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New Indonesian circuit off to a rocky start ahead of WorldSBK finale

Mandalika issues force ATC postponement


The Idemitsu Asia Talent Cup was to race at Indonesia’s Mandalika International Street Circuit last weekend but proceedings were put on hold after safety concerns were raised on Saturday.  The first ATC round at Mandalika had been planned to allow the new circuit to test its facilities and track services, and they came up short.

It appears many of the track marshals simply failed to attend their posts, or even show up at all, thus it was deemed too dangerous for the race to be held. We believe there was also power failure issues.

Organisers are promising that these teething issues will be rectified ahead of this weekend’s schedule World Superbike finale at the 4.31 kilometre circuit. The Asia Talent Cup races have also been pushed back and added to the WorldSBK schedule.

Young Aussie star Carter Thompson had qualified on the front row but just before racing was set to get underway, officials cancelled the races.

Asia Talent Cup SepangTest Carter Thompson
Asia Talent Cup

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP Riders and Team Managers reflect on the Valencia finale

2021 MotoGP – Round 18 – Valencia
Rider and Team Manager Quotes


Francesco Bagnaia – P1

“I’m thrilled with the victory today. To win wearing Valentino Rossi’s helmet was incredible and the best way to celebrate his last race. Today’s success was incredible, and now we know we are ready to fight for the riders’ title next year. During this season, we have improved the bike’s setup race after race, and at the end of 2021, the Desmosedici GP has become very strong, as well as its riders. We have a very good base for next year, and I hope to start as we finish. We have gained a lot of experience, and we have grown a lot! The team is unbelievable, and the atmosphere inside the garage is amazing! I’m really happy, and I thank Ducati for all this”.

Francesco Bagnaia
Jorge Martín – P2

“I couldn’t have asked for more. We finished what was a difficult race for me, with an important podium. It has been an incredible year, filled with both highs and lows, from which we have come ot stronger than ever. I would like to thank my team, Ducati, and my family.”

2021 Valencia MotoGP podium
1 Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – 41’15.481
2 Jorge Martin* – Pramac Racing – Ducati – +0.489
3 Jack Miller – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +0.823
Jack Miller – P3

“I’m delighted, even though I would have liked to have achieved something more today. Unfortunately, I lost some time at the start and had to recover to get back in the fight for the podium. It was a good race, and I had a lot of fun. Valencia is a track I really like, and it’s nice to finish the season like this. It’s the first time three Ducatis have finished on the podium, and it’s great to be part of this important achievement. I’m sure our bike will be even better next year, so I’m looking forward to the 2022 season and trying to fight for the riders’ title. This year we finish fourth, and it is my best result ever in the MotoGP Championship, so I hope to do even better next year.”

Jack Miller and Pecco Bagnaia
Joan Mir – P4

“Well, I don’t know where to start; I’m really disappointed because I didn’t expect this feeling during the race; I thought today could be our day because I had strong pace all throughout the weekend, but when it came to the race it was different and I struggled with the front. In the end the most I could do was fourth. It’s not the way I wanted the race to go, I want to be fighting for the podium every time, and especially here. I’m third in the championship, which is something after a tricky season for us. Let’s look towards Jerez…”

Valencia MotoGP
Fabio Quartararo – P5

“To be honest, I‘m satisfied because we were in a bad situation when we started on Friday morning, but we achieved quite a great pace today. We changed the bike in Warm Up this morning and that made it a bit better. It wasn‘t easy, but we achieved something that‘s pretty great. I wanted to have fun today more than wanting a good result, and I had fun today. So, I‘m super happy, because even if it wasn‘t the perfect weekend I hoped for, we were able to get a top-5 result. I enjoyed the race, and we finished the season in a good way.”

Fabio Quartararo
Johann Zarco – P6

“I started off badly and lost a lot of positions. I was, however, able to race well. My race-pace was good and I made many overtakes. I am satisfied with my season and happy to have ended the year on a good note There is a lot of motivation to do well next year.”

Valencia MotoGP
Brad Binder – P7

“I’m happy with where we finished in the championship and the race was a lot harder than I expected. I thought I’d be stronger and, unfortunately, I was missing a little in a few places and the gap was too much to make-up in some corners. It was a tough race but I tried my absolute best from lap one to the end. I have to leave here happy because I left it all on the table. It has been my most consistent year and a level-up. I have to thank the team. Even though we had some tough times they never stopped working. 6th in the championship is good and now five to go.”

Brad Binder
Enea Bastianini – P8

“I am happy with the race. I was able to overtake a lot, we showed a good pace and we got back to the speed we lacked yesterday. We didn’t get the rookie of the year, but it was more important for me to be fast and have a good race. Congratulations to Jorge for getting it, he did a great job but I would have liked to fight on equal terms.”

Aleix Espargaro – P9

“At the beginning, when the tyre had grip, I felt good and made up quite a few positions. However, doing that took its toll on the tyres and they paid the price in the finale. “The RS-GP gets harder to ride with low trip, so in the end I had to settle for a result which still gives me a good season finish. This is my best season with Aprilia. We finished ahead of riders who are extremely worthy adversaries and we know that we can do even better. This is our mindset as we prepare for 2022.”

Aleix Espargaro
Valentino Rossi – P10

“I didn’t expect that it could be a weekend like this. I was very worried for this weekend because I didn’t know how I felt and there was a lot of pressure with many things to do. It was fantastic, I received a lot of positive energy from all the people in the paddock and I had a lot of great surprises: from seeing all my bikes on Thursday, to all the VR46 Academy riders with my helmets today. I’m also happy because I was able to be strong in both Qualifying yesterday and in the race today, finishing in the top-ten. I enjoyed it a lot and it was the best way to finish. I am in the top ten best riders in the world and it means everything, because this result will never change. I also enjoyed the celebrations after the race. It was a long career and I want to say thanks to everybody.”

Valentino Rossi toasts his glittering career
Franco Morbidelli – P11

“I was lucky enough to enjoy Valentino‘s last laps for the whole way as I was riding behind him. I feel really lucky for that. Before the race, I wanted to stay as far as possible from him. I didn‘t want to be involved in anything that could upset his final race, but when I found myself behind him, I just enjoyed it. I tried to push him and stay behind him. It was really, really fast, and difficult to overtake. At the end of the race, he made a step also, he accelerated his pace – it was just amazing! I feel really lucky, and it was a really nice race.”

Franco Morbidelli
Andrea Dovizioso – P12

“We were much closer than we have been in other races today, so I’m happy to finish the season with that speed. We also worked well to improve the bike under braking, which meant I could take different lines. It was good for me that I could follow ‘Vale’ [Rossi] and Franco [Morbidelli] to learn how they ride the Yamaha, as they are very experienced with it. I’m very happy with today and it was a good way to finish the season. To be a team-mate of Rossi was strange, as I have always been in different teams to him, but it has been enjoyable. I tried to beat him but he was very strong and he always has something more to give in a race. It has been really nice to share the box with him at his final round and I feel lucky to have been part of it.”

Andrea Dovizioso
Álex Márquez – P13

“Starting from P19 was difficult but overall I think we did a good job today. I’m happy with the race, it’s difficult to get past and overtake here and I felt the front tyre was too soft for us today. It was unfortunate because I felt like we had the pace to be P8 today, but we need to be happy and learn for the future. I want to thank my team for all the effort they have given this year, it’s not always been easy, but in the end we got some good results and we need to keep going like this.”

Miguel Oliveira – P14

“I knew it was going to be difficult today but we made it into the points. My pace wasn’t fantastic and I struggled a bit with the front tire. Overall, it wasn’t our best race and we have to take motivation into the winter test that starts next week and keep working for the future.”

Miguel Oliveira
Iker Lecuona – P15

“Finally, I could finish the race, finish with one point, so I reached my goal. I struggled a lot but we finished close to the top guys. I just want to say thanks to the team for these two years! I cried a lot, I enjoyed a lot, I learned, I improved, so I want to say thanks to the team and for sure to my family, friends, the spectators, who came here to push me and to see my last race. So, thanks to everybody! It’s not the last goodbye. To be continued.”

Iker Lecuona
Maverick Vinales – P16

“The race today was in line with what we have demonstrated during this final part of the season. I’m able to be fast with Aprilia, doing good lap times, but I’m lacking the right feeling to be consistent throughout an entire weekend. We still achieved our goal, which was to get ready for 2022, identifying the areas we need to work on. We have an extremely clear idea as to what they are and that is what I’m most pleased about, because during the winter, the engineers will be able to use this data and the experience accumulated to make the new RS-GP more suited to my needs.”

Maverick Vinales
Danilo Petrucci – P16

“A huge thank you to everybody, everybody in KTM, everybody in Tech3 and generally everyone, who has been working with me. We tried our best. In this race, I just tried to enjoy until the last moment. I’m really thankful for everything. Now it’s time to rest a bit.”

Danilo Petrucci
Luca Marini – P17

“It was a difficult race. I was hoping to have a better pace, but I had a lot of difficulties with the rear grip. It was a good season where I was able to share with Valentino and where I gave my all. I tried to learn something every weekend and gain experience. I want to thank the whole team and Ducati for their support. And finally, a special thanks to Vale for everything he has done for our sport.”

Luca Marini
Takaaki Nakagami – DNF

“Unfortunately, I had a crash during the race. I’m really sorry to all my team and sponsors, it’s been a tough season. Here in Valencia we had a good weekend, I crashed in the race, but I’m happy about our speed. Next weekend we have the Jerez test for 2022 and we’re really looking forward to developing Honda’s bike for next season. Also, I want to say congratulations to Valentino (Rossi) for his career and the best of luck for the future.”

Alex Rins – DNF

“It has been an unlucky race for us here in Valencia, for sure it’s a big shame to end the season like this. Because I had the pace and I was running well, but I made a mistake. I was very slightly off-line and that’s what caused the crash, when that moment happened I knew I might crash – in the end it can be like that, but I’m disappointed. We’ll look at the data and then I’ll start to focus on the test, we’ll go to Jerez next week to try next year’s bike and our goal is to fight again in 2022.”

Alex Rins

Team Managers

Luigi Dall’Igna – Ducati Corse General Manager

“Today’s result is really an important milestone for us, and this is a historic day for Ducati. To have three of our bikes on the podium is a dream, especially because it was a race with very close gaps. Pecco, Jorge and Jack did an incredible job and to get the team title like this is great. I’m really happy, and I thank all the people at Ducati Corse for their commitment and dedication this season. Getting this far has required a huge effort from everyone! We will continue to work hard to bring the riders’ title back to Borgo Panigale next season”.

Francesco Bagnaia, Jack Miller and Team Ducati celebrate
Massimo Meregalli – Monster Yamaha Team Director

“Overall, it was a difficult weekend, more than we could have expected. Fabio was able to get a good result considering his starting position. We found a setting on the bike for him that paid off. We‘re quite satisfied about that, but we finished 5 seconds behind the race winner. That will be the fuel for our motivation during the wintertime, to be stronger next year, which is already starting next week at the Jerez Test. But first there’s tonight‘s MotoGP Gala where we can celebrate Fabio’s championship win in his debut year with our team.

“Franky did a consistent race. We know his physical condition isn‘t back to his former form yet, but during this race he was able to keep a good pace from the beginning to the end. For sure he will be using the off-season to train so he can start the next season very competitively.

“We are all so happy for Valentino that he was able to finish his epic career with a top-10 result today. He did it at a track where he usually struggles a bit. But this time he had a great weekend and proved once again why he is called the ’Greatest of All Time‘. That‘s exactly what he is. We had the pleasure to work with him for many years. We will forever keep the amazing memories he gave us and wish him all the best. Ciao, Valentino!”

Rossi’s was an emotional farewell
Shinichi Sahara – Suzuki Project Leader and Team Director

“Today we were close to the podium, but not quite there. I feel like this is a starting point to improve for 2022. Alex had good speed until the crash, and despite how it ended it’s a good sign – it gives us hope because the pace was strong. Joan also managed the weekend very well from the first practice onwards, but his feeling in the race wasn’t quite right. He was able to get fourth, which is OK and not a bad way to end the year. Now we’re fully focused on next season, starting with the test next week.”

Ken Kawauchi – Suzuki Technical Manager

“Friday and Saturday went really well and our riders did a good job. We had high expectations for the race, and although we were fighting for the podium we couldn’t get it in the end. Alex had a crash and that ruled him out, and Joan started the race well but then his pace dropped off in the second half. We will work hard to improve the bike for next year. I want to say thank you to Valentino Rossi, who has changed our motorcycle world. And also thank you to our riders, the Team and the engineers for their work this season, as well as all the Suzuki fans for their support.”

Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Race Manager

“The final race in Valencia is usually a difficult and an emotional one. In our case Danilo and Iker leave the MotoGP class and we had a great time with them and were able to count on some valuable development information from both and their styles. Danilo is a great guy and Iker also, who came into our team almost as an experiment and made much progress. We wish both of them all the best. Today Brad made a great race in a competitive field and took 7th and then 6th in the championship and we’re proud of that because this was our first year without concessions and he did it through a long and tricky season. We didn’t achieve our goals with Miguel – we both were not happy with that result today – and this means we need to analyze why. We all know his skills and his talent to ride this bike and he showed it several times. We are 100% convinced we will find the road back with him. Thanks to all the hard work from the company and all the people involved in this project. We will have a short rest and then push hard in the winter for 2022.”

Razlan Razali – Petronas SRT Team Principal

“Today was an emotional day for the team, especially as it was Rossi’s last dance after a glorious 26 years. We are truly honoured that he has ended his career with us and it will go down in the history books that the last team he rode for was Petronas Yamaha SRT. At the same time it is the team’s final race as well and it was good that Andrea could finish inside the points in 12th as well. It has been a great three years, with great highs and lows. We have made tremendous achievements in that time though.”

Valentino Rossi signed off on his glittering career
Johan Stigefelt – Pertronas SRT Team Director

“We end these three years in MotoGP today and it has been a very interesting journey, from starting the team to achieving what we did. We’ve been second in the World Championship and had many race wins, podiums and pole positions. It has been a privilege to work with Valentino and Andrea this year and we have to be very proud of what we have done. We were able to build up a structure this big and this professional, with the support of Petronas and the other partners that believed in this project from the beginning.  I want to thank everybody who was involved in this project from the bottom of my heart, from the crew to sponsors and partners – just everybody. I’m sad that it’s finishing, but I only have good things to say about these years. This is how it is sometimes, so just thank you again.”

Valentino Rossi signed off on his glittering career
Hervé Poncharal – Tech3 KTM Team Manager

“It’s official, the MotoGP season 2021 is over and it’s always a tough moment to end a season, especially when you are losing a part of your crew. I would like to thank everybody who has been with us this season, every single person who helped, who is in the garage every single day and pushing to be as well performing as everybody can.

“Clearly, Danilo and Iker have been super team players. I would like to thank them one more time and one more time wish them good luck for their future. It makes me happy, they have a future, a bright future and a future they like. Danilo is staying with KTM in the family. He is going to open a new chapter of his career to race in the desert. Offroad has always been his number one passion and I’m really glad he’s got this opportunity from Mr. Stefan Pierer and hopefully this will be the start of a second great career off road in the Rallye Championship.

