Tag Archives: 2022 MotoGP

KTM launch 2022 MotoGP efforts

2022 Red Bull KTM Factory Racing & Tech3 KTM Factory Racing line-up


KTM return to MotoGP in 2022 with the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing and Tech3 KTM Factory Racing teams each fielding two riders on board the RC16, with Brad Binder, Miguel Oliveira looking to improve upon a successful 2021 season. While MotoGP rookies Raul Fernandez and Remy Gardner form the Tech3 assault for 2022.

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing set their sights on 2022 GP wins after being one of only three teams where both riders tasted victory last year.

Losail International Circuit on March 6th will kick off the season as for the sixteenth consecutive year the Grand Prix of Qatar will open the MotoGP World Championship, with 2022 marking only the sixth season that KTM are on the MotoGP grid.

Tech3 KTM Factory Racing

Losail was the scene of their very first full-time MotoGP appearance in 2016, with the manufacturer having since surged to the forefront with five Grand Prix victories and 12 podium appearances since.

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing will welcome Francesco Guidotti into the role of Team Manager for 2022, with the Italian overseeing former Moto3 and Moto2 teammates Binder and Oliveira together on the rider roster.

Francesco Guidotti, Red Bull KTM Factory Racing Team Manager

“It is always important to do better than the previous year. To do better we need more consistent results, more consistency in the top five and on the podium. We have to develop the bike to make the riders happy, to give them the right feeling and confidence to achieve these results. Of course, their position is an important one because they need to show the potential of the bike and the project. They have 2-3 years experience in this category now so maybe it is the right moment to use this experience. They have already won some races so the ability and the potential is there ,so we have to see it more regularly. In the last five years the results have been incredible; starting from zero like KTM did and what they achieved is unbelievable and we want to keep it going.”

Miguel Oliveira

Guidotti will bring his former experience to a refined set-up that will focus on results, with the KTM testing team – led by Dani Pedrosa and Mika Kallio – spearheading development of the KTM RC16 away from Grand Prix.

Binder (26-years-old, 17 career wins, two in MotoGP) meanwhile prepares for his third MotoGP season, all with Red Bull KTM Factory Racing.

Brad Binder

“I’ve learnt so much over the last two seasons it’s difficult just to pick a couple things in particular. I think each year has come with it’s own sets of challenges:in my first I had to manage my expectations a bit. I often wanted toomuch, too soon and made a lot of mistakes.Last year I had to accept where we were at some points andtry and bring the bike home, which was difficult but I learnt a lot last year: I learned so much more about the category, how to save my tires better, how to manage races and I enjoyed it a lot actually. So, I’m going in to my third season understanding what I need to do to go faster and I’m looking forward to getting the year started. I’m more ready than I’ll ever be.”

Brad Binder and Miguel Oliveira

Oliveira (27, 15 career wins and three in the premier class) entered MotoGP a year earlier but is currently the most prolific of the quartet and has walked the podium five times in three campaigns, all with the KTM RC16.

Miguel Oliveira

“Last year we had a huge step forward in four races where I scored three podiums and one win so that was quite nice. Then with the injury in the second half of the season the races became really tough: it was definitely a learning curve for me. I lacked consistency and of course this season I’d like to improve that. It’s never easy to go to the limit and still think about finishing the race. I would say if I’m able to score points in every GP then at the end of the championship the result might be quite different, so we’re just looking to take the maximum potential of myself, of the bike, of the whole crew and translate that into results.”

Miguel Oliveira

KTM second duo of factory riders is thanks to a four-year collaboration with the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing Team.

Remy Gardner

Hervé Poncharal’s knowledgeable and decorated outfit will again help to induct two exciting new recruits: Moto2 World Champion Remy Gardner (23-years-old and six career victories) and 2021 runner-up Raul Fernandez (21 and 10 triumphs in two classes). Both riders came through elements of KTM’s GP Academy and Aki Ajo’s fabled set-up in both the Moto2 and Moto3 divisions.

