almost any circumstance.
Or are they?
I delved deeper, starting with
Marc Marquez, for whom 2023 is
surely make or break, as he turns
30. Coming back from three
years of injury hell on a Honda
that during that time has gone
from paragon to poltroon, he is
running out of chances and fac
-
ing that inevitable tide of preco-
cious young talent.
Luckily,
his horoscope (culled
with thanks from Astrotalk.
com) promises "some days and
events [wherein you can] work on
yourself to achieve better things
in the year ahead." He is enjoined
to "put all your efforts in the
right places." Like sorting out the
Honda.
Spookily, the Mars transit "will
also fix things that were running
off-track the previous year." In
Marc's case literally so.
And, "...in the third quarter the
missing pieces of your puzzle
will be right in front of your eyes."
Encouraging news.
Although since all the same
also applies to Jorge Martin, who
has a big point to prove stuck on
the satellite Pramac Ducati after
missing out on promotion to the
factory squad, Marc will also
need to keep looking over his
shoulder.
Sharing the omens applies
in particular to Capricorn Enea
Bastianini who took the factory
D
o you believe in magic?
Me neither. And astrology?
Was going to say the same
again. But as so often a little
delve into the woo-woo world of
star signs reveals some slightly
creepy nuggets among the piles
of platitudes and gallons of guff.
Consider this line, which
applies to Alex Rins, the only
Sagittarian of the dozen-strong
gang of MotoGP riders who have
already won or are likely to win
a race: "Don't fly too high … stay
away from risky ways to have a
great life."
Ooof. Could have sleepless
nights thinking about that.
Well, horoscopes are like
that. Written in such a way to fit
P102
CN
III IN THE PADDOCK
BY MICHAEL SCOTT
WHO WILL BE
CHAMPION IN
2023? THE STARS
KNOW BEST