Danilo Petrucci and the KTM 450 Rally he will race in the Dakar Rally

“Regarding Iker, he is very young and I believe he has a great future in road racing and he’s got a strong contract to race the next two seasons with a works machine in the World Superbike Championship, so I’m glad to see them with a smile on their face. Therefore, it’s less difficult to say goodbye to them.

“Today’s race was incredibly intense. There were not so many things happening apart from only two riders, who didn’t finish. But the lap times were unbelievable. Every single lap they were quicker and quicker. Iker was right behind Miguel all race long. They did the same race. Thank God we finished the race, we got a point and it is very exciting to see that KTM is very competitive, especially when you see where Brad Binder finished and the lap times he was doing.

“Danilo finally managed to finish a race. The last two races he has been so unlucky. So, I think he was very cautious, because the last thing he wanted was to not finish that race. He was really, really glad to see the chequered flag. I think him and Iker were also happy to join and follow Valentino Rossi for his very last lap in MotoGP. So, at the end of the day, we got great weather today, a record crowd here in Valencia. We end up on a positive note. 2021 is over and in a few days 2022 is going to start. So, tonight, let’s celebrate.”

Danilo Petrucci and Iker Lecuona say goodbye to Michelin slicks as they embark on new challenges for 2022

MotoGP Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 41m15.481
2 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +0.489
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +0.823
4 Joan MIR Suzuki +5.214
5 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha +5.439
6 Johann ZARCO Ducati +6.993
7 Brad BINDER KTM +8.437
8 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +10.933
9 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +12.651
10 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +13.468
11 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +14.085
12 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha +16.534
13 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +17.059
14 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM +18.221
15 Iker LECUONA KTM +19.233
16 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +19.815
17 Luca MARINI Ducati +28.86
18 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM +32.169
Not Classified
DNF Alex RINS Suzuki 17 Laps
Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 23 Laps

MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 278
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 252
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 208
4 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 181
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 173
6 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 151
7 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 142
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 120
9 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 111
10 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 106
11 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 102
12 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 100
13 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 99
14 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 94
15 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 76
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 70
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 47
18 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 44
19 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 41
20 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 39
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 14
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 12
24 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha ITA 12
25 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
26 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
27 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1

MotoGP Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 357
2 YAMAHA 309
3 SUZUKI 240
4 HONDA 214
5 KTM 205
6 APRILIA 121

MotoGP Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 433
2 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP 380
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 307
4 PRAMAC RACING 288
5 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 250
6 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 245
7 LCR HONDA 146
8 ESPONSORAMA RACING 143
9 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 135

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP, Moto2 and Moto3 Valencia Race Reports/Results/Points

2021 MotoGP – Round 18 – Valencia

Che spettacolo! For the fourth time in 2021, Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) took victory as the Italian led home a historic Ducati 1-2-3 at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, Pecco once again perfectly-poised as this time he saw the flag just ahead of Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) and Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) for a Bologna lockout.

2021 Valencia MotoGP podium
1 Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – 41’15.481
2 Jorge Martin* – Pramac Racing – Ducati – +0.489
3 Jack Miller – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +0.823

The race will forever be remembered as Valentino Rossi’s (Petronas Yamaha SRT) last dance too, and The Doctor delivered a P10 in his farewell MotoGP appearance in front of a packed Circuit Ricardo Tormo crowd. Pecco also dedicated the win to his mentor.

Valentino Rossi toasts his glittering career

Danilo Petrucci (Tech3 KTM Factory Racing) saw the chequered flag in P17 as the Italian premier class race winner also says goodbye to Grand Prix racing in an emotional Sunday in Valencia, and team-mate Iker Lecuona heads for WorldSBK after scoring a final point of the year.

Danilo Petrucci and Iker Lecuona say goodbye to Michelin slicks as they embark on new challenges for 2022

MotoGP Race Report

Rewinding to lights out and polesitter Martin grabbed the holeshot into Turn 1 as fourth place Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) got a great start to get the better of Bagnaia, with Miller slotting into second. Rossi made a good start and was up a place into P9, whereas World Champion Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was P6. Up ahead, Miller then dived up the inside of Martin at Turn 1 on Lap 2 to take the lead, but it was short-lived. Martin and Mir cut through on Lap 2, and Miller down to third, then it was fourth, then fifth – the Australian was going backwards after briefly leading.

The Suzukis were charging though – hard. Mir was harassing Martin, before Pecco then used the GP21’s superior grunt to take P2 off the 2020 Champion. Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) then snuck past Mir at Turn 6 on Lap 3, as the top four – Martin, Bagnaia, Rins and Mir – started to create a gap to now fifth-placed Quartararo. Miller was down to P6, seemingly struggling in the early stages.

The race then settled as the front runners held station, but Martin, Bagnaia and Rins were now 0.7s ahead of Mir. After a few laps of following the World Champion, Miller was back through on Quartararo and up to P5, as Rins set the fastest lap of the race. However, at Turn 6 on Lap 11 of 27, Rins then went down. The Spaniard tucked the front of his GSX-RR, handing teammate Mir third.

Miller battled with Quartararo

Rossi, meanwhile, was now 10th, 0.6s down on Enea Bastianini (Avintia Esponsorama) who, as things stood, was losing out on the Rookie of the Year crown with Martin leading…

Bagnaia was swarming all over the back of the race-leading rookie though and with 12 laps to go, at Turn 14, Pecco pounced. Now, with some clear air, what could the Italian do? The fastest lap, a 1:31.042, came next and the hammer was well and truly down. His mentor Rossi was still 10th with 11 laps to go, but VR46 Academy’s first World Champion and fellow Yamaha star Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) was right behind him…

Up front though, Martin was not letting Pecco pull clear. On two consecutive laps, the rookie was quicker than Bagnaia, and a second or so behind, Miller grabbed P3 off Mir at Turn 2. It was a Ducati 1-2-3 with eight laps to go, and history was on the cards for the Bologna factory. Miller wasn’t done yet either, the Australian 1.3s back when he passed Mir, but by five laps to go, he was just 0.7s off Martin.

Miller and Martin chase race leader Pecco Bagnaia

With two laps of the season to go, Pecco was 0.8s clear of Martin and it seemed the battle would be for second. Miller was closer than ever to Martin, but the rookie was holding firm. Unable to make a move, Miller couldn’t quite make it a factory Ducati 1-2 as Bagnaia crossed the line to win for a fourth time in 2021, although Martin clinched the Rookie of the Year crown with a P2 – his fourth podium of the season. Miller, in third, helps Ducati make history with their first 1-2-3 in MotoGP with his fifth rostrum. In addition, Bagnaia’s P1 and Miller’s P3 helps Ducati take the Teams’ Championship, adding to their Constructors’ crown.

Bagnaia takes the chequered flag

Mir held onto P4 by just 0.2s in the end as Quartararo homed in, but El Diablo takes P5 to cap off a title-winning season. Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) was P6, Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) was P7, with Bastianini’s P8 was not quite good enough for the Rookie of the Year title – nine points split the Italian and Martin in the end. Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) struggled in the latter stages and slipped to P9, finishing one place ahead of The Doctor.

Valentino Rossi took P10, where he started, to bow out in style. There aren’t enough superlatives to describe the Italian’s glistening Grand Prix career, as one of the world’s biggest sporting icons bids a fond farewell to the sport he loves – and the sport that loves him. Grazie Vale, from millions of fans around the globe!

Valentino Rossi signed off on his glittering career

Morbidelli crossed the line less than a second away from Rossi as the Italian now aims to get fully fit for 2022, Andrea Dovizioso (Petronas Yamaha SRT) had a good final weekend of the season to finish in P12, and Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol), Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) and WorldSBK-bound Lecuona take home the final points of 2021.

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) joined Rins in suffering a DNF in Valencia, the Japanese rider was perfectly ok after his Turn 6 crash.

And that, as they say, is a wrap. The curtain comes down on 2021, as we say ciao to the icon that is Valentino Rossi. The number 46 will be missed immensely on and off track in 2022 and beyond, but MotoGP couldn’t be in a better place. The next generation is here, Rossi’s legacy will live on with his VR46 Academy and new MotoGP team, and Yamaha and Quartararo will be aiming to defend their title against a whole host of unbelievable bikes and riders. What a year! And #GrazieVale!

Francesco Bagnaia – Race Winner

It’s the only possible thing today – to give a present for Vale. With this helmet, to do a race like that so I want to dedicate this race to him and say thanks to him for what’s he done for us in the academy. So it’s for him, I’m very happy because before the weekend I wasn’t sure it was possible to do a race like this but all the improvements we made this year with my riding style and the bike, finally, we arrived here and were one of the fastest. I’m very happy we won today and it’s an incredible way to end the season.”

Rossi’s was an emotional farewell

MotoGP Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 41m15.481
2 Jorge MARTIN Ducati +0.489
3 Jack MILLER Ducati +0.823
4 Joan MIR Suzuki +5.214
5 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha +5.439
6 Johann ZARCO Ducati +6.993
7 Brad BINDER KTM +8.437
8 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +10.933
9 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +12.651
10 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +13.468
11 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +14.085
12 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha +16.534
13 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +17.059
14 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM +18.221
15 Iker LECUONA KTM +19.233
16 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +19.815
17 Luca MARINI Ducati +28.86
18 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM +32.169
Not Classified
DNF Alex RINS Suzuki 17 Laps
Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda 23 Laps

MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 278
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 252
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 208
4 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 181
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 173
6 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 151
7 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 142
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 120
9 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 111
10 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 106
11 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 102
12 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 100
13 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 99
14 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 94
15 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 76
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 70
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 47
18 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 44
19 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 41
20 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 39
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 14
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 12
24 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha ITA 12
25 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
26 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
27 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1

MotoGP Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 357
2 YAMAHA 309
3 SUZUKI 240
4 HONDA 214
5 KTM 205
6 APRILIA 121

MotoGP Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 433
2 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP 380
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 307
4 PRAMAC RACING 288
5 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 250
6 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 245
7 LCR HONDA 146
8 ESPONSORAMA RACING 143
9 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 135

Moto2

In a tense, red-flagged race at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) was crowned the 2021 Moto2 World Champion after finishing P10 on Sunday afternoon. Teammate and title rival Raul Fernandez won for an incredible eighth time to finish just four points down in the overall standings, as Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) and Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) claimed podiums.

2021 Valencia Moto2 podium
1 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 25’38.612
2 Fabio Di Giannantonio – Federal Oil Gresini Moto2 – Kalex – +0.517
3 Augusto Fernandez – Elf Marc VDS Racing Team – Kalex – +0.786

The Moto2 title decider got underway but a crash involving Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46), Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Lorenzo Baldassarri (MV Agusta Forward Racing) brought out the red flags, with an oil spillage occurring between Turns 2 and 3. All riders were ok, a brief pause in proceedings happened with a clean up operation underway before the race got back in business.

There was a little more drama though. After claiming his first pole since 2012 on Saturday, Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) pulled into pitlane after the Warm Up lap and the experienced Italian was out of the race with a technical issue. Meanwhile on track, Augusto Fernandez led Raul Fernandez into Turn 1, with the latter taking the lead at Turn 6 on Lap 2. Gardner made a steady start and was ninth.

Raul Fernandez wasn’t having it all his own way at the front though. Di Giannantonio came through on the Spaniard to lead on Lap 4, with Gardner slipping backwards. Jorge Navarro (Termozeta Speed Up), Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) and Tom Lüthi (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team) all passed Gardner and suddenly, the Australian was P11 – and had former teammate Tetsuta Nagashima (Italtrans Racing Team) swarming all over the back of him. Still, though, as things stood – Raul Fernandez P2, Gardner P11 – the title was heading to Gardner.

With six laps to go, the Australian found a way past Lüthi at Turn 4 into P10. The top three – Diggia, Raul Fernandez and Augusto Fernandez – were split by nothing, with Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) 1.2s back on the podium scrap in P4. Then, with four to go, Raul Fernandez pounced on Diggia at Turn 2. A classic block pass from the Spaniard saw him take the lead, but with Gardner 10th, it still wasn’t enough. Gardner, in turn, was two seconds behind Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP) in ninth, although only 0.6s ahead of Nagashima in 11th…

Two laps to go saw Raul Fernandez P1, Gardner P10. Diggia and Augusto Fernandez were still in touch with the race leader too, and Gardner was keeping Nagashima at bay.

By the last lap, a tense 0.3s was the advantage Raul Fernandez held over Diggia and Augusto Fernandez, and Gardner was still 10th – able to just keep his own three-tenth advantage over Nagashima on the chase. Raul Fernandez was holding up his end of the bargain and so was Gardner, but as the rookie sensation crossed the line to take a Marquez-beating, mesmerising eighth victory of the season, taking the chequered flag in P10 made Remy Gardner the the 2021 Moto2 World Champion.

Diggia and Augusto Fernandez rode superbly to finish just behind Raul Fernandez in P2 and P3, and rookie Vietti ended his campaign with an equal-best result in P4. Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team) rounded out the top five, with Vierge finishing P6 despite being involved in the red-flagged crash, a great result for the Spaniard who heads off to WorldSBK in 2022.

Lowes, Navarro and Schrötter crossed the line in 7th, 8th and 9th respectively, before Gardner claimed 10th. It was a nervy race, but 10th was more than enough. Nagashima claimed P11, and Lüthi – in his final Grand Prix – notched up P12 as we bid a fond farewell to the fourth highest Grand Prix appearance maker after 318 starts. Stefano Manzi (Flexbox HP40), Marcos Ramirez (American Racing) and WorldSBK-bound Hafizh Syahrin (NTS RW Racing GP) claimed the final points.

Raul Fernandez won the final battle but it was Remy Gardner that won the war to be crowned 2021 Moto2 World Champion

A simply outstanding title race between Gardner and Raul Fernandez ends with the Australian coming out on top. A staggering season by both, now we get ready to watch them move to MotoGP with Tech3 KTM Factory Racing in 2022.

Raul Fernandez – Race Winner

It was a fantastic race, I did my job and won. I’m happy with that. We did an incredible season, in the end we didn’t win the Championship but in was the best season of my life, I enjoyed it like a kid and we won eight races. Before we started if anyone told me I’d win two or three I wouldn’t believe it. Now we have eight, it’s incredible.

Both Gardner and his team-mate Raul Fernandez will move up to MotoGP in 2022 with Tech3 KTM

Moto2 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 25m38.612
2 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex +0.517
3 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex +0.786
4 Celestino VIETTI Kalex +2.393
5 Aron CANET Boscoscuro +4.978
6 Xavi VIERGE Kalex +5.091
7 Sam LOWES Kalex +5.415
8 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro +5.808
9 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex +7.941
10 Remy GARDNER Kalex +9.112
11 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA Kalex +9.42
12 Thomas LUTHI Kalex +10.355
13 Stefano MANZI Kalex +11.898
14 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex +12.088
15 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS +12.361
16 Jake DIXON Kalex +13.982
17 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro +14.022
18 Barry BALTUS NTS +14.145
19 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex +17.111
20 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex +19.273
21 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex +19.426
22 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro +19.608
23 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex +19.986
24 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex +23.805
25 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex +31.559
Not Classified
DNF Hector GARZO Kalex 5 Laps
DNF Dimas EKKY PRATAMA Kalex 14 Laps
Not Starting
DNS Simone CORSI MV Agusta 0 Lap
DNS Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta 0 Lap

Remy Gardner
2021 FIM Moto2 World Champion

Heading in to the Valencia finale with a 23-point advantage, the Australian needed to take a handful of points in the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana to wrap up the crown, and that he did with a tenth place finish. After an incredible season of consistency with 12 podiums, of which five have been victories, Gardner kept his nerve to the last to become a World Champion.

