Jorge Martin Admits Four-Second Gap to Jack Miller in Private Training
Jorge Martin has candidly revealed he loses around four seconds to Jack Miller when comparing their respective private training lap times, highlighting a notable physical performance gap.

Martin Opens Up on Training Time Deficit
Jorge Martin has made a candid admission about his physical conditioning, revealing that when he compares his private training times with those of Jack Miller, the gap between the two riders stands at roughly four seconds. The MotoGP world champion's frank disclosure underlines just how seriously elite riders track off-bike and off-track performance metrics as part of their preparation.
Speaking publicly about the comparison, Martin acknowledged the shortfall without hesitation, indicating the deficit is significant enough to serve as genuine motivation for improvement. While training lap times on motocross or enduro bikes are a common benchmark among MotoGP riders during downtime, a four-second margin represents a meaningful difference at that level of competition.
What the Gap Reveals About MotoGP Rider Preparation
Off-track training is a critical component of a MotoGP rider's season schedule, with many competitors using motocross, cycling, and other disciplines to maintain fitness and sharpen reflexes between race weekends. Comparing training times - even informally - gives riders and their coaching staff insight into relative physical conditioning and bike control under non-competitive settings.
For Martin, who claimed the premier class world title in 2024, the admission that Miller holds a clear advantage in this particular discipline demonstrates the depth of self-awareness the Spaniard brings to his preparation. Rather than downplaying the gap, Martin appears to be using it as a reference point for targeting improvement.
Miller, known for his aggressive riding style and strong off-road credentials, has long been regarded as one of the more naturally gifted motocross exponents among the MotoGP grid. His background and comfort on dirt-based disciplines arguably give him an edge in training environments that simulate raw bike handling.
Context and Implications for the Season Ahead
The revelation adds an interesting layer to how riders monitor each other's form outside of official sessions. While training times do not translate directly to race-day results - Martin's 2024 championship being the clearest evidence of that - they do offer a window into the physical benchmarks riders set for themselves.
Martin's willingness to publicly acknowledge a specific deficit also reflects the open culture that has developed within the MotoGP paddock around performance discussion. Far from treating the gap as an embarrassment, the reigning champion framed it matter-of-factly, suggesting he views such comparisons as useful data rather than a source of concern.
As the 2025 MotoGP season continues to unfold, all eyes will remain on Martin as he defends his title under new circumstances following his move to a new team environment. Whether the four-second training gap to Miller narrows over the coming months remains to be seen, but Martin's transparent approach to performance tracking suggests he will be working to close it.
Original reporting on this story was published by MotoGP News.
MotoGP Correspondent
Luca Moretti is 21.news's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.