Remy Gardner
Remy Gardner

“I am thrilled to start my first season in the MotoGP class. This is the dream of every motorcycle racer and I cannot wait to get started. We already had a few tests in 2021 that were encouraging, so I am very excited to improve myself, continue to discover the bike, and be able to learn about this amazing class with so many talented riders.I am also looking forward to working again with Tech3, getting along with the team, and continuing the relationship with KTM. This is going to be a long,but interesting year. I know it won’t always be easy but I will always push, try and give the best of myself in order to get the best results we can without going too crazy. I will certainly take this season step by step, but I am very excited to start riding again.”

Remy Gardner
Raul Fernandez

“I am really happy to do my first MotoGP season and it is a great opportunity for me. I remember only three years ago I was competing in the Moto3 World Championship, and now here I am in the MotoGP class. It is an absolute pleasure. This winter, I prepared differently than previous years in order to gain muscle and get stronger. The MotoGP bike is so much more powerful. The braking is different… Everything requires more physical fitness, so I did motocross and road bike training, some cycling and running, and I feel ready. My main goal this season will be to advance and progress race by race, and enjoy myself in every single one of them.”

Raul Fernandez
Hervé Poncharal – Tech3 KTM Factory Racing Team Principal

“The new season is always an intense moment, exciting and emotional. 2022 is very special for us because we have the pleasure to welcome Remy Gardner and Raul Fernandez, who respectively finished first and second in the 2021 Moto2 World Championship.There has been a lot of work done this winter to prepare for the 2022 season, both on the bike and in the organization of the KTM MotoGP technical structure. The Tech3 KTM Factory Team has had a few changes of its own too. We are now impatient and ready to start. With two rookies, we don’t expect to win the championship, but our main target will be to win the Rookie of the Year title in the MotoGP class. We are hoping to do some strong finishes, Top 10 and why not Top 5? With riders like Remy and Raul, we have to dream high. Over the last years, rookies have reached podiums, so it can be us this year.”

Red Bull KTM Factory Racing and Tech3 KTM Factory Racing
Pit Beirer, KTM Motorsport Director

“2021 was the most successful motorsport season ever in our group. It is amazing what we have done in one year in the road racing paddock: winning the Moto3 world championship and the Moto2 world championship and finishing 6th in MotoGP. It is super-motivating for everything in the future. When you start a project like this in MotoGP you want to win a race one day and to say that sounds quite simple but to actually do it is such an incredible effort from so many people involved. We did it. It’s on paper, but we also had to learn it the hard way; you win one weekend in that class but the next weekend you are fighting to qualify for Q2 because it is just so tight. The target for us now is to be there consistently every weekend, get in that top five and fight for the podium at the end of season standings. That must be the goal for this season. I know it is a very high one because the other manufacturers have ambitious targets as well but we are strong now: we have the team, the base, the bike and we have the riders.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

Gresini Racing Moto2 Launch

Gresini Racing Moto2 2022


Following the presentation of Gresini Racing’s MotoGP team, it has now unveiled the Gresini Racing’s Moto2 liveries. The middleweight category gives young riders the opportunity to showcase their talent and a springboard to their future, with 2022 the year Nadia Padovani Gresini wanted to reconfirm this project, led by her son Luca as Team Manager.

Gresini Racing’s Moto2 livery breaks cover

The reveal introduces new livery, a new identifying colour for the Gresini family and two new riders: Alessandro Zaccone and Filip Salač.

Zaccone had a great season in MotoE last year, leading the standings until the final round of the season; he is not new to the Moto2 class as he raced previously in the same category albeit in the CEV championship.Alessandro Zaccone

Alessandro Zaccone #61

“It will be my first year in the Moto2 World Championship so the most important thing will be to try to learn the new tracks as quickly as possible: the first four ones are going to be a little bit tough for me, but I can’t wait to try! The winter break has always been a long suffering, but this year it really seemed never ending, perhaps because it was difficult to find a Moto2. It’s like a dream that is about to come true, we just have to wait for the tests. In the meantime, I’m training at the gym as well as doing some motocross and Supermoto riding, trying to get back to full fitness after last year’s injury. We are almost there, so I am confident!”

Alessandro Zaccone

Filip moves up from Moto3, where he proved to be rider but his growth in terms of height ended up preventing him to fully express his talent.

Filip Salac #12

“Everything will be new for me after a difficult year in Moto3, I was too tall for that bike. This winter I trained with a bike more similar to Moto2 and I can say that I feel much more comfortable. It will be a new adventure for me and I will have to gain a lot of experience, I will do everything possible to learn quickly and I will always give my best. I really miss the action on track, but I will have to hold on a little longer for the February tests, I can’t wait to work with the team again, I had a lot of fun with them in the first test! While waiting, I’m concentrating on training at the gym, I need to strengthen my muscles and adapt them to the Moto2 which has a different structure. But to be honest, I like this kind of training even more!”

Filip Salac

The #12 (Filip) and #61 (Alessandro) bikes will be back on track for the first time this year in February for the Jerez test, which will allow the boys to familiarise themselves with their Kalex machine and get to know better the team they will tackle the season with.

Luca Gresini – Team Manager

“I am really happy with the Moto2 2022 team, a young project in the hands of young riders. In fact, we chose two rookies in the world category, Zaccone had already competed in the same category but in the CEV with the Honda 600, where he showed he can go really fast and he confirmed his talent also in 2021 with the excellent results achieved in MotoE. Filip is also a very promising guy, he has grown a lot in the last years in Moto3, despite being hampered by his height. He did some good races proving he can compete with the leading group. With this light-blue bike on the track they will see us for sure, it is a strange color that over the season everyone will like more and more.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

Repsol Honda Team confirm Marc Marquez for Sepang Test

Marc Marquez is back

Marc Marquez has been cleared to make his on-track return with the new Honda RC213V and the Repsol Honda Team at the Sepang Test on February 05, 2022.

Throughout the winter Marquez has had continual medical checks and consultations to monitor his diplopia. In recent weeks the improvements in his condition saw his medical team deem his recovery sufficient to return to training on two wheels. The #93 first returned to the motocross track before trying the Honda RC213V-S in Portimao and a Honda CBR600RR in Aragon.

Last Monday, January 24, Marquez underwent another medical check which reconfirmed that the treatment has been a complete success and the eight-time World Champion is in a suitable condition to ride a MotoGP bike.

Therefore, it has been decided that Marquez will start his 2022 campaign at the first official MotoGP Test in Sepang before heading to Mandalika, Indonesia the following week. This will be Marquez’s first time back on a MotoGP machine since winning the 2021 Emilia Romagna GP ahead of Pol Espargaro.

The Repsol Honda Team will head to the first test of the new season at full strength with Marquez alongside Pol Espargaro, who enters his second year with the team.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Marc Marquez successfully back on track at Portimao

Another step towards full recovery made by Marquez


Marc Marquez has jumped back on the Honda RC213V-S in Portugal for a full day of riding, just a few days after getting back out on the motocross track as his recovery continues.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

For the first time since winning the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix on October 24, 2021, Marc Marquez was back on a closed race circuit as he continued to assess the development and improvement of his diplopia.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

Completing a total of 65 laps over the course of the day, Marquez and his team were able to further evaluate his current condition in the lead up to the 2022 MotoGP World Championship.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

The eight-time World Champion was first and foremost overjoyed to experience the thrill of riding again after his forced break. Marquez reported no major concerns with his diplopia during the day and was left pleased and optimistic with the day’s work.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

Attention now turns to the first pre-season test at the Sepang International Circuit in early February, Marquez working to be fit and ready to return to his Repsol Honda Team RC213V.

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

“I am feeling very happy, first to be back on a bike at the track and also because we were able to confirm the sensations I had on a motocross bike here with the road bike. It’s a great feeling, a feeling of relief because when I was riding, I didn’t have any discomfort with my vision. Since I haven’t ridden in so long, I did notice some physical areas where I’m missing a little bit but this is just because I have not been able to have my usual pre-season. There’s a margin to improve but the positive and the fundamental take away from this test was to reconfirm the feeling we had when we first got on the motocross bike and to enjoy the good feeling of speed. I have completed an intense day of riding with long runs, I am very happy with the results. We have two weeks until testing begins in Sepang so I will take the opportunity to intensify my physical preparation and train on the bike.”

Marc Marquez
Marc Marquez

What is Diplopia?

Diplopia is the simultaneous perception of two images of a single object that may be displaced horizontally or vertically in relation to each other.  Also called double vision, it is a loss of visual focus under regular conditions, and is often voluntary. However, when occurring involuntarily, it results in impaired function of the extraocular muscles, where both eyes are still functional, but they cannot turn to target the desired object.  Problems with these muscles may be due to mechanical problems, disorders of the neuromuscular junction, disorders of the cranial nerves that innervate the muscles, and occasionally disorders involving the supranuclear oculomotor pathways or ingestion of toxins. Diplopia can be one of the first signs of a systemic disease, particularly to a muscular or neurological process, nd it may disrupt a person’s balance, movement, or reading abilities.

Diplopia definition taken from Wiki

Source: MCNews.com.au

Team Gresini officially launch 2022 MotoGP Team in Faenza

Team Gresini Racing MotoGP 2022

Team Gresini Racing MotoGP was presented via streaming worldwide today; the team, which was founded and ‘raised’ by Fausto Gresini, returns to the premier class of MotoGP as an independent team after seven years of absence in this role.

Team Gresini Racing MotoGP 2022
Nadia Padovani Gresini

We’re finally presenting a project we strongly believed in and one we have been working non-stop for during the last year. We’re very motivated and we ended up being the first MotoGP team to present itself; plus, I believe our bikes are beautiful – and I hope all the others will like them, too. I would like to think Fausto is looking at us from above and that is proud of his family. There is almost no distinction between natural and work families, we’re one. I must say that I saw both Diggia and Enea in great shape and eager to start: we’re aiming at being among the protagonists and show up at the parc fermé sometimes.”

This project is led by team owner Nadia Padovani Gresini and supported by Gresini Racing’s core; this season will witness the return with Enea Bastianini, who already stepped on the podium last year with Ducati, as he joins fellow Italian and MotoGP rookie Fabio Di Giannantonio.

Team owner Nadia Padovani Gresini with riders Enea Bastianini and Fabio Di Giannantonio.

Fabio Di Giannantonio will be the first to take to the track in Sepang’s first test, which is reserved exclusively to the MotoGP rookies. On-track action will get underway on January 31st with a three-day ‘shakedown’ where the light blue-liveried team will be already among the protagonists.

Fabio Di Giannantonio
Fabio Di Giannantonio

2022 is just around the corner. It will be my first season in MotoGP and it will be so cool! I will have a lot to learn, my expectation is to grow race by race and who knows, we’ll may be able to collect even some great achievements. In a bit we’ll be back on track for the test, we’re going in Malaysia and Indonesia is following. I can’t wait to ride again this beautiful beast. The winter break is always too long, I’m counting the days, the hours! And the bike is spectacular, maybe the most beautiful I’ve ever ride, the most beautiful I’ve ever seen. With that unique main color it looks like a bike of the 70’s, retrò style, on track we’ll be recognizable for sure. Particular, original, Beautiful. A unique emotion“.

Fabio Di Giannantonio

Both riders will race aboard the Ducati Desmosedici GP21 in 2022, a bike they were able to get a glimpse of last November at Jerez de la Frontera. Bastianini has already proved he can be extremely competitive with his new bike, while Di Giannantonio has shown great signs for the upcoming debut season.

Enea Bastianini
Enea Bastianini

The new colours of the bike are very particular, when I saw it first it appears a little strange to me, but now that I see it live I can say it is amazing. Such a great bike can’t be but fast! In about twenty days we’ll be leaving for the tests, luckily it is just a short time because I’m way too excited to be back on my Ducati. I already met the team during the first test: we had the chance to know each other better and to work together, and I can firmly say that I have a super team. I think it is going to be a very interesting season, I’m sure we’ll achieve great results. I can’t wait for the season to begin!”