Remy Gardner
2021 FIM Moto2 World Champion

Gardner started the 2021 season with three podiums in a row in Qatar, Doha and Portimão, before a fourth place from pole in Jerez. Le Mans was another podium, this time in second place, before Gardner won three in a row on an incredible run of form: Mugello, Catalunya and Germany, the latter of which was the 200th Moto2 race. Another podium at Assen saw him head into the summer break with an advantage in the title fight of 31 points. His closest rival, however, was team-mate Raul Fernandez and the rookie sensation would continue to prove the key challenger as the season rolled on.

Remy Gardner and Raul Fernandez battled all season

Gardner came back from the summer break off the podium in both races at the Red Bull Ring as Raul Fernandez took another win in the second, not going down without a fight.

Remy Gardner took the win at Sachsenring

The Australian hit back with victory at Silverstone as his team-mate crashed out, but both Aragon and San Marino saw the number 87 forced to settle for second as Raul Fernandez began a serious comeback and strung together his own run of three wins in a row – including at the Circuit of the Americas, where Gardner made his first big mistake of the season and crashed out.

KTM 1-2 at Mugello

And so, as the paddock returned to Misano for the Emilia-Romagna GP, the gap between the two was just nine points… but there was another twist in the tale just around the corner. Despite the race proving a tougher once for Gardner, Raul Fernandez crashed out the lead – doubling Gardner’s advantage in one fell swoop as the gap shot back out to 18 points in favour the Australian.

Remy Gardner

That set up the first match point in the Moto2 World Championship for the Algarve GP, and despite a dramatic crash on Friday that left Gardner riding a little bruised on Sunday, the Australian dug deep and took an incredible win under intense pressure from his teammate. That added another five points of advantage, making it 23 on the way in to the season finale.

It was a pensive final race of the season for Gardner at Valencia

After a Red Flag and restart, Gardner kept his nerve from P8 on the grid, dropping a couple of places and duelling it out in the latter half of the top ten. Raul Fernandez had to win to keep his chances alive and that the number 25 did, but Gardner stayed calm and avoided any risks near the front to come out on top in the fight for tenth – three places higher than he needed – and take a history-making World Championship crown. Wayne and Remy join Kenny Roberts and Kenny Roberts Jr as father and son World Champions.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Remy Gardner on winning the World Championship

It’s definitely been an intense season. Raul did an amazing job this year, as a rookie he really made me work for it for sure. It’s such an amazing season, so many podiums, great races, four wins. [Speaker: five wins]. Five wins? Five. Well that shows how much I’m keeping track. It’s been an incredible season. So many parc fermes and podiums, incredible moments with the team. There were times I’d finish second and think that was a bad day but you have to enjoy every moment. It’s been such an amazing season but intense for sure, especially the last quarter has been really intense, Raul has been so fast, I’ve made a few mistakes and he has too, but consistency was key in the end and the days when I just couldn’t win or he won, it was just about finishing and getting the points I could. Ultimately that’s what got us over the line.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“With the first race I had a pretty good first lap, after that incident at Turn 2 I got though on the inside and ended up with the front guys and I thought that would be a good opportunity to go with those guys and break up the group and have a good consistent race, then with the Red Flag everything stopped.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion and KTM Constructor Champion

“I made a good start in both, the second wasn’t as good on the first lap and for the first few laps I was just hanging in there and going with the guys but it was a bit scary cause I saw there was a bit of commotion, guys were passing, Raul was going for it and I thought ‘I’m not going to put myself in the middle there, I’m going to hang back.’ Then I came under fire from the guys behind and had to pull my finger out a little bit and break up the group a bit.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“I had to push a bit harder to get away from Tetsu, he was going crazy and as my team-mate in the past, I know how he rides! Just tried to break up the group a bit and finish the race in a respectable position and safely. Managed to do that, keep my nerves and for sure it was a lot of pressure but I managed to bring it home.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“It hasn’t really sunk in yet to be honest. There have been so many hard years, decent success this year and even last year, I really kind of changed my chip last year and everything started to go a bit better. I didn’t have the most podiums in the world but managed to get my mind under control, everything was falling into place and I was trying to keep positive about everything. From 2015 to even 2019 they were really, really tough years for me and like I said, there were points in my career I honestly believed that was it, there was no more and that was the end of the road. Especially after injury for sure, fighting through that was incredibly difficult.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Moto 2 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex AUS 311
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 307
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex ITA 214
4 Sam LOWES Kalex GBR 190
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 174
6 Aron CANET Boscoscuro SPA 164
7 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex ITA 161
8 Ai OGURA Kalex JPN 120
9 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro SPA 106
10 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex GER 98
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex SPA 93
12 Celestino VIETTI Kalex ITA 89
13 Joe ROBERTS Kalex USA 59
14 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex ITA 51
15 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex USA 50
16 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex NED 46
17 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex SPA 39
18 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex THA 37
19 Stefano MANZI Kalex ITA 36
20 Jake DIXON Kalex GBR 30
21 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro SPA 28
22 Thomas LUTHI Kalex SWI 27
23 Hector GARZO Kalex SPA 16
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta ITA 16
25 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro SPA 13
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex ITA 12
27 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex ITA 10
28 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS MAL 9
29 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA Kalex JPN 5
30 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro SPA 4
31 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta ITA 3
32 Barry BALTUS NTS BEL 2
Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion and KTM Constructor Champion

Moto2 Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 KALEX 450
2 BOSCOSCURO 199
3 MV AGUSTA 19
4 NTS 11
Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion – With Team Manager Aki Ajo

Moto2 Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 RED BULL KTM AJO 618
2 ELF MARC VDS RACING TEAM 364
3 SKY RACING TEAM VR46 303
4 INDE ASPAR TEAM 192
5 FEDERAL OIL GRESINI MOTO2 173
6 IDEMITSU HONDA TEAM ASIA 157
7 LIQUI MOLY INTACT GP 149
8 PETRONAS SPRINTA RACING 123
9 TERMOZETA SPEED UP 119
10 AMERICAN RACING 89
11 ITALTRANS RACING TEAM 74
12 PERTAMINA MANDALIKA SAG TEAM 73
13 FLEXBOX HP40 56
14 MV AGUSTA FORWARD RACING 19
15 NTS RW RACING GP 11

Moto3

Xavier Artigas (Leopard Racing) is a Grand Prix winner! The rookie played it to perfection with a last corner lunge on Sergio Garcia (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) to take his first Moto3 win in style, with the number 11 forced to settle for second. Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) rounds out the season on the rostrum, with drama earlier on the final lap as contact between Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) and World Champion Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) saw the latter crash out.

Off the line it was as you were for the front row, with Acosta getting a great start from pole to lead the freight train away. Izan Guevara (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) soon struck to take second from Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) though, and drama came early just behind. Lorenzo Fellon (SIC58 Squadra Corse) crashed out, and almost simultaneously Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) had his own higside mid-track, forcing a few into avoiding action. Ryusei Yamanaka (CarXpert PrüstelGP) wasn’t able to and also went down, riders ok but the group taking a few corners to settle.

At the front, the leaders were a train of 12. Acosta, Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3), Artigas, Masia, Guevara, Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team), Garcia, Filip Salač (CarXpert PrüstelGP), Foggia, Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) and Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team). As ever, the chopping and changing saw plenty of places exchanged in Moto3.

Another frisson of drama then saw Öncü and Salač both get Long Laps for track limits, which they took quickly – but they slotted back in at the back of the group. In turn, that helped the second gaggle of riders, led by Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46 Academy) tag onto the group, and he brought the likes of John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) – the Japanese rider from the very back after an incredible charge after a tough qualifying – into the mix. Next, Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) crashed at Turn 1 too, making one less in the group.

As the final few laps dawned, the melee turned into a 2021 Moto3 classic at the front: Acosta vs Foggia. And heading onto the final lap, the Leopard machine led the Red Bull KTM Ajo rider over the line, with Artigas, Garcia and Öncü for close company.

Acosta attacked at Turn 1, and Foggia lined him up to return the favour at Turn 2. But the Leopard rider was in too deep and there was contact between the two, with the newly-crowned World Champion then unable to hold it and skidding off into the gravel. Rider ok and Foggia continued, but the incident was under investigation by the FIM MotoGP Stewards.

Artigas picked their pockets in the melee and in turn, Garcia then attacked the number 43. The GASGAS rider took over in the lead, holding on as the corners ticked down. Masia also got past Öncü with some well-judged, clean aggression, but it all went down to the last apex.

As they headed into the final corner, Artigas attacked for the lead as Öncü attacked for third. The rookie – and wildcard Valencia podium finisher – pitched it to perfection to slot past Garcia, but Öncü headed well wide. On the drag to the line, Garcia tucked in to try and hit back but Artigas held on, the rookie taking his first win and completing the set for the three frontrunning rookies this season: Acosta, Guevara and Artigas have now all won races after an incredible season.

Xavier Artigas took the final race victory of Moto3 season 2021 and that was also his maiden victory

Garcia was forced to settle for second but returns to the podium after his injury struggles, and Masia completes the rostrum to end the year on a high. Öncü was picked off by Salač as the Czech rider took one of his best finishes in his last Moto3 race, with Öncü relegated to fifth by the flag.

Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) took sixth after an impressive Sunday, with Guevara just behind. Carlos Tatay (Avintia Esponsorama) was next up as he made good progress to take a good haul of points, with Antonelli taking ninth to sign off from Moto3 in the top ten. Completing that top ten was Sasaki after a stunning recovery ride from the number 71, coming from the very back to P10.

McPhee took P11 ahead of Fenati, another who leaves for Moto2, after the veteran Italian exceeded track limits on the final lap and was demoted a position behind McPhee. Meanwhile, the result of the Stewards’ investigation relegated Foggia to thirteenth as the Italian was given a three-second penalty for the Acosta incident.

An incredibly tight three-way fight for P14 saw Adrian Fernandez (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) just take it, with Jeremy Alcoba (Indonesian Racing Gresini Moto3) taking the last point to deny Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride).

Joel Kelso

Aussie teenager Joel Kelso suffered two crashes over the course of the weekend, including a crash out of the race.  Kelso had been substituting for Covid positive rider Maximilian Kofler for CIP-Green Power team but will form the backbone of the 2022 Moto3 rider line-up for the team in 2022.

Joel Kelso
Joel Kelso (DNF)

I’m super happy with the way the weekend went. We showed that we have good pace and potential. Unfortunately, I crashed out, but I’m still happy. I’m looking forward to next year. I’m looking forward to it more and more as I ride this bike. I would like to thank the team CIP GREEN POWER for everything they have done. Let’s keep it up for the upcoming season!”

KTM also wrapped the Constructors’ crown, their fifth in the class, with a KTM needing to finish in the top nine and that more than fulfilled with one on the podium in P3 with Masia.

That’s a wrap on 2021, with pastures new for some and a recharge and reset for others. It’s been a truly remarkable season and the Champion now moves up, so join us again next year to see who succeeds Acosta and writes their own chapter in the history books!

Xavier Artigas – Race Winner

This is amazing to be here with victory this weekend, it was important for me. This season as hard. I’m happy with the race, it was hard but I pushed a lot, did my maximum and I’m happy with the result. I need it because the first part of the season was hard. The last few races I finished in the front group but I didn’t feel great at the end of the race. In this race I felt better and I did my best.”

2021 Valencia Moto3 podium
1 Xavier Artigas – Leopard Racing – Honda – 38’30.302
2 Sergio Garcia – Valresa GASGAS Aspar – GASGAS – +0.043
3 Jaume Masia – Red Bull KTM Ajo – KTM – +0.232

Moto3  Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 38m30.302
2 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS +0.043
3 Jaume MASIA KTM +0.232
4 Filip SALAC KTM +0.443
5 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM +0.54
6 Stefano NEPA KTM +1.156
7 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS +1.209
8 Carlos TATAY KTM +2.109
9 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM +2.185
10 Ayumu SASAKI KTM +2.322
11 John MCPHEE Honda +2.791
12 Romano FENATI Husqvarna +2.461
13 Dennis FOGGIA Honda +3.819
14 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna +13.298
15 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda +13.348
16 Riccardo ROSSI KTM +13.369
17 Kaito TOBA KTM +17.249
18 Andrea MIGNO Honda +45.581
19 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM +5 Laps
Not Classified
DNF Pedro ACOSTA KTM 1 Lap
DNF Alberto SURRA Honda 3 Laps
DNF Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda 6 Laps
DNF Yuki KUNII Honda 11 Laps
DNF Joel KELSO KTM 19 Laps
DNF Jose Antonio RUEDA Honda 19 Laps
Not Finished 1st Lap
DNF Lorenzo FELLON Honda 0 Lap
DNF Darryn BINDER Honda 0 Lap

Moto3  Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM SPA 259
2 Dennis FOGGIA Honda ITA 216
3 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS SPA 188
4 Jaume MASIA KTM SPA 171
5 Romano FENATI Husqvarna ITA 160
6 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM ITA 152
7 Darryn BINDER Honda RSA 136
8 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS SPA 125
9 Ayumu SASAKI KTM JPN 120
10 Andrea MIGNO Honda ITA 110
11 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM TUR 95
12 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda SPA 86
13 John MCPHEE Honda GBR 77
14 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda JPN 76
15 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda SPA 72
16 Filip SALAC KTM CZE 71
17 Kaito TOBA KTM JPN 64
18 Stefano NEPA KTM ITA 63
19 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda ARG 60
20 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM JPN 47
21 Carlos TATAY KTM SPA 40
22 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna SPA 30
23 Riccardo ROSSI KTM ITA 29
24 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM SWI 27
25 Yuki KUNII Honda JPN 15
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM AUT 10
27 Elia BARTOLINI KTM ITA 7
28 Daniel HOLGADO KTM SPA 4
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda INA 4
30 Syarifuddin AZMAN Honda MAL 3
31 Joel KELSO KTM AUS 2
32 Alberto SURRA Honda ITA 1
33 Lorenzo FELLON Honda FRA 0
34 Takuma MATSUYAMA Honda JPN 0
35 Matteo BERTELLE KTM ITA 0
36 Mario AJI Honda INA 0
37 David SALVADOR Honda SPA 0
38 David ALONSO GASGAS COL 0
39 Jose Antonio RUEDA SPA 0

Moto3 Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 KTM 369
2 HONDA 360
3 GASGAS 266
4 HUSQVARNA 166

Moto3 Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 RED BULL KTM AJO 430
2 VALRESA GASGAS ASPAR TEAM 313
3 LEOPARD RACING 288
4 RED BULL KTM TECH 3 218
5 PETRONAS SPRINTA RACING 216
6 AVINTIA ESPONSORAMA MOTO3 199
7 STERILGARDA MAX RACING TEAM 190
8 INDONESIAN RACING GRESINI MOTO3 146 146
9 RIVACOLD SNIPERS TEAM 146
10 CARXPERT PRUESTELGP 110
11 BOE OWLRIDE 92
12 CIP GREEN POWER 77
13 SIC58 SQUADRA CORSE 76
14 HONDA TEAM ASIA 19

Source: MCNews.com.au

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Remy Gardner
2021 FIM Moto2 World Champion

Heading in to the Valencia finale with a 23-point advantage, the Australian needed to take a handful of points in the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana to wrap up the crown, and that he did with a tenth place finish. After an incredible season of consistency with 12 podiums, of which five have been victories, Gardner kept his nerve to the last to become a World Champion.

