Philipp Oettl ended an eight-year wait for a World Championship victory on Sunday at Assen, winning a slippery, red-flagged WorldSSP Race 2 that rewarded cool heads and correct tyre calls over raw pace.
Rain fell on the TT Circuit before the lights went out and every rider in the field gambled on slicks despite damp patches littering the 4.5-kilometre Dutch venue. The gamble was the right one, but the opening laps were cagey and the lead changed hands repeatedly as riders hunted for grip.
It was the German's decisive second-half stint that made the difference. Alessandro Zaccone, Can Oncu and Jaume Masia all spent spells at the front, but on lap 10 Oettl dived up the inside of Oncu into Turn 1 and refused to look back. When Roberto Garcia crashed at Turn 5 with six laps to go, the red flags flew — and because the race had covered more than two-thirds distance, the classification was called at the previous lap.
Oettl, who last stood on top of a World Championship rostrum in Moto3 at Sachsenring in 2018, took the flag as a first-time WorldSSP winner. In the aftermath he credited the tyre gamble and his ability to read the track as it dried.
"Yesterday I struggled a little bit with the long lap and also I struggled a little bit with the tire," Oettl said. "Today we tried a different tire choice and I tried to be smart, try to push when I was in front."
He was cautious about declaring the race his own before the red-flag call arrived, but by that stage his Ducati Panigale V2 was already edging clear.
"Then suddenly the red flag came out, let's say just in the right right moment. But I had the feeling that I could push away a little bit, and I was in control. The bike was super fast and I felt comfortable, and also with the zero tyre I felt more secure, more stable compared to yesterday."
Albert Arenas crossed the line 0.403 seconds down in second, continuing the consistent start to the season that has kept him squarely in the championship fight. Turkey's Can Oncu — needing a win to kick-start his title charge after a muted opening — settled for his first podium of the season in third, with Tom Booth-Amos fourth ahead of Zaccone.
Championship leader Jaume Masia endured a scrappy afternoon on his way to sixth, and his advantage at the top of the standings has been trimmed to a single point over Arenas. Oettl's dream Sunday moves him to third overall, leapfrogging Stefano Valentin in the standings.
For the German, the win closes a long chapter of near-misses and resurrects a story that had drifted close to the margins. "I'm really looking forward to the next round and to see race by race," he said. After eight years waiting, he can finally take that approach from the top step.
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*Originally published on [Motorsports Global](https://motorsports.global/article/oettl-ends-eight-year-drought-with-maiden-worldssp-win-at-assen). Visit for full coverage.*