Enea Bastianini

The Gresini bikes will join the Pramac, VR46 and official Factory Ducati squads to make up an unprecedented eight strong attack by the Italian manufacturer in 2022.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Joel Kelso’s road to the Moto3 World Championship

Joel Kelso’s road to the Moto3 World Championship


Aussie Joel Kelso made waves in the FIM CEV Repsol Moto3 Junior World Championship this year, having just claimed another win in Misano, and is now set to move to the Moto3 World Championship for 2022.

Joel Kelso - Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 - Misano
Joel Kelso – Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 – Misano

However his racing career started here in Australia, with a special bond with an aspiring team owner. At 10-years-old Kelso, born in Brisbane, moved to Darwin, Northern Territory, with his mum Nayelle and little sister. While clear he had talent, Nayelle could only take her son so far in his racing career on her own.

It was only after a chance encounter with Jake Skate – current ASBK team manager of ProGP Racing Junior Team by JDS Moto – who was a young mechanic and aspiring team owner from Victoria, that the duo set their plan into motion.

In 2013 with limited funds, an excess of talent and raw passion, the two set out to take on the world of motorsport racing. The team of Kelso and Skate gelled quickly and scored their first Championship in 2014 with the MRRDA 70 cc Championship.

By 12, Kelso was fighting for what would end up being his second road race title in Australia, this time in the 80 cc Junior Championship, an event that would also produce one of the duo’s more hilarious moments together.

Joel Kelso and Jake Skate in 2015
Joel Kelso and Jake Skate in 2015

With the last race of the round determining the Championship at Winton Motor Raceway, Kelso practiced the pass he would make on Scott Nicholson on the final lap to see if he could, in his own words – “slipstream Scotty to the line or pass on the corner”.

The move stuck, and Kelso tucked in down the straight to ‘focus on the last lap.’ Unbeknownst to himself, the chequered flag had been waved, and the race won. Footage from the day shows a depleted Nicholson sitting up and throwing his hands in disappointment.

It was then that racing commentator David Johnson began to piece together that Kelso had no clue the Championship title was his as he went on a flying lap around the circuit.

After completing what is potentially an in-lap record at Winton, Kelso remembers seeing the red flag on the final corner and rolling into the pits towards an elated Skate.

“What happened to Scotty?” Kelso asked in confusion. “He came into the pits, like every other rider,” Skate recalls telling him through ecstatic laughs. They had just won their second Australian Championship together.

Their third Championship win on Australian soil was in the Moto3 class in 2017 as part of the Australian Superbike Championship.

Joel Kelso in ASBK in 2017 - Image by TBG
Joel Kelso in ASBK in 2017 – Image by TBG

“I remember going into the race at Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit knowing we had to win. We had great speed, we were at lap record speed, we were going for it. I entered Siberia, and I hit the brakes, crashing with no warning and figured that was the championship over,” shared Kelso.

As fate would have it, only mere moments later he saw another bike sliding past him, only to realise it was his championship rival Dylan Whiteside.

“I knew I had to quickly get up and go riding, Dylan went and grabbed my bike, and I went and grabbed his.

The championship wasn’t over, and he was still in the fight.

“That Saturday night, we made a bet,” Skate said. “At the time, we didn’t know that Dylan wasn’t going to race the next day.”

The bet being that, if Kelso won the Championship, Skate would get Kelso’s racing number 66 tattooed on him. Skate lost that bet.

Kelso and Barton battling it out
Joel Kelso – Image by Half Light

There were limited junior road racing options before programs like the Oceania Junior Cup were introduced in 2019, and Kelso and his family were unsure of his racing future.

“I had a conversation with his (Kelso’s) mum, and she essentially said, ‘Just find what we are going to do, we need to do something’,” Skate remembers.

Skate decided shortly after he would take his race team JDS Moto, including both riders Kelso and teammate Jack Mahaffy, to Europe – he was 26 at the time.

“It was a phone call, that’s where it all started from, where we just convinced each other that we were doing it,” Kelso said. Kelso recalls calling Skate almost every day, urging him to convince Nayelle to let him go.

However, Skate had already started laying the foundations with Nayelle about what a European racing season might look like and just how they were going to pull it off.