Remy Gardner
2021 FIM Moto2 World Champion

Son of 1987 500cc Champion Wayne Gardner, Remy Gardner started riding bikes early as he got his first motorcycle at the age of four. He began his career racing dirt track and long track, as a good few greats from Down Under have done before him, competing at state and national level in his native Australia.

Remy Gardner racing here with Matt Barton and Zac Zanesco – Image Keith Muir

He then switched to tarmac not long after, and his first international race came in late 2010 thanks to an invite from Honda Australia to compete at the NSF100 Trophy Worldwide Mini Bike race in Albacete, Spain. Later that same year, Gardner made his Australian road race debut at the iconic Phillip Island, winning the MRRDA Australian Nippers Championship.

Remy Gardner started his road racing in the MRRDA with brother Luca – Image Keith Muir

The next step in his career would prove crucial as Gardner travelled to Spain to compete in the pre-Moto3 class in the Mediterranean Championship in 2011. He came second overall, and that prefaced a full-time move to Spain for 2012. The Aussie has called the country home ever since.

Wayne and Remy Gardner on the grid at Jerez CEV Repsol in 2014

Gardner entered the Moto3 class in the CEV for the first time in 2012, finishing most races and scoring points in his debut season. In 2013 he made more progress, including taking his first top five finish at the Albacete round, and he remained in the Championship for 2014 and took another step forward, scoring points in every race he started bar one and taking his first podium.

Jorge Navarro in first, and Fabio Quartararo 2nd, Remy Gardner 3rd
Jorge Navarro in first, and Fabio Quartararo 2nd, Remy Gardner 3rd back when the young trio were in the CEV ranks in 2014

Gardner also made his Grand Prix debut that season, racing at Misano, Phillip Island and Sepang. His final appearance at the Malaysian Grand Prix provided a milestone as the Aussie scored his first World Championship point, finishing fifteenth. The move to the World Championship came full-time for 2015, and the NSW native finished the season 30th overall aboard a Mahindra – with his home Grand Prix at Phillip Island proving a highlight as Gardner took his first top ten finish Down Under.

Remy Gardner's opening day was full of technical gremlins
Remy Gardner’s opening day of a troubled 2015 season was full of technical gremlins, and it never got all that much better

For 2016, Gardner then moved to bigger machinery, taking on the Moto2 European Championship with Race Experience and, from the Catalan GP on, the Moto2 World Championship with Tasca Racing. In the former he impressed with a top five in Race 2 at MotorLand, before signing off his participation with his first win in Race 2 in Barcelona – and by a sizeable margin.

Remy Gardner - Image by Tasca Racing
Remy Gardner (2016) – Image by Tasca Racing

The same Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya also staged his Moto2 World Championship debut, which saw Gardner come home in P15 and score a point first time out, just week before his first European Moto2 win. Impressing with his adaptation, Gardner then remained in the Moto2 World Championship for the remainder of 2016, taking more points at the Sachsenring with a 12th-place finish before another points-paying P13 at Sepang.

Remy Gardner victorious in FIM CEV Moto2 race at Catalunya
Remy Gardner victorious in FIM CEV Moto2 race at Catalunya (2016)

His performances earned him a seat at Tech3 Racing for 2017, and he was a regular points scorer, taking his first top ten in the Moto2 World Championship with a ninth place at Brno.

Remy Gardner
Remy Gardner – Sepang 2017

2018 saw the Aussie take more points and move further forward once again, the progress clear despite a motocross accident ahead of the Spanish GP in which he broke both his legs. Once he was back from injury though, Gardner picked up where he left off, took his first front row at Silverstone and then ended both the season and his tenure with Tech3 in style at Valencia with his first Moto2 top five.

Remy Gardner
Remy Gardner – 2018

2019 and 2020 added more milestones as Gardner moved to the SAG Team. In 2019 the number 87 took his first Grand Prix podium with second place at Termas de Rio Hondo, as well as setting the fastest lap, and the TT Circuit Assen saw the Australian take his first pole position.

MotoGP Rnd Assen QP Moto Gardner Binder Vierge
2019 Assen TT Moto2 Qualifying results:
1 – Remy Gardner (AUS – Kalex) 1’36.572
2 – Brad Binder (RSA – KTM) +0.110
3 – Xavi Vierge (SPA – Kalex) +0.144

2020 began with a top five in Qatar, Gardner took pole in Austria and by the Styrian GP he was back on the podium. However, a crash in Warm Up at Misano – where he was set to start from pole – saw the Aussie facing more injury struggles with a fracture to his left hand. He missed that race and the Emilia-Romagna GP, returning at Catalunya but only taking P16 after riding through the pain barrier.

Remy Gardner won the Moto2 race at Portimao in 2020

From there though, the momentum began its crescendo that would culminate in the 2021 Moto2 crown: second at Le Mans, two top fives at MotorLand, and third and seventh at Valencia. That prefaced the season finale where, after mastering the rollercoaster as the Autodromo Internacional do Algarve joined the calendar, Gardner took his first Grand Prix win in some style: from pole and with the fastest lap.

Remy Gardner winning at Portimao in 2021

For 2021, the rider on a roll joined Red Bull KTM Ajo and the rest is history, or likely become so. Gardner started the season with three podiums in a row in Qatar, Doha and Portimão, before a fourth place from pole in Jerez. Le Mans was another podium, this time in second place, before Gardner won three in a row on an incredible run of form: Mugello, Catalunya and Germany, the latter of which was the 200th Moto2 race. Another podium at Assen saw him head into the summer break with an advantage in the title fight of 31 points.

Remy Gardner won the 200th Moto2 race at Sachsenring 2021

His closest rival, however, was team-mate Raul Fernandez and the rookie sensation would continue to prove the key challenger as the season rolled on.

Remy Gardner and Raul Fernandez battled all season

Gardner came back from the summer break off the podium in both races at the Red Bull Ring as Raul Fernandez took another win in the second, not going down without a fight.

Remy Gardner took the win at Sachsenring

The Australian hit back with victory at Silverstone as his team-mate crashed out, but both Aragon and San Marino saw the number 87 forced to settle for second as Raul Fernandez began a serious comeback and strung together his own run of three wins in a row – including at the Circuit of the Americas, where Gardner made his first big mistake of the season and crashed out.

KTM 1-2 at Mugello

And so, as the paddock returned to Misano for the Emilia-Romagna GP, the gap between the two was just nine points… but there was another twist in the tale just around the corner. Despite the race proving a tougher once for Gardner, Raul Fernandez crashed out the lead – doubling Gardner’s advantage in one fell swoop as the gap shot back out to 18 points in favour the Australian.

Remy Gardner

That set up the first match point in the Moto2 World Championship for the Algarve GP, and despite a dramatic crash on Friday that left Gardner riding a little bruised on Sunday, the Australian dug deep and took an incredible win under intense pressure from his teammate. That added another five points of advantage, making it 23 on the way in to the season finale.

It was a pensive final race of the season for Gardner at Valencia

After a Red Flag and restart, Gardner kept his nerve from P8 on the grid, dropping a couple of places and duelling it out in the latter half of the top ten. Raul Fernandez had to win to keep his chances alive and that the number 25 did, but Gardner stayed calm and avoided any risks near the front to come out on top in the fight for tenth – three places higher than he needed – and take a history-making World Championship crown. Wayne and Remy join Kenny Roberts and Kenny Roberts Jr as father and son World Champions.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Remy Garnder by numbers

Remy Gardner is the first Australian rider to clinch the Moto2 title and the second to do so in the intermediate category of GP racing along with Kel Carruthers in 1969.

Remy Gardner is the seventh different Australian rider to clinch a GP world title along with Casey Stoner (2), Mick Doohan (5), Kel Carruthers (1), Tom Phillis (1), Keith Campbell (1) and Remy’s father Wayne Gardner (1).

In addition, with his father Wayne crowned World Champion in the 500cc class in 1987, they become the second father and son to both be World Champions, along with MotoGP Legends Kenny Roberts and Kenny Roberts Jr.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion – With Team Manager Aki Ajo

Aged 23 years and 263 days old, Gardner is the eighth youngest rider to clinch the title in Moto2, behind Alex Marquez (23 years 194 days old).

With six wins in the intermediate category, Remy Gardner is the second most successful Australian rider in the intermediate class behind Kel Carruthers (7 wins).

Remy Gardner has won five races in 2021, three less than his teammate Raul Fernandez. However, he is tied with Fernandez as the riders most podiums in Moto2 this season, with 12.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Remy Gardner on winning the World Championship

It’s definitely been an intense season. Raul did an amazing job this year, as a rookie he really made me work for it for sure. It’s such an amazing season, so many podiums, great races, four wins. [Speaker: five wins]. Five wins? Five. Well that shows how much I’m keeping track. It’s been an incredible season. So many parc fermes and podiums, incredible moments with the team. There were times I’d finish second and think that was a bad day but you have to enjoy every moment. It’s been such an amazing season but intense for sure, especially the last quarter has been really intense, Raul has been so fast, I’ve made a few mistakes and he has too, but consistency was key in the end and the days when I just couldn’t win or he won, it was just about finishing and getting the points I could. Ultimately that’s what got us over the line.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“With the first race I had a pretty good first lap, after that incident at Turn 2 I got though on the inside and ended up with the front guys and I thought that would be a good opportunity to go with those guys and break up the group and have a good consistent race, then with the Red Flag everything stopped.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion and KTM Constructor Champion

“I made a good start in both, the second wasn’t as good on the first lap and for the first few laps I was just hanging in there and going with the guys but it was a bit scary cause I saw there was a bit of commotion, guys were passing, Raul was going for it and I thought ‘I’m not going to put myself in the middle there, I’m going to hang back.’ Then I came under fire from the guys behind and had to pull my finger out a little bit and break up the group a bit.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“I had to push a bit harder to get away from Tetsu, he was going crazy and as my team-mate in the past, I know how he rides! Just tried to break up the group a bit and finish the race in a respectable position and safely. Managed to do that, keep my nerves and for sure it was a lot of pressure but I managed to bring it home.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

“It hasn’t really sunk in yet to be honest. There have been so many hard years, decent success this year and even last year, I really kind of changed my chip last year and everything started to go a bit better. I didn’t have the most podiums in the world but managed to get my mind under control, everything was falling into place and I was trying to keep positive about everything. From 2015 to even 2019 they were really, really tough years for me and like I said, there were points in my career I honestly believed that was it, there was no more and that was the end of the road. Especially after injury for sure, fighting through that was incredibly difficult.

Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Remy Gardner Profile

  • First Grand Prix: Misano 2014, Moto3
  • First pole position: Assen 2019, Moto2
  • First podium: Argentina 2019, Moto2
  • First victory: Portugal 2020, Moto2
  • Grands Prix: 113 (92 in Moto2)
  • Victories: 5 (5 in Moto2)
  • Podiums: 16 (16 in Moto2)
  • Pole positions: 6 (6 in Moto2)
  • Fastest laps: 5 (5 in Moto2)
  • World Championships: Moto2 (2021)
  • 2014: Moto3 World Championship – 32nd, Kalex/Kalex KTM, 3 races, 1 point
  • 2015: Moto3 World Championship – 30th, Mahindra, 18 races, 6 points
  • 2016: Moto2 World Championship – 26th, Kalex, 12 races, 8 points
  • 2017: Moto2 World Championship – 21st, Tech3, 17 races, 23 points
  • 2018: Moto2 World Championship – 19th, Tech3, 15 races, 40 points
  • 2019: Moto2 World Championship – 15th, Kalex, 18 races, 77 points
  • 2020: Moto2 World Championship – 6th, Kalex, 13 races, 135 points
  • 2021: Moto2 World Championship – 1st, Kalex, 18 races, 311 points
Remy Gardner – 2021 Moto2 World Champion

Moto 2 Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex AUS 311
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 307
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex ITA 214
4 Sam LOWES Kalex GBR 190
5 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 174
6 Aron CANET Boscoscuro SPA 164
7 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex ITA 161
8 Ai OGURA Kalex JPN 120
9 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro SPA 106
10 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex GER 98
11 Xavi VIERGE Kalex SPA 93
12 Celestino VIETTI Kalex ITA 89
13 Joe ROBERTS Kalex USA 59
14 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex ITA 51
15 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex USA 50
16 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex NED 46
17 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex SPA 39
18 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex THA 37
19 Stefano MANZI Kalex ITA 36
20 Jake DIXON Kalex GBR 30
21 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro SPA 28
22 Thomas LUTHI Kalex SWI 27
23 Hector GARZO Kalex SPA 16
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta ITA 16
25 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro SPA 13
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex ITA 12
27 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex ITA 10
28 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS MAL 9
29 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA Kalex JPN 5
30 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro SPA 4
31 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta ITA 3
32 Barry BALTUS NTS BEL 2

Aki Ajo – Red Bull KTM Moto2 Team Manager

In both categories this season has been incredible. On the other hand, I have to remind myself that this is part of the work: the result of that is the improvements we can see, and we can still make. It is always a pleasure to go through that process. It’s an emotional moment. Remy did it today and Raul had a great race; like for every rider, we just tried to help them take out the maximum of their potential. It’s important to draw out the best of everything around you in racing while also keeping it simple.”

Aki Ajo embraces Remy Gardner in Parc Ferme at Valencia

Pit Beirer – KTM Motorsports Director

It’s a great moment. Winning the title in Moto3 and then watching these boys in Moto2 – and knowing they are moving up to MotoGP – I feel like our foundation for the future is set. This year has been another milestone. It’s crazy what Red Bull KTM Ajo did this season and we’re looking forward to 2022 already.”

