Yamaha’s star recruit put together a blinding stint to string together three sub-1m29s laps in a row, going 1m28.896s, then 1m28.927s, and then 1m28.847s.

While all three laps would have been more than enough to leave Vinales on top of the times at the end of the day, he still came out right at the end of the session and posted another two sub-29 laps – a 1m28.888s and a 1m28.863s.

Still, it was the third of that early stint that wound up being the benchmark time, Vinales sitting 0.462s clear of the field as play came to a close this evening.

Wednesday’s pacesetter Marc Marquez finished up second, despite finding more than a tenth overnight.

The Honda rider set his 1m29.309s at almost exactly the same time as Vinales was on his session-topping charge early in the day, and couldn’t improve at the end despite a number of laps in the mid-1m29s.

Cal Crutchlow was third quickest on the LCR Honda. Having been one of the first to venture into the 1m29s, replacing Ducati's Andrea Dovizioso on top of the times with a 1m29.661s effort right on the hour mark, Crutchlow improved to a 1m29.326s to slot in behind Vinales and Marquez.

Alvaro Bautista (Aspar Ducati) was the next in line with a 1m29.411s, followed by Dovizioso and Aleix Espargaro, who ran a new fairing on the Aprilia.

Unlike yesterday the string of riders to get under 1m30s ran right down to 12th place. Behind Espargaro it was Jonas Folger on the Tech 3 Yamaha, followed by Valentino Rossi (Yamaha), who was unable to replicate the last-minute heroics that saw him go second fastest on Wednesday.

Alex Rins, who trialled a new fairing on the Suzuki late in the day, was ninth fastest, with Jack Miller (Marc VDS Honda), Johann Zarco (Tech 3 Yamaha), and Andrea Iannone (Suzuki) all setting laps in the 1m29s bracket.

Dani Pedrosa, meanwhile, missed the majority of the day’s running due to a throat infection. The Honda rider didn’t appear on track until there was just under three hours of running to go, completing 38 laps and finishing up 16th with a 1m30.245s.

That was one place behind Jorge Lorenzo, who was 1.350s off the pace of Vinales aboard the second works Ducati in 15th place.

Day 2 times: