
Malaysia’s Hakim Danish Leads Moto3 Practice as Veda Ega Pratama Falters at Brno
The opening free practice for the Czech Grand Prix delivered a sharp contrast for Southeast Asian riders, with Indonesia’s championship hopeful Veda Ega Pratama finishing 22nd while Malaysia’s Hakim Danish set the fastest time.
The first free practice session for the Moto3 Czech Grand Prix at the Automotodrom Brno ended with Malaysia’s Hakim Danish atop the timesheets, while Indonesia’s Veda Ega Pratama languished in 22nd place. Danish produced a late surge to clock 2 minutes 4.938 seconds, a time that proved unbeatable as the session closed. Veda Ega, by contrast, could not sustain the early promise that briefly placed him 13th; his best lap of 2:07.544 left him over 2.6 seconds adrift of the leader and near the bottom of the 26-rider field.
The session unfolded with a flurry of changes at the front. Spanish riders Maximo Quiles and Marco Morelli traded the top spot early on, before Danish seized control in the final three minutes. David Almansa finished second, 0.308 seconds behind, with Alvaro Carpe third. Veda Ega’s descent was gradual: after a promising start, he slipped to 20th, then 21st, and finally 22nd as rivals improved. Viewed from Jakarta, the result left the Indonesian rider with significant ground to make up before Sunday’s race.
Veda Ega arrived in Brno after a Hungarian round in which a long lap penalty contributed to a 16th-place finish, his first point-less race of the season. That result dropped him three places to sixth in the championship standings, with 71 points. “After Balaton Park, where the result was not what we expected, I am looking forward to the next challenge,” he said ahead of the weekend. The 17-year-old acknowledged that Brno, a circuit he has never raced on, would demand rapid adaptation. “The most important thing is that we learned a lot from last weekend, especially about adapting quickly to a new circuit and managing difficult situations during the race.”
The Brno circuit, at 5.4 kilometres with pronounced elevation changes and a flowing layout, is known to be demanding for newcomers. Hiroshi Aoyama, manager of Honda Team Asia, cautioned that the expected hot conditions would add a physical toll. “This is a very long and beautiful circuit,” Aoyama said. “The first goal is to understand the layout quickly and build confidence session by session.” For Veda Ega, the immediate task is to recover pace in the afternoon Practice session, which determines direct entry to the second qualifying segment. Only the top 14 riders from Practice advance automatically to Q2; the rest must fight through Q1.
The weekend’s schedule continues with qualifying on Saturday and the 16-lap race on Sunday. For Veda Ega, a strong result is essential to halt his slide in the standings and remain in contention for the Moto3 title. Danish’s early speed placed a Malaysian rider at the top of the timesheets, a notable result in a category where Southeast Asian riders are increasingly competitive, adding another dimension to the intra-Asian rivalry that has quietly animated the lower tiers of grand prix racing.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 1 languages
Southeast Asian outlets closely track their riders' fortunes. Indonesia's Veda Ega Pratama showed early promise but slipped to 22nd in FP1; the team and rider remain upbeat about recovering. Honda's manager urges quick adaptation to the unfamiliar Brno circuit, while Malaysia's Hakim Danish tops the session, boosting regional pride.
Continental European press frames the Brno weekend as a routine MotoGP stop, focusing entirely on the premier class. Moto3 practice sessions are ignored; all attention goes to Marc Marquez, Bezzecchi, and the championship battle. The tone is technical, offering only practical details on schedules and TV coverage.
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