Both Gardner and his team-mate Raul Fernandez will move up to MotoGP in 2022 with Tech3 KTM

Moto2 Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 KALEX 450
2 BOSCOSCURO 199
3 MV AGUSTA 19
4 NTS 11

Moto2 Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 RED BULL KTM AJO 618
2 ELF MARC VDS RACING TEAM 364
3 SKY RACING TEAM VR46 303
4 INDE ASPAR TEAM 192
5 FEDERAL OIL GRESINI MOTO2 173
6 IDEMITSU HONDA TEAM ASIA 157
7 LIQUI MOLY INTACT GP 149
8 PETRONAS SPRINTA RACING 123
9 TERMOZETA SPEED UP 119
10 AMERICAN RACING 89
11 ITALTRANS RACING TEAM 74
12 PERTAMINA MANDALIKA SAG TEAM 73
13 FLEXBOX HP40 56
14 MV AGUSTA FORWARD RACING 19
15 NTS RW RACING GP 11

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP riders reflect on QP and look to the race ahead

2021 MotoGP – Round 18 – Valencia
Saturday Qualifying Results/Quotes/Notes


Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) put in a stunning lap at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana on Saturday to take his fourth pole position of the season and Ducati’s first at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo since 2010, his final push enough to depose Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) by just 0.064.

Jorge Martin has qualified on pole position for the fourth time in his rookie season along with Doha when he took his maiden podium in MotoGP (finishing third), Styria when he took his maiden win in the class and Austria when he finished third for his most recent podium.

It’s an all-Ducati front row with Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) in third, with the factory riders suffering a crash each but once again, Bologna bringing the noise on Saturday afternoon. That’s now 11 poles for the manufacturer this season, and there’s been a Ducati on the front row at every single Grand Prix. They’ve taken 30 front row placements out of 54, to be exact. Martin’s pole is his fourth of the season after a stunning premier class debut, and he heads the grid at the venue where he took his first Grand Prix win in Moto3.

2021 Valencia MotoGP front row
1 Jorge Martin – Pramac Racing – Ducati – 1’29.936
2 Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +0.064
3 Jack Miller – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – +0.389

Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) may not have taken another front row, but he had another great qualifying. He said after the Algarve GP he wanted to start routinely qualifying on the front two rows, and in the pre-event Press Conference in Valencia the 2020 Champion said he wanted to se if they could replicate the quality qualifying… so that’s mission accomplished in fourth.

Alongside Mir on Row 2 are Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing), to make it four Ducatis in the top five, with Rins in P6 coming through from Q1 to make it two Suzukis in the top six.

Binder likewise converted the chance from Q1 into a good grid position, the South African taking P7 to head the third row. He’s joined by reigning Champion Quartararo as the Frenchman had another muted Saturday, out of the top six for the third race in a row.

Ninth went to Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) ahead of one of the best recent qualifying sessions for Rossi in tenth, the ‘Doctor’ also having gone straight through to Q2.

Franco Morbidelli (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), who also went straight through, is P11, with Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) taking P12.

Pol Espargaro suffered a vicious highside on the exit of Turn 12 heading into Turn 13 in FP3. Scans revealed heavy bruising, especially around the right thorax and abdomen.  Espargaro will rest Saturday night before assessing his condition and a decision on his continued participation on Sunday morning.

That’s an interesting grid to round out the season. A Ducati front-row lock out, Mir with a lot less work to do on Sunday and Rins too, and of course, a farewell for the ‘Doctor’…


MotoGP Rider Quotes

Jorge Martin – P1

“I knew I could do it, before qualifying I was really confident. But the target was the front row, here it’s so important to be on the front row because it’s difficult to overtake. The first lap was good but I knew with some mistakes, and I could improve. On the second tyre was perfect, I felt a lot of speed from the beginning, improved the weak points and was fully focused. For sure still with some margin but on the limit. Really happy about my performance, the base isn’t bad. It’s a pity that in FP4 we tried to hard tyre but I think it’s not the race tyre. I hope the medium works well at the end of the race but I think we can battle for the podium for sure.”

With four poles in his rookie season, Jorge Martin becomes the first rookie with four (or more) pole positions in MotoGP since Fabio Quartararo with six poles back in 2019. Prior to the race, Martin is second in the fight for the Rookie of the Year with 91 points, three behind Enea Bastianini.
Francesco Bagnaia – P2

“I’m happy with today’s result in qualifying. Unfortunately, I was pushing too hard on the last lap and crashed. Despite that, we’re starting from the front row, from the second position, and that’s a good result. Valencia is not one of the tracks that best suits my riding style, and this is the first year I have been able to be competitive here. All weekend I have struggled to be perfect on a single lap, but the pace for the race is good. We’ve been working well all weekend, and we already know what tyres we’ll use for the race, so I’m positive and ready for the final Grand Prix of the season”.

Francesco Bagnaia is second for his tenth successive front row start but ending a streak of five pole positions.
Jack Miller – P3

“This was our last qualifying session of the year, so I really tried to give everything and once again, I was close to the pole. During the last lap, I crashed at turn 9, and maybe I was pushing a little too hard, but in any case, I had fun: the good feeling I have with my Desmosedici and the good weather conditions today allowed me to take advantage of the full potential of my bike. I feel like I have a good pace for tomorrow’s race, and now we just have to figure out exactly what tyre choice to make for it. It would be nice to end the season with a third win!”

Jack Miller has finished on the podium twice in Valencia. This time around he has qualified third for his eighth front row of the season. He will be aiming to take back-to-back podiums for the first time since his back-to-back wins in Spain and France earlier in the season.
Joan Mir – P4

“I’m happy about qualifying today, we worked well and we missed out on the front row by a very small amount. We’re following the steps to have a stronger bike and a better package for next year. I’ve been feeling good all weekend and my pace is pretty strong, both with the used tyres and with the fresh ones. It gives me a boost that we were so close to the front row and I’m pleased to show my potential ahead of the final round. Tomorrow will be a special race with so many fans.”

Joan Mir is fourth for his second-best qualifying result of the season after Algarve last time out in third. He will be aiming to win for the second time in MotoGP along with the European GP last year (in Valencia).
Johann Zarco – P5

“I am satisfied. To start from the second row is an excellent result. Tomorrow we need to be good and maintain a good race-pace for every lap. Congratulations to Jorge for the pole position!”

Alex Rins – P6

“It was a good day for the team with both Joan and I pretty fast. My final laps in Q2 were disturbed by the two yellow flags, which was a bit of a shame, but it’s nice to be on the second row and I feel that I can get a good start. It’s tricky with all the Ducatis around, but I know our pace is strong. One thing is sure; we will give our all to have a great final race.”

After coming through Q1, Alex Rins has qualified sixth for his second-best qualifying of the season along with the Portuguese GP when he was second. He has finished on the podium twice at Valencia, in 2018 and 2020/1, both times in second place.
Brad Binder – P7

“In general I’m happy with the way qualification went today. I’d say we made a positive step. I was happy to get through Q1 and I only had one set of tires and managed just one flying lap, which was a bit of a shame but we went OK. The guys did well to give me something that worked for Q2 and the feeling is a bit better. I believe I can do a good job tomorrow but it won’t be as simple as it looks because we’ll have to manage the rear tyre well.”

Brad Binder, who also came through Q1, has qualified seventh as the top KTM. This is Binder’s second-best qualifying of the season after Mugello, where he was sixth.
Fabio Quartararo – P8

“In FP4, we made a step because we put on the hard tyre, and that was much better, but I feel like the front tyre is too soft for me, and there‘s no turning. We need to find a solution to improve this. It will be tricky to recover some positions, but our race pace looks not too bad. I will be pushing on the first laps to make up some places. The main thing now is to improve the setting and accordingly the feeling with the front, and then we can also improve on braking.”

2021 MotoGP World Champion Fabio Quartararo has qualified eighth (as the top Yamaha rider), for his second worst qualifying result of the season after Emilia-Romagna, when he was 15th.
Takaaki Nakagami – P9

“To be honest, I expected a little bit of a better result, but third row (P9) is not too bad for tomorrow’s race. In FP4 we were fastest and that’s good for the race pace. In qualifying it was a little bit strange as I struggled with the performance of the speed, but I’m really looking forward to the race. Hopefully we can make a good start and follow the top guys and I’ll fight until the chequered flag.”

Valentino Rossi – P10

“It was a good Saturday and I am very happy about today because I felt good with the bike from this morning, and I was able to go straight to Q2. This was great and everything felt easier, like the tyres for example. I was able to do a good lap in Q2 and I will start my last MotoGP race in the top-ten, so it means that I am part of the fastest ten riders in the world. I am so proud of this for me, but also for my team. Now we need to improve in two or three places, try to ride well and have a good race tomorrow. I did have some help from ‘Pecco’ [Bagnaia], as I used his slipstream both this morning and afternoon, so I have to say thanks to him. To be honest, I was worried about this weekend because it is difficult to manage everything, but everything has been good and I have enjoyed the many surprises, like the big mural. So I want to say thank you to everybody, I’m enjoying it all.”

Valentino Rossi has qualified 10th for his best qualifying result since he was eighth at Silverstone this year. He will be aiming to stand on the podium for the 200th time in the premier class. Valentino Rossi will retire after having covered more than 46,000 km in races, around 46,500 km!
Franco Morbidelli – P11

“I‘m a bit disappointed, actually, because I think that our potential was more than this. But I made a mistake. I tried something different in the second run of FP4, and it didn‘t feel too bad, but then I brought it to qualifying, and with the soft tyres I had to adapt to it. I thought I would have adapted to it by the second run, but then that didn‘t happen. I had a yellow flag when Bagnaia crashed, and then on my second lap there were some people cruising on track because they thought it was already after the chequered flag. I slowed down. It‘s a pity because I think that our potential was better in FP4. In every practice we felt really good, and we were up there. But it‘s okay. I need to work and improve my riding. I need to move a little bit more on the bike, but my physical state doesn’t allow me to do that yet. But we are improving.”

Franco Morbidelli
Aleix Espargaro – P12

“We took a step forward and I’m pleased. The bike worked well today. Despite the crash in FP4, I went back out with the second RS-GP on extremely used tyres and still managed to lap with good times. It’s a pity that we got unlucky in qualifying, with yellow flags that cancelled out all my fast laps. It’s frustrating, but sometimes that’s the way it goes. Let’s just say that starting from the fourth row isn’t idea, especially here in Valencia, but we have the pace to make up for it.”

Andrea Dovizioso – P13

“I’m not too happy about the position today, but the speed is a bit better. I’m happy about that because from the first session yesterday we have been faster and have been closer to the quickest riders. This is what we need and I was only two tenths shy of the fastest Yamaha rider, which is really good. I’m happy and let’s see what happens tomorrow. I know that I am closer to the group of riders ahead of me in the times, but Valencia can be a strange race as you use the left side of the tyre a lot and it will affect the race more than at other circuits. I’m not sure what I will be able to achieve tomorrow, but my pace isn’t too bad. It will be important to gain positions at the start and then be consistent until the end.”

Maverick Vinales – P14

“I’m truly satisfied with what we accomplished today, although I would have expected to be faster in qualifying, to be honest. If we look at my pace in race simulation during FP4, we did a good job and I’m able to be fast even after a lot of laps. I lose a lot in the third sector, which is where I lose the most ground. Now that we have a good base for the race, we’ll try some specific changes in the warm-up session to try and improve in that situation.”

Iker Lecuona – P15

“We were struggling throughout the day and worked very hard to find a good base. At the same time, we are very close. In FP3 I finished about five tenths behind the top and was in P14, so it’s super-tight. In Q1, I was pushing a lot, I made some mistakes but I’m happy because we are there, we have the speed. For sure tomorrow we have to give a bit more but we are ready to fight.”

Iker Lecuona
Danilo Petrucci – P16

“It was a very tight qualifying and everybody is so close to each other. I didn’t do the best lap but I was pushing a lot and was still missing some hundredths. I still think we can do a decent race tomorrow. I feel good with the bike and with a fine start I believe there is the chance for us to score some points.”

Luca Marini – P17

“It’s a tricky track where it’s difficult to find a good feeling with the asphalt and tyres. I’m missing something at the front to be able to be completely comfortable with the handling. It was a pity the yellow flag in FP3, it would have been a different Saturday with direct access to Q2. I was fast, but maybe I lacked a bit of experience with the asymmetric front tyre, plus the rear grip is very difficult to manage. The more experienced riders are making the difference.”

Enea Bastianini – P18

“It was a bad day. Unfortunately we couldn’t understand why we couldn’t make a step forward compared to yesterday. I will start 18th and I will try to make a comeback, but I think it will be difficult. It’s the last race of the season, I will try to enjoy it and to finish in the best possible way.”

Álex Márquez – P19

“I’m a bit angry and sad with myself as I made a mistake in qualy and wasn’t able to go very fast after that. The first lap was good and after that maybe I was little too optimistic. I’m upset because in FP4 we saw our potential with used tyres. I know that on this track it’s hard to pass and I made a mistake, but we can’t change the past and we have to look to the future. The future is that we have a race tomorrow, we’ll try to make a good start and a good first part, that will be important to making a good race if we can be close to the top 10. So ,we’ll try our best from the first lap.”

Miguel Oliveira – P20

“FP4 was a good improvement for us in terms of speed and pace everything looked OK for qualifying. When we added the new tires and less fuel – the normal procedure for us in qualifying – we easily found a limit on the lap-time again. It is frustrating because I am putting in a lot of effort and things are not coming my way. Also, for the team because there are no clear answers. I don’t know what kind of race we can have tomorrow. We have a long way to come back.”

Pol Espargaro – P21

“Unfortunately today I had a very big crash during FP3 at Turn 13. The impact was very hard but fortunately I have no serious injuries and nothing appeared broken in the tests we did at the hospital. At the moment I have a lot of pain from around my ribs when I breathe, this is what hurts most. I’m really disappointed because we had great speed and I was feeling really confident. I’m sorry for my team. Tonight we will rest, take painkillers and see what the situation is in the morning.”

This is Ducati’s 11th pole position of the season. Their previous best in a single MotoGP season was in 2008 with nine. In addition, there has been at least one Ducati rider on the front of every race this year (for a total of 30 front rows for Ducati riders out of 54 front row spots).

MotoGP Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Q Time/Gap
1 Jorge MARTIN DUCATI Q2 1m29.936
2 Francesco BAGNAIA DUCATI Q2 +0.064
3 Jack MILLER DUCATI Q2 +0.389
4 Joan MIR SUZUKI Q2 +0.459
5 Johann ZARCO DUCATI Q2 +0.482
6 Alex RINS SUZUKI Q2 +0.539
7 Brad BINDER KTM Q2 +0.573
8 Fabio QUARTARARO YAMAHA Q2 0.684
9 Takaaki NAKAGAMI HONDA Q2 +0.708
10 Valentino ROSSI YAMAHA Q2 +0.810
11 Franco MORBIDELLI YAMAHA Q2 +0.845
12 Aleix ESPARGARO APRILIA Q2 +1.088
13 Andrea DOVIZIOSO YAMAHA Q1 (*) 0.186
14 Maverick VIÑALES APRILIA Q1 (*) 0.318 
15 Iker LECUONA KTM Q1 (*) 0.321 
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM Q1 (*) 0.372 
17 Luca MARINI DUCATI Q1 (*) 0.400 
18 Enea BASTIANINI DUCATI Q1 (*) 0.512 
19 Alex MARQUEZ HONDA Q1 (*) 0.578 
20 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM Q1 (*) 0.646 
21 Pol ESPARGARO HONDA FP2 0.012


Moto2

Simone Corsi (MV Agusta Forward Racing) claimed a first pole position since the 2012 Aragon GP in Moto2, and after coming through Q1.

