Marc Marquez has raced out of the blocks by winning all four races to begin the 2025 MotoGP season with Ducati.
Already he holds a 16-point lead in the MotoGP riders’ standings and it doesn’t look like there is anyone capable of challenging him on a consistent basis.
Marquez knows what it takes to win a championship, having claimed six of them between 2013 and 2019 with Honda.
Now he has been paired with the dominant Ducati outfit, it’s pretty clear that unless teammate Francesco Bagnaia steps up, he could be running away with the crown.
Marquez is yet to face a ‘true test’ in 2025, but when he does it could be a feisty affair. The entire grid will be desperate to stop him.
After working hard over the winter, Jack Miller called Marquez’s body ‘a racehorse’ after improvements in his physique. It may have made him even stronger.

Jack Miller ‘wouldn’t like’ to see Marc Marquez win every MotoGP race in 2025
Two races into the season and Marquez already has his rivals fearing him achieving one incredible feat on his new bike.
Is it possible that he could go 44/44 and win every single race this season? His rivals do not want to see that sort of domination.
Pramac’s Miller has spoken about the possibility of the Spaniard making such a record come true. He wasn’t overly enthusiastic about it.
“If he dominates the whole year and does a Jett Lawrence and has a perfect season, no, I wouldn’t like to see that. But, I don’t think it’ll happen. I could be wrong,” he said.
Claudio Domenicali says Marquez ‘wasn’t right’ for Ducati in 2023 after snubbing him for a move to the Italian team sooner.
He may be looking on with regret that they didn’t sign him sooner after witnessing his recent form. He’s imperious currently.
READ MORE: What people ‘around’ Valentino Rossi are saying about Marc Marquez after perfect start at Ducati
Marc Marquez made a ‘worrying’ admission about Ducati’s bike at the Argentina Grand Prix
Following on from another dominant weekend in Termas de Rio Hondo, Marquez made a ‘worrying’ admission about his Ducati bike.
He wasn’t totally comfortable with the GP25. If he is as quick as he is currently without having full confidence, how fast will he be when he adjusts?
The upcoming Grand Prix of the Americas is a very strong track for the 32-year-old. He has won there seven times in total.
If form and past results are anything to go by, he should be 6/6 in 2025 MotoGP races after the weekend in Austin, unless he receives some poor reliability luck.
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