. It’s him saying he knows this phase matters more than anything that came before it. He’s already got nine world titles. Seven of those in MotoGP. His legacy is locked in. Everything from here on out is extra. But it’s also the part where he’s got the least margin for error physically, and arguably the most competition he’s ever faced.

And yet, he’s still right there. One Sprint win, one P4, and very much in the fight.

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