Simone Corsi has qualified on pole for the second time in Moto2 along with Aragon in 2012. This is MV Agusta’s second pole position in Moto2 along with Stefano Manzi at the Valencia GP last year.

It was a session that saw title-chasing Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) crash, but the Spaniard starts P5, with World Championship leader Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) going for title glory from P8.

Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) and Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) bagged front row starts.

2021 Valencia Moto2 front row
1 Simone Corsi – MV Agusta Forward Racing – MV Agusta – 1’34.956
2 Celestino Vietti – Sky Racing Team VR46 – Kalex – +0.049
3 Augusto Fernandez – Elf Marc VDS Racing Team – Kalex – +0.070

Moto2 Combined Times

Pos Rider Motorcycle Q Time/Gap
1 Simone CORSI MV AGUSTA Q2 1m34.956
2 Celestino VIETTI KALEX Q2 +0.049
3 Augusto FERNANDEZ    SPA KALEX Q2 +0.070
4 Fabio DI GIANNANTONI   ITA KALEX Q2 +0.078
5 Raul FERNANDEZ KALEX Q2 +0.080
6 Thomas LUTHI KALEX Q2 +0.135
7 Aron CANET BOSCOSCURO Q2 +0.147
8 Remy GARDNER KALEX Q2 +0.161
9 Jorge NAVARRO BOSCOSCURO Q2 +0.197
10 Sam LOWES KALEX Q2 +0.223
11 Marco BEZZECCHI KALEX Q2 +0.276
12 Xavi VIERGE KALEX Q2 +0.286
13 Marcel SCHROTTER KALEX Q2 +0.288
14 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS Q2 +0.454
15 Tetsuta NAGASHIMA KALEX Q2 +0.540
16 Marcos RAMIREZ KALEX Q2 +0.619
17 Joe ROBERTS KALEX Q2 +0.664
18 Cameron BEAUBIER KALEX Q2 +1.005
19 Hector GARZO KALEX Q1 (*) 0.213
20 Stefano MANZI KALEX Q1 (*) 0.313
21 Fermín ALDEGUER BOSCOSCURO Q1 (*) 0.322
22 Bo BENDSNEYDER KALEX Q1 (*) 0.353
23 Jake DIXON KALEX Q1 (*) 0.373
24 Nicolò BULEGA KALEX Q1 (*) 0.465
25 Somkiat CHANTRA KALEX Q1 (*) 0.663
26 Albert ARENAS BOSCOSCURO Q1 (*) 0.761
27 Tony ARBOLINO KALEX Q1 (*) 1.063
28 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI   ITA MV AGUSTA Q1 (*) 1.263
29 Dimas EKKY PRATAMA KALEX Q1 (*) 2.321
30 Barry BALTUS NTS FP3 0.808


Moto3

Newly-crowned Moto3 Champion Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo) signed off from the lightweight class in style on Saturday, with the youngster saying he was on a mission to take a pole position before he graduates to Moto2 and he got the job done. His 1m38.668 puts him three tenths clear of Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) in second, with rookie Izan Guevara (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) completing the front row after having been fastest on Friday.

2021 Moto3 World Champion Pedro Acosta has qualified on pole for the first time in his GP career. Acosta becomes the 12th different polesitter this year, equalling the highest number in a single Moto3 season along with 2019.

Acosta is also the 12th different rider on pole this year, equalling the record for the most in a Moto3 season from 2019.

2021 Valencia Moto3 front row
1 Pedro Acosta – Red Bull KTM Ajo – KTM – 1’38.668
2 Tatsuki Suzuki – SIC58 Squadra Corse – Honda – +0.310
3 Izan Guevara – Valresa GASGAS Aspar – GASGAS – +0.385

Moto3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Q Time/Gap
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM Q2 1m38.668
2 Tatsuki SUZUKI HONDA Q2 +0.310
3 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS Q2 +0.385
4 Andrea MIGNO HONDA Q2 +0.392
5 Filip SALAC KTM Q2 +0.424
6 Lorenzo FELLON HONDA Q2 +0.465
7 Dennis FOGGIA HONDA Q2 +0.466
8 Romano FENATI HUSQVARNA Q2 +0.475
9 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM Q2 +0.481
10 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS Q2 +0.641
11 Carlos TATAY KTM Q2 +0.649
12 Jeremy ALCOBA HONDA Q2 +0.702
13 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM Q2 +0.825
14 Stefano NEPA KTM Q2 +0.894
15 John MCPHEE HONDA Q2 +0.998
16 Darryn BINDER HONDA Q2 +1.142
17 Xavier ARTIGAS HONDA Q2 +1.302
18 Joel KELSO KTM Q2 +1.441
19 Adrian FERNANDEZ HUSQVARNA Q1 (*) 0.269
20 Yuki KUNII HONDA Q1 (*) 0.445
21 Jose Antonio RUEDA HONDA Q1 (*) 0.458
22 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM Q1 (*) 0.714
23 Jaume MASIA KTM Q1 (*) 0.821
24 Kaito TOBA KTM Q1 (*) 1.003
25 Alberto SURRA HONDA Q1 (*) 1.043
26 Ayumu SASAKI KTM Q1 (*) 1.180
27 Riccardo ROSSI KTM FP1 0.860

Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo Schedule (AEST)

Sunday
Time Class Session
1840 Moto3 WUP
1910 Moto2 WUP
1940 MotoGP WUP
2100 Moto3 Race
2220 Moto2 Race
0000 (Mon) MotoGP Race

MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 267
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 227
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 195
4 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 165
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 163
6 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 142
7 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 142
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 113
9 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 106
10 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 100
11 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 99
12 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 94
13 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 92
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 91
15 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 76
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 67
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 42
18 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 41
19 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
20 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 38
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 14
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 12
24 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha ITA 8
25 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
26 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
27 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1

Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 332
2 YAMAHA 298
3 SUZUKI 227
4 HONDA 211
5 KTM 196
6 APRILIA 114

Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 392
2 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP 364 364
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 294
4 PRAMAC RACING 258
5 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 250
6 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 234
7 LCR HONDA 143
8 ESPONSORAMA RACING 135
9 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 128

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship calendar

Round Date Location
Round 1 Mar-28 Qatar, Losail (night race)
Round 2 Apr-04 Doha, Losail (night race)
Round 3 Apr-18 Portugal, Portimao
Round 4 May-02 Spain, Jerez
Round 5 May-16 France, Le Mans
Round 6 May-30 Italy- Mugello
Round 7 Jun-06 Catalunya, Barcelona
Round 8 Jun-20 Germany, Sachsenring
Round 9 Jun-27 Netherlands, Assen
Round 10 Aug-8 Styria, Red Bull Ring
Round 11 Aug-15 Austria, Red Bull Ring
Round 12 Aug-29 Great Britain, Silverstone
Round 13 Sep-12 Aragon, Motorland Aragon
Round 14 Sep-19 San Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Americas, Circuit of the Americas
Round 16 Oct-24 Italy e dell’Emilia Romagna, Misano
Round 17 Nov-7 Portugal, Algarve
Round 18 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Malaysian Hafizh Syahrin to race WorldSBK in 2022

WorldSBK 2022

MIE Racing Honda has announced a two-rider line-up for the 2022 Superbike World Championship season.

As well as confirming Argentinean Leandro “Tati” Mercado after their first season together, Team Principal Midori Moriwaki has welcomed Malaysian rider Hafizh Syahrin to the ranks of the MIE Racing Honda Team.

Midori Moriwaki – Team Principal

We are extremely happy to confirm two strong riders like Leandro Mercado and Hafizh Syahrin, thus doubling up on our line-up for the 2022 World Superbike season. “Tati” has been great this season, always maintaining a positive and determined attitude, despite some challenging moments for the team, and making an important contribution to the solid progress we have made over the year. He is fast, determined, and experienced and, by extending our collaboration, we will bring continuity to our project. We have been following Hafizh’s career over the years, ever since he ran his first wildcard race in the Moto2 World Championship on a Moriwaki bike (Malaysia 2011) at just 16 years of age. He is one of many strong riders to have emerged from the vibrant and competitive racing scene on the Asian continent, where motorcycling is a much-loved and extremely popular sport. Hafizh is very talented and competitive and will be a very valuable addition to our team and the Superbike World Championship.

27-year old Syahrin, who hails from Selangor district, is about to conclude his sixth season in the Moto2 World Championship and has also completed two seasons in the MotoGP class, in 2018 and 2019. Now set to debut in WorldSBK on a Fireblade, Syahrin will find a strong and experienced team-mate in Mercado, who will embark on his second season with Moriwaki’s squad.

Hafizh Syahrin

I would like to thank the team, Midori Moriwaki especially, and Honda for the belief and trust they put in me. I am sure we will be able to work well together and hopefully produce good results. I will do my very best as always. This will be a new challenge for me, and I am enthusiastic about getting started! I would like to thank all the sponsors, my family, friends, and the fans as well for their continuous support – I know everyone is as excited as I am! Bring it on! Thank you everyone”.

Mercado has managed to bag 21-points across season 2021 and is currently ranked 21st in the WorldSBK Championship with one round still remaining.

Leandro Mercado

I am very happy to continue with the MIE Racing Honda Team and with this project in the Superbike World Championship. I think we have done a good job this year and made consistent progress, but we still have more to do and more to give! We can, and must, get better results and for this reason it is important to be able to continue working on this project, which gives me so much motivation. I want to thank Midori Moriwaki for believing in me, the whole team for the great work they do, and the sponsors for their support. For my part, I will give 100% to continue our growth”.

Source: MCNews.com.au

MotoGP Team Managers reflect on season 2021

The year in review
Team Managers talk 2021

Overnight at Valencia, representatives from each of the six factory teams sat down to review the season in front of the assembled press contingent: Paolo Ciabatti (Ducati Corse Sporting Director), Lin Jarvis (Managing Director of Yamaha Motor Racing & Team Principal of Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), Shinichi Sahara (Project Leader and Team Manager of Team Suzuki Ecstar), Alberto Puig (Repsol Honda Team Manager), Mike Leitner (Red Bull KTM Race Manager) and Massimo Rivola (CEO Aprilia Racing).

Some key statements from the Team reps

Paolo Ciabatti (Ducati Corse Sporting Director)

“We’re pleased about winning for the second consecutive year the Constructors’ championship, I think also this year in a more normal championship over 18 rounds is even better for us to achieve this result, and I think it’s the best ever season for Ducati with 21 podiums, the highest ever number. The other best result was in 2007 when we won the championship with Casey and we had 18 podiums with Casey and Loris Capirossi. Six races, 10 pole positions, there’s always been a Ducati on the front row and I don’t remember the last time that happened. It has been successful, I think winning with three riders, on the podium with five riders shows our bike is very competitive, we’re still maybe struggling a little on some circuits like Sachsenring and maybe Assen isn’t perfect for us, but all in all we’re happy. It’s a shame we weren’t able to fight until Valencia with Fabio but he did fantastic season and made almost no mistakes, he deserved to win. But we’re confident we’ll be there next year to try and bring this title back to Bologna.

Paolo Ciabatti (Ducati Corse Sporting Director)

“We made a big change from last year to this year, we ‘promoted’ Pecco and Jack from Pramac to the factory team and invested in new young riders – the oldest is Johann who is just 30. So, happy because the results are showing we made the right choice and went in the right direction, and we also have some new rides coming next year. Eight bikes on the grid is for sure a challenge form the logistics side, but we did it in the past with Pramac, Avintia and Aspar. So we know how to handle it. Having many of the most promising young riders on Ducatis is good for us and our future.”


Lin Jarvis (Managing Director of Yamaha Motor Racing)

“We’re super happy with the result, that’s what we’re all here for at the end of the day, to win the riders’ title, the one that really counts and is remembered in years to come. [Ciabatti laughs] We’re friendly competitors on and off track so that’s part of the game [laughs]. Super happy, it’s been five years since without winning a rider title, and I think Fabio did the almost prefect season, he did a bit of a Joan Mir and got the title then crashed out, which was finally what was the decisive factor to allow Ducati to take their deserved Constructors’ prize. There’s still the team title but we’re 28 points behind but never say never, for example in Misano they had zero points and then in Portimao we ended up with close to zero points. thing can change quickly here it’s very competitive but it feels good to have another riders’ title under our belts.

Lin Jarvis (Managing Director of Yamaha Motor Racing & Team Principal of Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP)

“It’s about bringing the whole package together, working together as a team, having the engineers working closer with the team, with the Europeans. To win in a highly competitor world with six manufacturers you have to have everything aligned. It’s very complicated and complex, unpredictable as well, sometimes you have almost everything aligned and then a major problem happens, for example like Marc, with his unexpected injury a year ago which has been a game changer for Honda. So I think we’ve definitely regrouped over the last two or three years. Last year was a difficult year, you’ll all recall and I do, unfortunately in bad ways, we had issues with the engine, the valve story, if you make mistakes in your prep and process you don’t achieve the goal so this season we took a step forward from last year. We’re still lacking pure power but that’s due to also the Covid restrictions from last season to this year, with no engine development, so we were unable to make a step forward but many things we improved this year. We took Fabio into the factory team, with some of his, let’s say, staff members on board, very good synergy, very good working together. It’s not his first year, it’s his third with Yamaha. Fabio has stepped up this year as well, we’ve fixed many problems we had last year when it was a brand new factory bike, new generation, I think we just stepped up and were able to get the job done.”


Shinichi Sahara (Project Leader and Team Manager of Team Suzuki Ecstar)

“We achieved the rider title last year and team title, compared to this it’s been very difficult, a tough season for us. But the start of the season, before starting we decided to not be defending champions and decided to be challengers again to achieve the top positions. But as a result, we had some difficult moments in the middle of the season and first half of the season, without a device that other manufacturers already had. But fortunately we have two strong riders, and Joan is very consistent and he has speed, we just need something small to achieve more speed and results. And Suzuki sometimes struggles in qualifying, this costs in our race results. Every time on the grid, Simon Crafar asks me and I say, ‘the grid position isn’t ideal for us but race pace is good’, and he says it’s the same comment I always make! But I think we’ve already started to overcome this for next year and I think next year we’ll be in the position to fight for podiums and wins.

Shinichi Sahara (Project Leader and Team Manager of Team Suzuki Ecstar)

“My new role as a team manager is too much for me, but everything is done and quickly with support from the team, and I’m very satisfied. I’m trying to make a new team structure for next year, have a new team manager and this is now fixed. At the moment I can’t say anything about this now!”


Alberto Puig (Repsol Honda Team Manager)

“It wasn’t easy at the beginning, Marc came but still wasn’t really fit, and even still he managed to win three races, and for Pol it was also difficult. He expected one type of bike and realised it was different. It took him quite a long time to understand the bike. He started in Silverstone, it managed to click a bit and he got pole, and from then on he improved. I think important for us was the Misano test, we realized quite a lot of things and we were able to react for the last part of the season, and globally the results have been improving. But it’s clear that it’s not what wed call a good year for Honda. We still need to improve many issues and that’s where we are right now, the factory trying to improve the hardware and the bike, and on the other hand, for Pol it’s not a problem but for Marc we’ll have to see how things go for him.

