Alex Márquez Races Solo as Gresini Skips Replacement at Sachsenring
**Alex Márquez** will be the sole rider for Gresini Racing at the Sachsenring weekend, after the team announced on **July 6, 2026** that injured teammate **Fermín Aldeguer** will miss the German Grand Prix and no replacement will be fielded.
Gresini posted a short statement on social media: “@Aldeguer54 remains sidelined as he continues his enforced recovery and will miss the Sachsenring round. No replacement rider will be fielded.” The team cited the short‑term nature of Aldeguer’s injury-a crash at Assen that re‑aggravated a lingering issue-as the reason they did not scramble for a stand‑in. Unlike larger factory outfits, Gresini does not keep a salaried reserve rider ready to jump in, so the empty pit box simply stayed that way.
Across the paddock, **Castrol Honda LCR** has been running **Cal Crutchlow** in place of **Johann Zarco**, who tore his ACL at Catalunya and is out until September. Crutchlow’s fifth appearance this season shows a different calculus: a longer‑term absence makes the expense of a dedicated bike setup worthwhile. Gresini’s choice reflects a cost‑benefit analysis for a one‑round miss, not a regulatory requirement.
Before the German round, Aldeguer and Márquez sit ninth and tenth in the riders’ standings, **78** and **76** points respectively-a two‑point gap that could widen dramatically if Aldeguer cannot score. At Assen, Márquez rode through “pain almost everywhere,” skipped Q2, started from the fourth row and still finished **fifth**, while Aldeguer did not start at all. The points swing at Sachsenring could turn a tight mid‑field battle into a decisive lead for Márquez.
Márquez will line up on his usual Gresini bike, likely starting from the back of the grid given the empty teammate slot. Without a second rider to share data, the crew will focus all setup work on Márquez’s preferences. Expect a determined push in the race; his Assen performance showed he can extract pace even when bruised. The German Grand Prix, held **July 11‑13, 2026**, will be a true test of how far a single rider can go when the team’s resources are concentrated on one machine.
If Aldeguer’s recovery drags beyond a single round, Gresini may reconsider keeping a reserve on standby, especially as the season heads into its final stretch. For now, the team appears comfortable letting the championship speak for itself, letting Márquez carry the banner while Aldeguer heals.
Márquez enters the Sachsenring as the lone Gresini rider, with a chance to climb the standings while his teammate watches from the sidelines. The decision not to replace Aldeguer underscores the financial realities of independent MotoGP teams and puts extra pressure on Márquez to deliver points in Germany.