“It was surreal – the first month went slow, I was really nervous. I kept calling Jake who would say ‘I have no news’ and I thought gee whiz this is not going to happen,” Kelso recalled. “Then I remember calling, and he said, ‘I’m booking the flights’, and it just switched. It would have been a lot of work for Jake, but we were on a plane a month later.”

Joel Kelso - JDS Moto - CIV 2018 Round One - Image by Fotoagenzia31
Joel Kelso – JDS Moto – CIV 2018 Round One – Image by Fotoagenzia31

Logistically, it takes a great deal of work to uproot a small team to Europe. They quickly realised the more economical option of a shipping container wouldn’t arrive in time, so the bikes and any equipment they had would have to be squeezed into flight cases – that would then be flown into Italy.

Skate would then have to land in Ireland to pick up a truck he had organised and drive it back to Italy to collect the cases. All this just two weeks ahead of Kelso and Mahaffy’s arrival.

Navigating Europe as both a young rider and a team owner/mechanic/crew chief all in one was fraught with as many challenges as there were rewards.

Joel Kelso - JDS Moto - CIV 2018 Round One - Image by Fotoagenzia31
Joel Kelso – JDS Moto – CIV 2018 Round One – Image by Fotoagenzia31

While Kelso did find his way onto the podium racing with JDS Moto in 2018 and at the CIV in Mugello and Vallelunga for Leopard Racing in 2019, it was ‘tough work’ to get there, both admitting finances and language barriers being their two most significant challenges.

“It was hard, it was really difficult, but we didn’t know anything different from Australia,” Kelso admits.

To ease any high expectations, Skate had advised Kelso early on into their time in Europe to expect to be at the back of the pack. Still, on his first test day, he had already caught the eyes of two mechanics in pit lane who saw that Kelso was under two minutes in his first session, which is considered really ‘fast around Misano.’

They learnt a lesson though later into their European racing season – one on managing the excitement that can come with a good day on track.

“When we got pole position, we celebrated as if we had won the World Championship and the people around us said, ‘there are no points on Saturday’,” Skate recalls.

They were right, and Joel crashed out of the race the following day. “I don’t get happy about poles now I’ve learnt. Even when Mum and Jake call to say it is looking good, I say, ‘Let’s just see’.”

Joel Kelso – JDS Moto – CIV 2018 Round One – Image by Fotoagenzia31

Crashes are inevitable, limits are pushed, and accidents happen – with one of Kelso’s biggest crashes happening in Imola, 2018, in the CIV.

Kelso went into the round with a new bike, one he hadn’t even seen, and the time frame was so tight in getting it to him, the bike was brought straight to the race track.

“We hadn’t even seen it, and we said alright, let’s race this thing,” said Skate. By the second lap, he was in the first group, even after starting from pit lane because of a penalty for a change of engine.

Then, within minutes, Kelso lost the front, crashed and subsequently got run over by two bikes, much to the horror of Nayelle watching her son on TV at home.

It wasn’t the crash or the pain that Joel remembers – he was knocked out and would feel the latter later. It was the moments that followed in the medical centre that still keep him up.

“I still think about it to this day. It was the most awkward moment of my life. They had cut my leathers off,” he recalls. “I woke up when they were cutting my skin suit off, then they get to my jocks, chop them off and I was lying there butt-naked with four Italian nurses standing around. I was sixteen and thinking how could this happen to me. I really just wanted Jake to come in and help,” he said laughing.

In an industry where the relationships within a team can be temperamental, Kelso claims he can’t remember that ever being the case with Skate. “We never had problems, like all riders when they are young, it’s always the bike’s fault, which is normal,” Skate said.

Kelso agreed, “It surprises me that we did have a good relationship because now, if something is not going right, you’re going down with your crew chief, you learn to fix things but (with Skate) there never was any arguments or things to fix.”

Skate, smiling, adds, “I think it’s because I didn’t let him know that he was allowed to argue with me.”

While in recent years they have forged their own paths on the opposite sides of the world, they remain very close and in touch.

“It’s such a cruel sport sometimes, I get nervous every time I watch Joel’s races and just wish I could fast forward to the last lap. You just want to know the result,” Skate confesses.

