Jorge Martin and track limits...
The climax to Sunday's thrilling Austri♏an Moto3 Grand Prix saw Jorge Martin grab the final podium place from Livio Loi byꦦ just 0.008s.
However, just before reaching the chequered flag🍃, the Gresi🍰ni Honda rider crossed the white line running along the side of the track.
On Monday, during the private Moto2 and Moto3 test at the Red Bull Ring, MotoGP Race Director Mike Webb explained wh𒁃y Martin's move was not a penalty offence:

The🦩 climax to Sunday's thrilling Austrian Moto3 Grand Prix saw Jorge Martin grab the final podium place from Livio Loi by just 0.008s.
However, just before reaching the chequered flag, the Gresini Honda rider crossed the white li☂ne running along the side of the tra🌄ck.
On Monday, during 🎶the private Moto2 and Moto3 test at the Red Bull Ring, MotoGP Race Director Mike Webb explained why Martin's move was not a pe🥃nalty offence:
"A white line near the side of the 𝓰track is not necessarily a 'track limit', so there is not an automatic pen🍸alty. But what you can't do is exceed a kerb.
"🎃Kerbs are in places where people can gain time. The area beyond the ker🔯b is usually painted green and you can't go further than the outside edge of the kerb.
"But if you happen to wobble down a straight piece of track and go outside of a white line -☂ and there is not a ker꧋b there - that is not seen as a place where you can take an advantage."
Jorge Martin crosses white line at endඣ of the race. No penalty as no kerbing, which is placed where time can be gained.
— mahbx.com MotoGP (@crash_motogp)
'Exceeding track limits'
'Lap time cancelled for exceeding track limits' is a message frequently seen on the timing screen🦂s during practice and qualifying of a grand prix weekend. In a race situation, the same offence can mean a rider being forced to drop posit𓃲ion(s) or the addition of a post-race time penalty.
"The protocol for tracks limits is; if you take advantage by going out of the track - meaning you gain a 💛position or gain time - that's an automatic penalty," Webb explained. "Typica🌸lly a change of position or a time penalty, if it happens at the end of the race.
"If you go outside of theﷺ track limits and lose time, it's ignored.
"But what often happens is you go outside of the kerb and onto the green paint, but there is no way to decide i🌼f you gained or lost. There is no measurable advantage or disadvantage. That's what we call 'track limits' and we've go𝐆t two or three full-time people watching for it.
"During practice and qualifying the lap 🤪time is cancelled, even if you didn't gain an advantage by going outside the kerb.
"In the race, it's a cas♉e that the asphalt 🐽run-offs are there for safety. If you make a mistake, go on the run-off and lost time, that's fine.
"If we can't determine that 🍸you lost or gained time - you stayed in the same position with the same relative gap to other riders - then okay, it was a mistake.
"But if you then do it two or three times…
"There are no hard and fast rules. What we decide is case-by-case and circuit-by-circuit because it depends on factors such as, where it is and what possible advantage you can get. Was it clearly 🦋a better run for the next corner, for example?
"So what we do 🃏is keep a running count of everyone who has been out of the track limit during a race and where they have done it. When it reaches the stage of what we consider 'you shouldn't be doing this', they get a 'track limits' warning on their dashboard. If they do it once or twice more after that, they get a penalty.
"So even if there is no💝 clear-cut advantage; if you've run off too many times, you get a penalty. That's where we are at and everyone understands that."

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 ye🌃ars and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.