Alberto Puig (Repsol Honda Team Manager)

“Normally a rider that wins is not winning because he doesn’t understand the bike, he understand the bike. So now we’ll have to have a second year of development without the rider who’s won a lot of races. It’s not the best scenario but racing isn’t always what you want, it’s what it is and what you have at that moment. Now we have to try and understand what’s our direction with the other three. They’re fast but they don’t have the experience winning as Marc has. But it is what it is, we’ll go for it and try and take the best of their information.”


Mike Leitner (Red Bull KTM Race Manager)

“We started the new season not in the way we wanted but after some races we found quite a good way to fix it, and from Mugello on we were very competitive, Miguel won Barcelona, then two second positions, Brad also did great results at that time. After summer break we expected to continue in that way but things turned… like Alberto says, racing is racing and you have what you have, sometimes things change fast. It took us a little to understand but for us a big change in the racing operation was the loss of concessions, it forces you to develop the bike differently, especially from the company and the way you get new parts, and all these things, the procedures. We learned a lot about that and the target is clear: do better in 2022.

Mike Leitner (Red Bull KTM Race Manager)

“The class is so competitive with every manufacturer, you don’t have a bike with one big bad point. They’re balanced and in this category, 0.15 of a second puts you in a completely different area. Putting all the points in line with the riders, team everything. We took two victories, to be fair it’s not a terrible season, and Brad will finish sixth of seventh in the Championship, we’ll take the most positives out, learn from this season and make the next step.”


Massimo Rivola (CEO Aprilia Racing)

“It was a good season compared to the past for sure, despite that we’re not finishing the season in the best way so we need to focus on what we’re doing now and finish in a proper way. We’re very keen to fight in 2022, we’ll also be a factory team. If we look at our progression from 19 to 20 to 21 hopefully we’ll keep that progression and close the gap to the guys in front, but still we are behind so we have a long way to go.

Massimo Rivola (CEO Aprilia Racing).

“The approach we have with Maverick is to do the races as a test, trying different parts and setups and configurations, trying to understand what’s better for him, this is sacrificing the race result itself and sometimes his confidence which has been a bit harder to build, but I’m sure in Maverick we have a super talent and I’m convinced we can find a way to match our resources with his talent.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

Ben Currie to join new look World Supersport ranks

World Supersport 2022

After a few years without any permanent representation in the ranks of World Supersport Australia already has two riders signed up to take on the new look World Supersport Championship in 2022.

In the biggest shake-up in the history of the category, organisers will open the class up to 955 cc V-Twins and 765 triples in a quest to broaden the appeal of the category and open it up to more manufacturers. 

Oli Bayliss has already been announced as a rider for Barni Racing Ducati, and this week Motozoo Racing by Puccetti announced that Ben Currie will race one of their ZX-6R machines. 

Benjamin Currie is a rider with a double passport, German and Australian, born on May 17, 1995 in Würzburg – Germany. He has lived in the UK since he was 18, was national vice-champion in the Superstock 600, then moved up to the British Supersport 600 in 2017 finishing third. In the same class he finished second in 2018, while in 2019 he competed for Kawasaki Factory in the BSB. In 2021 he participated in the British Supersport 600, finishing second. 2022 will be the year of his debut in the Supersport 600 World Championship.

Ben Currie

I have been working for a long time to take the opportunity to compete in the Supersport 600 World Championship. For me it is a dream come true and I am looking forward to getting on track for the first tests. I will have the opportunity to continue my work with Kawasaki and this is certainly very positive. In these seasons I have always achieved great results in Supersport 600 with the Kawasaki ZX6R and I am sure that thanks to the support of Motozoo Racing by Puccetti I will have the opportunity to reap a lot of satisfaction.”

Ben Currie
Ben Currie atop the British Supersport podium at Brands Hatch earlier this year – Image Dave Yeomans

Currie’s team-mate will be rising young Dutch star, Jeffrey Buis. Born in 2001, Buis was Supersport 300 World Champion in 2020, while he finished third in 2021 in the 300 class.

Jeffrey Buis

I am really very happy to confirm already now my presence at the Supersport 600 World Championship in 2022. Continuing with Motozoo, the team with which I am competing in the last two races of the 2021 season, in Argentina and Indonesia, makes me happy. I got along well with them right from the debut, they are very professional and prepared. Already in my debut race we managed to reach the points zone. Having confirmed our collaboration also for 2022 will allow us to prepare ourselves in the best possible way for next season.

The team, which will enjoy direct support from Kawasaki Motors Europe, will compete in its second full season in the World Championship in 2022.

Fabio Uccelli – Motozoo Racing by Puccetti Team Manager

I am really happy to be able to announce our team’s participation in the Supersport 600 World Championship also in 2022. We have already defined the plans for next season, even before having finished. that of 2021. Next year we will enjoy the direct support of Kawasaki Motors Europe confirming that the work done this year, in our first world championship season, has been judged very positively by the European branch of the Japanese motorcycle manufacturer. It is the right reward for the professionalism shown this year and I am very proud of this. It was obviously a difficult season, we didn’t know the tracks and the bike. Having scored points in more races this season and winning race one in Navarra in the World Supersport Challenge with Hikari Okubo made us aware of our level and our potential. The support of Kawasaki Motor Europe – in addition to the technical support by the Puccetti organization – will allow us to grow even more. in 2022. We will have two excellent riders, Jeffrey Buis, already World Champion in the 300 class, with whom we are already gaining experience in the end of this season, and Benjamin Currie, protagonist in 2021 in the 600 class of the British Supersport, where he finished second. The ingredients to do well are all there, but now we aim to finish the current season well with Buis, with whom we will compete in the next and last race in Indonesia.”

Source: MCNews.com.au

Jack Miller tops day one at Valencia in mixed conditions

2021 MotoGP – Round 18 – Valencia
Friday Practice Quotes/Notes/Times


It was a close Day 1 at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, with Ducati vs Honda at the top and Jack Miller (Ducati Lenovo Team) taking final honours by the end of play.

FP1 was wet before the sun came out in the afternoon and created a frenetic mini-qualifying session, leaving Miller, Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) in second and Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) in third covered by just 0.068.

You could split the top trio of Miller, Pol and Pecco with a tyre blanket, but then there’s a bit of a gap to Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) in fourth. The Spaniard is 0.409s down on P1, while Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) rounded out the top five – also 0.4s shy.

Nakagami had a solid opening day in P6, the Japanese rider just ahead of 2020 World Champion Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) in seventh and Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) in eighth.

Dovizioso slipped to P9 by the time FP2 had ended but a top 10 is a fantastic Friday result for the Italian as he cotninues to adapt to the 2019 M1. Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) occupies P10 ahead of Saturday’s action.

Pecco has six poles so far and Quartararo five… will that change in the season finale? With Quartararo down in P11 after Friday, the Frenchman will be looking to bounce back strong on Saturday…


MotoGP Rider Quotes

Jack Miller – P1

“I’m delighted with this first day here at Valencia, which is one of my favourite tracks on the calendar! The bike is working really well here, and both in the wet this morning and the dry this afternoon, I felt comfortable straight away. I had a small crash in FP1: I went wide in the first corner, but as soon as I touched the paint, it was like hitting the ice! Apart from that, I’m enjoying riding here, and I can’t wait to see what the rest of the weekend has in store for us”.

Jack Miller
Pol Espargaro – P2

“We have had a good day today. It started in the wet and I took it a little easy because you can end your weekend in the first session if you’re not careful. In the afternoon I was feeling confident on used medium tyres. Overall it was a good second session apart from the small crash we had, but I thought something like this might happen because I was pushing a lot. The track was not in the best condition because of the rain so we have to keep working overnight to raise our level for Qualifying. It’s a good start to the weekend and I want to give the Spanish fans in the stands something to cheer about.”

Francesco Bagnaia – P3

“It was my best Friday ever here in Valencia, so I’m very happy. I felt good on the bike straight away, and we already have a clear idea of what we need to change to improve further. This morning in the wet, I crashed at Turn 2, a place where I crash every year, but then I quickly found my rhythm again. Even this afternoon in the dry, although the conditions were not easy because of the little grip and the wet patches, we were very fast. I’m satisfied and ready for our last qualifying session of the season tomorrow”.

Alex Rins – P4

“My first day here in Valencia wasn’t so bad, it’s a shame that FP1 was wet because it was almost like a wasted session – the forecasts say we won’t get any more rain this weekend. But you know, you have to tackle each session as it comes. In FP2 I had pretty good pace and we made a good step today. Let’s try to get the best set-up for tomorrow and attack for qualifying.”

Alex Rins
Jorge Martín – P5

“I am very happy with this first day of free practice sessions. It’s a track where I am comfortable and have a lot of fun. I am very motivated and I know that we can do very well here.”

Jorge Martín
Takaaki Nakagami – P6

“We had a good start today in both sessions, FP1 and FP2. It was different conditions, wet in FP1 and dry in FP2, in both sessions we were able to stay in the top 10, especially FP2 when we had quite consistent lap times and good pace. I’m quite happy about today, although we still need to improve the braking stability, but that was the only main issue really. I’m really looking forward to tomorrow morning’s session and qualifying and our target is to get a first or second row place in qualifying.”

Takaaki Nakagami
Joan Mir – P7

“It was a positive day for us, trying two different conditions. This morning I felt great in the wet and I was able to build up a good performance from the beginning, so I was pretty happy with that. Then in the afternoon I still had some work to do with the dry set-up; I didn’t feel fully confident. But the base is fine, so I feel quite optimistic for tomorrow. Let’s see what we can do, I’m looking forward to it.”

Joan Mir
Andrea Dovizioso – P9

“Today isn’t important but I’m still happy to be inside the top-ten. From the start I had a good feeling and I was able to do a good lap time. I don’t think every rider showed their true pace, especially as the conditions were tricky, but overall it has been better today. Let’s see what happens tomorrow when everyone is pushing at 100%. Everything is new for me at each track, but I think this one is okay for our bike. However to have good speed is one thing, to be consistent for a whole race is another matter. Tomorrow it will be important to try to be in Q2, but also to work on our race pace.”

Johann Zarco – P10

“This morning it was very cold and it was raining. It wasn’t easily to acquire the right feeling on the track. In the evening on the asphalt I set the tenth-best time, but I am satisfied. We have worked well. We need to be able to take a small step forwards.”

Fabio Quartararo – P11

“I felt bad on the bike today. In the morning we know why that happened, but in the afternoon I had the same lack of feeling. I‘m looking forward to the meeting with the team to see what caused it and then solve it. In Portimão it was a race weekend in which we made a bad qualifying and struggled a lot because of it. But it‘s been a while since I struggled on a Friday. I think it was last year in Portimão. It‘s pretty strange, and I hope we can change it for tomorrow.”

Fabio Quartararo
Aleix Espargaro – P12

“Unfortunately, we’re struggling at the beginning of this weekend too. The conditions definitely didn’t help us because we struggle to get the tyres up to temp and that prevents us from having grip. We’re working on it. Tomorrow we plan to make a substantial change to the bike’s geometry, precisely to try to find more grip, which is what has been limiting us in the last few races.”

Franco Morbidelli – P13

“It was a good day. I was able to be decently fast on wet as well as on dry. I also had a good feeling on used tyres, and I had good speed. And this is positive, we should keep going like this. The team is on the right path since we started working. It‘s a while already, but we are getting there step by step. And today I felt good on the bike, the best I‘ve ever felt. That‘s a positive thing. It means that the team is working well. It is also important to be fast with used tyres, because lately I‘ve been fast with new tyres but not that much on used tyres and in the race. But we‘re on the right path.”

Álex Márquez – P14

“It was a surprise for the whole team this morning that we had heavy rain, so we just took it quite easy, tried a few things that we had on plan for wet conditions and didn’t take too many risks as we knew that this afternoon and tomorrow would be dry. This afternoon in the dry I was feeling really good from the beginning and was in the top seven or eight all the time as we tried something new on the bike that worked well. Unfortunately, in the last time attack I touched the green, so track limits and my flying lap that was P8 or P9 disappeared, but that’s how it is. Tomorrow we need to be focused because we had good rhythm and pace, we just need to adjust a few details.”

Danilo Petrucci – P15

“Unfortunately, I suffered a heavy crash this morning and got hurt quite a bit. The good thing is, that I felt better in the afternoon and I was able to ride. Overall, FP2 was not bad. It was like the first session of the weekend. The track was not in a perfect condition, but I felt ok with the bike. For sure, we have to solve some small issues with the setup, but I’m quite confident. We are all really close to each other, so I think we can do a decent Qualifying tomorrow.”

Danilo Petrucci
Iker Lecuona – P16

“This morning, I felt very strong in the wet and I was even first! In the afternoon, the conditions have been rather mixed and I struggled a lot with the electronics and with the bike in general. We couldn’t find a good base, so we still have to adjust a lot. We need to work on that in order to improve and to do a step forward tomorrow morning.”

Maverick Vinales – P18

“The weather conditioned our day today. This morning was not a simple one in the wet and even in the afternoon, the grip wasn’t the best. Valencia is a track where you can learn a lot and we need that as we continue to grow with this new bike. Hopefully the conditions will be a bit more stable tomorrow so we’ll be able to keep working and trying to take a step forward.”

Maverick Vinales
Enea Bastianini – P19

“I’m not happy. This morning with the rain it didn’t go too well and in the afternoon I crashed, in general I didn’t feel very confident. Anyway, we will focus on doing a good job tomorrow in the third free practice and get a good qualifying position.”

Enea Bastianini
Luca Marini – P20

“It was not an easy Friday. The grip was probably the most difficult aspect to handle. I have to get used to this kind of conditions, but the gap to the group is not big and tomorrow we can get closer. We will work again in FP3 and try the hard front tyre.”

Valentino Rossi
Valentino Rossi – P21

“It was a difficult Friday because the conditions were quite bad. This morning it was very cold and there was a lot of water on track. Fortunately this afternoon was fairly dry, but there were still some damp patches and that made it a bit dangerous, especially with these temperatures. The layout of this track makes it very difficult and I think it might be the most difficult track for me. The place is great though with all the fans and it’s always a good atmosphere. I didn’t feel fantastic with the tyres and we didn’t have a lot of grip. It’s just the first day though, so we have to do some work. I hope that it remains dry, that the track improves and that we can improve the setup of the bike.”

Valentino Rossi

MotoGP Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 J.Miller DUCATI 1m30.927
2 P.Espargaro HONDA +0.012
3 F.Bagnaia DUCATI +0.068
4 A.Rins SUZUKI +0.409
5 J.Martin DUCATI +0.469
6 T.Nakagami HONDA +0.500
7 J.Mir SUZUKI +0.586
8 B.Binder KTM +0.594
9 A.Dovizioso YAMAHA +0.670
10 J.Zarco DUCATI +0.676
11 F.Quartararo YAMAHA +0.781
12 A.Espargaro APRILIA +0.893
13 F.Morbidelli YAMAHA +0.905
14 A.Marquez HONDA +0.925
15 D.Petrucci KTM +1.156
16 I.Lecuona KTM +1.171
17 M.Oliveira KTM +1.281
18 M.Viñales APRILIA +1.287
19 E.Bastianini DUCATI +1.292
20 L.Marini DUCATI +1.302
21 V.Rossi YAMAHA +1.358


Moto2

Day 1 of the Moto2 title-deciding weekend is done and dusted, and it’s just 0.008s between World Championship leader Remy Gardner and Red Bull KTM Ajo team-mate Raul Fernandez, his sole remaining challenger for the crown.