Joel Kelso
Joel Kelso took a victory at Portimao in the CEV Repsol Moto3 competition

In Portimo, for round 4 of the FIM CEV Kelso, calm and in control, had his race plan worked out to a tee. Although the young rider dropped down the pack with only a few laps to go the race plan was put into action. Several laps later he took the win.

Standing emotional on the top of the podium as the national anthem echoed around him – the years and years of hard work, the literal blood, sweat and tears, all worth it.

It was then, only mere moments after jumping off the podium, Skate received a call, it was Joel.

“I just wish you were here, mate.” The sentiment went both ways.

Now, in 2021, Kelso is writing one of the more exciting chapters of his story. This year has seen Kelso at the front end of the highly competitive Moto3 Junior World Championship riding with the AGR Racing Team.

The 18-year-old also secured two wildcard entries into the Moto3 World Championship, riding for CIP Green Power, where he almost saw himself finishing within the points.

Joel Kelso on the CIP Green Power Moto3 machine at Assen

The riders performance on track even caught the eye of Australian MotoGP rider Jack Miller, who came down and said hello shortly after the race.

Kelso’s ability and talent has stirred significant interest in the paddock with a number of high-profile teams vying for his signature.

However, he remained loyal to the team that gave him his opportunity in the Moto3 World Championship and believes it is with CIP Green Power that he can continue to learn and deliver.

The duo, who are currently focusing on their own career paths, Kelso preparing himself for the 2022 Moto3 World Championship and Skate running his race team ProGP Racing Junior Team with JDS moto in the mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship, presented by Motul, still speak every week.

On the Friday of every race week, Skate religiously receives a call from Kelso. Whether Kelso feels good, bad or indifferent about the bike or races ahead, the duo talk it through. Skate at times is even left to work out what could be wrong with the bike and how to fix it via a WhatsApp video call.

Joel Kelso - Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 - Misano
Joel Kelso – Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 – Misano

We ask Kelso how the story, his story, ends. It doesn’t take long for him to answer – he will be riding in MotoGP, and Skate will be working right next to him.

“It would be the perfect ending to the story, and that’s just it,” he says.

Kelso has one more round of the Moto3 Junior World Championship to run at Ricardo Tormo Circuit, Spain, in November, and currently sits in fourth place in the Championship.

He then hopes to spend Christmas with his family before he begins his full-time training for the 2022 Moto3 World Championship.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Indonesia to host MotoGP pre-season testing

Mandalika Circuit to host MotoGP pre-season test in 2022


Indonesia has been confirmed as the host of a MotoGP pre-season test, which will take place at the newly constructed Mandalika Circuit in Lombok, over the Februrary 11-13 (2022) weekend.

Happy Harinto – Chief Strategic Communication Officer of the MGPA

“It is an honor for the Mandalika circuit, and for Indonesia, to be able to serve as a location for the pre-season test in 2022. Everything is being tested from drivers to test technicians, so later standardisation or technological specifications will be applied during the 2022 racing season.  Hopefully, the future of Indonesia’s automotive industry will be brighter, this is an encouragement not only for the automotive, but also the tourism industry. We should package and manage the presence of a MotoGP class world event properly.”

Although counted as a new circuit, the Mandalika Circuit has also joined the World Superbike calendar as the scheduled host of the closing round of the series on November 12-14 this year.

A concept design for the Mandalika Circuit on display at the https://www.themandalikagp.com/ website

Harinto believes this is an extraordinary opportunity for Indonesia with local preparations also to be tested.

Earlier in 2021 Dorna Sports S.L. designated Mandalika Circuit as one of the venues for MotoGP.
Earlier in 2021 Dorna Sports S.L. designated Mandalika Circuit as one of the venues for MotoGP, with surfacing only recently complete

Prior to Mandalika, MotoGP also has their traditional scheduled a pre-season test at the Sepang International Circuit in Malaysia on February 5-6. The shakedown test session will also be held from January 31 to February 2 in Sepang, with attendees comprising test riders and rookies.

The 2022 season opening Qatar GP is tentatively set to take place from the 4th to the 6th of March, with the season once again set to start under the stunning floodlights of Losail International Circuit.

Source: MCNews.com.au