Bezzecchi was a class apart from the rest of the field at the Buddh International Circuit last weekend, recovering from a sluggish start to win the grand prix by over eight seconds - the biggest victory margin seen in MotoGP this year.
The Italian lost positions to fellow Ducati riders Jorge Martin and Francesco Bagnaia with a poor getaway from pole, but was back in the lead by the end of the opening lap as he clinched his third Sunday win of the season - and the first since the French GP back in May.
The 24-year-old was also rapid in Saturday’s sprint after being hit by team-mate Luca Marini into Turn 1, charging his way through the pack to finish fifth.
Recounting MotoGP’s maiden visit to India, Bezzecchi said two scrappy 70-minute practice sessions on Friday where he went off multiple times in Turn 1 were key to his dominant Sunday ride, as he was able to understand the braking limitations of his year-old GP22 Ducati.
“I focused myself on braking because this track was tough for it,” he said. “It was a difficult condition to stop the bike, the front lock was a lot.
“And so I focused myself a lot on braking because normally Pecco, Jorge make the difference on that part of the track, of every track.
“On Friday I made a lot of mistakes, I went straight or wide many times but that was just to find the limit, and once I found it I was able to move it a little bit forward and this gave me the possibility to be very fast.
“So Saturday I already felt amazing with the bike and I started to see that I was able to make more difference compared to other riders, but Jorge was impressive. So today wasn't easy.
“To win is always beautiful so by one thousand but by eight or nine seconds is even better, so I can't complain.”
Bezzecchi took less than a full lap to regain the lead of the race after dropping to third at the start, passing Martin when the Pramac rider went wide at Turn 4 before sending his Ducati up the inside of Bagnaia going into the final corner.
The VR46 rider said it was important for him to run in clear air to conserve the front tyre on his GP22 and bounce back from his collision with Marini in the sprint race.
“On Saturday, I was strong, I was fast but unfortunately in the start I lost a lot of time [in the incident with Marini],” he said. “To bounce back like this was amazing.
Source: Autosport