In a dry afternoon at the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, the Australian’s best was a 1:35.857, with his team-mate that close second and Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) keeping the top three tight as the number 37 ended Friday just 0.041s off the top too.

With the sun coming out in the afternoon, it’s FP2 that sets the pace. Gardner leads the way ahead of Fernandez R, with Fernandez A third. Vietti and Vierge complete that top five.

Just behind, Jake Dixon (Petronas Sprinta Racing) set his fastest lap on his last flyer, the British rider sixth on Friday, just ahead of Stefano Manzi (Flexbox HP40).

MotoGP-bound Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) ended his final Moto2 Free Practice Friday in eighth, 0.304s away from P1, with Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) – also MotoGP-bound – and Marcos Ramirez (American Racing) completing the top 10.

Moto2 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 R.Gardner KALEX 1m35.857
2 R.Fernandez KALEX +0.008
3 A.Fernandez KALEX +0.041
4 C.Vietti KALEX +0.087
5 X.Vierge KALEX +0.115
6 J.Dixon KALEX +0.253
7 S.Manzi KALEX +0.261
8 M.Bezzecchi KALEX +0.304
9 F.Di Giannanto KALEX +0.334
10 M.Ramirez KALEX +0.377
11 A.Canet BOSCOSCURO +0.424
12 H.Syahrin NTS +0.44
13 J.Navarro BOSCOSCURO +0.577
14 T.Nagashima KALEX +0.612
15 M.Schrotter KALEX +0.67
16 S.Corsi MV AGUSTA +0.769
17 H.Garzo KALEX +0.793
18 T.Luthi KALEX +0.804
19 S.Chantra KALEX +0.888
20 C.Beaubier KALEX +0.96
21 T.Arbolino KALEX +0.964
22 F.Aldeguer BOSCOSCURO +1.033
23 S.Lowes KALEX +1.054
24 J.Roberts KALEX +1.097
25 B.Bendsneyde KALEX +1.179
26 A.Arenas BOSCOSCURO +1.233
27 N.Bulega KALEX +1.274
28 B.Baltus NTS +1.368
29 L.Baldassarri MV AGUSTA +1.394
30 D.Ekky Pratam KALEX +2.7


Moto3

Reigning FIM Moto3 Junior World Champion Izan Guevara (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) topped FP1 with a 1:39.561, and after the rain came down and no one was also to improve in FP2 either, which ensured the Texas winner is the fastest man on Friday. It wasn’t by much though, with Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) just 0.048s further back.

Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) completed the top three as the final race weekend of the season fires into life, the veteran Italian on form once again.  Salač fourth and Acosta fifth.

Yuki Kunii (Honda Team Asia) put in a good morning stint in P6, ahead of Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team), Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3), Valencia specialist Sergio Garcia (Valresa GASGAS Aspar Team) and John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing).

Moto3 Combined Times

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 I.Guevara GASGAS 1m39.561
2 D.Binder HONDA +0.048
3 A.Migno HONDA +0.193
4 F.Salac KTM +0.209
5 P.Acosta KTM +0.332
6 Y.Kunii HONDA +0.436
7 R.Fenati HUSQVARNA +0.473
8 A.Sasaki KTM +0.478
9 S.Garcia GASGAS +0.497
10 J.Mcphee HONDA +0.521
11 N.Antonelli KTM +0.526
12 A.Fernandez HUSQVARNA +0.583
13 C.Tatay KTM +0.662
14 D.Öncü KTM +0.692
15 S.Nepa KTM +0.733
16 A.Izdihar HONDA +0.805
17 R.Rossi KTM +0.860
18 J.Masia KTM +0.904
19 R.Yamanaka KTM +1.030
20 J.Kelso KTM +1.090
21 K.Toba KTM +1.110
22 X.Artigas HONDA +1.119
23 A.Surra HONDA +1.136
24 J.Alcoba HONDA +1.205
25 L.Fellon HONDA +1.261
26 J.Rueda HONDA +1.303
27 D.Foggia HONDA +1.414
28 T.Suzuki HONDA +2.115

Comunitat Valenciana-Ricardo Tormo Schedule (AEST)

Saturday
Time Class Session
1900 Moto3 FP3
1955 MotoGP FP3
2055 Moto2 FP3
2235 Moto3 Q1
2300 Moto3 Q2
2330 MotoGP FP4
0010 (Sun) MotoGP Q1
0035 (Sun) MotoGP Q2
0110 (Sun) Moto2 Q1
0035 (Sun) Moto2 Q2
Sunday
Time Class Session
1840 Moto3 WUP
1910 Moto2 WUP
1940 MotoGP WUP
2100 Moto3 Race
2220 Moto2 Race
0000 (Mon) MotoGP Race

MotoGP Championship Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 267
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 227
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 195
4 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 165
5 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 163
6 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 142
7 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 142
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 113
9 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 106
10 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 100
11 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 99
12 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 94
13 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 92
14 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 91
15 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 76
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 67
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 42
18 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 41
19 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
20 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 38
21 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 14
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 12
24 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha ITA 8
25 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
26 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
27 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1

Constructor Standings

Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 332
2 YAMAHA 298
3 SUZUKI 227
4 HONDA 211
5 KTM 196
6 APRILIA 114

Team Standings

Pos Team Points
1 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 392
2 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP 364 364
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 294
4 PRAMAC RACING 258
5 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 250
6 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 234
7 LCR HONDA 143
8 ESPONSORAMA RACING 135
9 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 128

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship calendar

Round Date Location
Round 1 Mar-28 Qatar, Losail (night race)
Round 2 Apr-04 Doha, Losail (night race)
Round 3 Apr-18 Portugal, Portimao
Round 4 May-02 Spain, Jerez
Round 5 May-16 France, Le Mans
Round 6 May-30 Italy- Mugello
Round 7 Jun-06 Catalunya, Barcelona
Round 8 Jun-20 Germany, Sachsenring
Round 9 Jun-27 Netherlands, Assen
Round 10 Aug-8 Styria, Red Bull Ring
Round 11 Aug-15 Austria, Red Bull Ring
Round 12 Aug-29 Great Britain, Silverstone
Round 13 Sep-12 Aragon, Motorland Aragon
Round 14 Sep-19 San Marino, Misano
Round 15 Oct-03 Americas, Circuit of the Americas
Round 16 Oct-24 Italy e dell’Emilia Romagna, Misano
Round 17 Nov-7 Portugal, Algarve
Round 18 Nov-14 Valencia, Circuit Ricardo Tormo

Source: MCNews.com.au

Ducati’s wildest naked ever, meet Streetfighter V4 SP

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

Along with announcement of the V2 overnight as the new young start-up in Ducati’s Streetfighter range, Bologna also pulled the covers off a new big daddy of the Streetfighter range, meet the V4 SP.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

At $48,400 Ride Away the V4 SP is more than twice the price of the new Streetfighter V2, and 8k more than a Panigale V4 S, so what do you get for your money?

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

Basically what you get is a Panigale V4 S without its clothes but with even more trick bits, some of which come from the 150k+ Superleggera, and the sum of those parts go to help make the Streetfighter V4 SP the wildest naked to ever be offered by Ducati. It looks pretty spesh too.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP Standard Features

  • Handlebar embossed with the progressive number of the bike
  • Brushed aluminum at sight tank
  • Dedicated seat with “V4 SP” logo
  • Carbon fibre wings
  • Carbon fibre front fender
  • STM-EVO SBK dry clutch
  • Carbon fibre wheels with 5-split spokes
  • Brembo Stylema R front brake callipers
  • Brembo MCS 19.21 front brake pump (Multiple Click System)
  • Adjustable rider footpegs in machined aluminium with carbon heel guards
  • Single-seat configuration
  • Lithium-ion battery
  • Carbon clutch cover open (supplied)
  • License plate holder removal cover (supplied)
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The “Winter Test” livery has been conceived by the Ducati Centro Stile taking inspiration from the Ducati Corse motorcycles ridden in MotoGP and SBK Championships pre-season tests. The Matte Black of the fairings combined with the Matte Carbon finish of rims and wings, contrasts with the bright Red accents and the sparkling brushed aluminium tank. Making it a little bit more special is the progressive number printed on the handlebar and the Italian flag colour scheme on the carbon wings.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The Streetfighter V4 SP is equipped with split-five-spoke carbon rims, 1.4 kg lighter than the forged aluminium ones fitted as standard on the Streetfighter V4 S and capable of reducing the inertia by 26% at the front and 46% at the rear, making the bike significantly more agile and lighter when changing direction.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

Brembo Stylema R front brake calipers guarantee great braking power under even extremes of duress.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The SP model shares with the Streetfighter V4 S version Öhlins NIX-30 fork, Öhlins TTX36 rear shock absorber and Öhlins steering damper controlled by the second generation Öhlins Smart EC 2.0 system. Unlike the S version, the new machine has the same Panigale V4 springs and hydraulics. The only difference is fork spring pre-load reduced from 11mm to 6mm.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The beating heart is the 1,103 cc Desmosedici Stradale with 208 hp capable of delivering a torque of 123 Nm at 9,500 rpm. The Desmo 90°-V4 layout MotoGP-derived engine, featuring rare gems such as the counter-rotating crankshaft and “Twin Pulse” firing order.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

On the Streetfighter V4 SP the Desmosedici Stradale is fitted with the STM-EVO SBK dry clutch, which promises a better anti-hopping function, even in the most aggressive downshifts, and greater fluidity during all “off-throttle” stages, a crucial aspect to be truly effective on the track when pushing to the limit.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The equipment of this unique bike is enriched by the adjustable aluminium and CNC machined foot-pegs, the carbon front mudguard, the lithium-ion battery and a range of accessories suitable for the “track days”, such as the open carbon clutch cover and the caps for removing the license plate holder.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The latest-generation electronics package on the Streetfighter V4 SP is based on a six-axis Inertial Unit (6D IMU – Inertial Measurement Unit) capable to instantaneously detect the bike’s roll, yaw and pitch angle in space.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

In addition, the electronics package includes controls to manage all riding phases, from the start, to acceleration and braking, traction, through the corners and out the other side.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

• ABS Cornering Bosch EVO
• Ducati Traction Control EVO 2 (DTC EVO 2)
• Ducati Slide Control (DSC)
• Ducati Wheelie Control EVO (DWC EVO)
• Ducati Power Launch (DPL)
• Ducati Quick Shift up/down EVO 2 (DQS EVO 2)
• Engine Brake Control EVO (EBC EVO)
• Ducati Electronic Suspension EVO (DES EVO)

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

Lastly, the operating parameters of each control are associated by default with the three Riding Modes. Riders have therefore the opportunity to personalise their riding style or restore the Ducati settings. Any of the control levels, such as DTC, DWC, DSC o EBC, can be quickly adjusted via the left switch cube.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

The Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP is expected to arrive in Australia from May 2022 priced at $48,400 Ride Away.

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP Specifications

Engine
Type Desmosedici Stradale 90° V4, rearward-rotating crankshaft, 4 Desmodromically actuated valves per cylinder, liquid cooled
Displacement 1,103 cc
Bore X Stroke 81 x 53.5 mm
Compression Ratio 14,0:1
Power 153 kW (208 hp) @ 12,750 rpm
Torque 123 Nm (90.4 lb-ft) @ 11,500 rpm
Fuel Injection Electronic fuel injection system. Twin injectors per cylinder. Full ride-by-wire elliptical throttle bodies.
Exhaust 4-2-1-2 system, with 2 catalytic converters and 4 lambda probes
Transmission
Gearbox 6 speed with Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) up/down EVO 2
Primary Drive Straight cut gears; Ratio 1.80:1
Ratio 1=38/14 2=36/17 3=33/19 4=32/21 5=30/22 6=30/24
Final Drive Chain 525; Front sprocket 15; Rear sprocket 42
Clutch Hydraulically controlled slipper dry clutch. Self bleeding master cylinder
Vehicle
Frame Aluminum alloy “Front Frame”
Front Suspension Öhlins NIX30 43 mm fully adjustable fork with TiN treatment. Electronic compression and rebound damping adjustment with Öhlins Smart EC 2.0 event-based mode
Front Wheel 5-split spoke carbon fiber 3.50″ x 17″
Front Tyre Pirelli Diablo Rosso Corsa II 120/70 ZR17
Rear Suspension Fully adjustable Ohlins TTX36 unit. Electronic compression and rebound damping adjustment with Öhlins Smart EC 2.0 event- based mode. Aluminium single-sided swingarm
Rear Wheel 5-split spoke carbon fiber 6.00″ x 17″
Rear Tyre Pirelli Diablo Rosso Corsa II 200/60 ZR17
Wheel Travel (Front/Rear) 120 mm (4.7 in) – 130 mm (5.1 in)
Front Brake 2 x 330 mm semi-floating discs, radially mounted Brembo Monobloc Stylema® R 4-piston callipers with Bosch Cornering ABS EVO. Self bleeding master cylinder
Rear Brake 245 Mm Disc, 2-Piston Calliper With Bosch Cornering ABS EVO
Instrumentation Last generation digital unit with 5″ TFT colour display
Dimensions And Weights
Dry Weight 177 kg (390 lb)
Kerb Weight 196 kg (432 lb)
Seat Height 845 mm (33.3 in)
Wheelbase 1.488 mm (58.6 in)
Rake 24.5°
Front Wheel Trail 100 mm (4 in)
Fuel Tank Capacity 16 l – 4.23 gallon (US)
Number Of Seats Single seat
Equipment
Safety Equipment Riding Modes, Power Modes, Bosch Cornering ABS EVO, Ducati
Traction Control (DTC) EVO 2, Ducati Wheelie Control (DWC)
EVO, Ducati Slide Control (DSC), Engine Brake Control (EBC)
EVO,  Auto tyre calibration
Ducati Power Launch (DPL), Ducati Quick Shift (DQS) up/down
EVO 2, Full LED lighting with Daytime Running Light (DRL),
Ducati Electronic Suspension (DES) EVO with Ohlins suspension
Standard Equipment Steering damper, Quick adjustment buttons, Auto-off indicators, Carbon fiber wheels, Carbon fiber front mudguard,
Wings in carbon fiber, Adjustable rider footpegs in aluminium with heel guard in carbon fiber, Lithium-ion battery
Additional Equipment**
Additional Carbon Fiber Open Clutch Cover**, Removing License Plate Holder kit **
Ducati Data Analyser+ (DDA+) with GPS module, Ducati
Ready For Multimedia System (DMS), Anti-theft, Heated grips
Warranty And Maintenance
Warranty 24 months unlimited mileage
Maintenance Intervals 12,000 km (7,500 mi) / 12 months
Valve Clearance Check 24,000 km (15,000 mi)
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP
2022 Ducati Streetfighter V4 SP

Source: MCNews.com.au