Latin America

MotoGP: Marc Marquez claims Italian reporters attacked him at home

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

MotoGP: Marc Marquez claims Italian reporters attacked him at home
Defending MotoGP champion Marc Marquez says Italian reporters appeared at his home and 'shouted a series of insults' a week after his on-track incident with Valentino Rossi

MADRID, Spain – MotoGP world champion Marc Marquez has reported two Italian journalists to Spanish police after a scuffle broke out at the rider’s home in the Catalan town of Cervera on Friday, October 30.

The reporters from the “Le Iene” (The Hyenas) program targeted Marquez in the aftermath of his high-profile crash with 9-time Italian world champion Valentino Rossi.

Marquez was kicked off his bike by Rossi in a tense Malaysian Grand Prix last weekend.

“Yesterday a series of unfortunate incidents took place in Cervera,” Marquez’s representatives said in a statement on Saturday.

“A group of people appeared at the rider’s home and shouted a series of insults, acted in a ridiculous and humiliating way towards the rider himself and even pushed and assaulted his closest relatives.

“Given the seriousness of these actions, such acts have been reported and the normal course of criminal proceedings will be followed against such persons.”

(READ: Rossi-Marquez feud has ‘poisoned’ MotoGP, says chief)

However, journalists Stefano Corti and Alessandro Onnis claimed they were the ones that had been injured and had their cameras broken.

“We arrived in the vicinity of the dwelling of the parents of the pilot where we met Marc Marquez, his father, his brother and a friend,” they posted on the Le Iene official Facebook page alongside a picture of the broken cameras.

“We were attacked and in the struggle they broke the camera and took the video card.”

Rossi leads the championship standings by 7 points from Yamaha teammate Jorge Lorenzo, but was sanctioned for the season’s final Grand Prix in Valencia next weekend in which he will start from the back of the grid as punishment for kicking out at Marquez.

However, that penalty has been suspended pending Rossi’s appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport with a final decision not expected until 48 hours before the race on Friday.

The spat between Rossi and Marquez began when the former claimed the Spaniard was conspiring against him to help compatriot Lorenzo land the title. – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!