Tag Archives: MotoGP

Two races and new qualifying format coming to MotoE™ in 2022

Dorna, the FIM and IRTA have confirmed there will be a new format for MotoE™ events from next season onwards

In an electronic meeting held on 17th. September 2021, the MotoE™ Grand Prix Commission, composed of Messrs. Carmelo Ezpeleta (Dorna, Chairman), Paul Duparc (FIM), and Herve Poncharal (IRTA), made the following decisions:

Sporting Regulations – 2022 season

New format of MotoE™ events:

Starting from 2022, standard MotoE™ events will feature two Free Practice sessions and a Qualifying on Friday, and two races: one on Saturday and the other on Sunday. Each race will normally be after the Grand Prix classes.

E-pole will be replaced by more traditional Qualifying sessions: Qualifying session format: Q1 (10 minutes) – 10 min break – Q2 (10 minutes)

– Qualifying 1 will comprise the slowest 10 riders from the combined results of FP1 and FP2. The duration of Qualifying 1 will be 10 minutes with no limitation on the number of laps. The two fastest riders in Qualifying 1 will be permitted to recharge their machines in pit lane and also receive an additional rear tyre.

– Qualifying 2 will comprise the fastest eight riders from the combined results of FP1 and FP2, plus the fastest two riders from Qualifying 1. The duration of Qualifying 2 will be 10 minutes with no limitation on the number of laps.

A regularly updated version of the FIM Regulations which contains the detailed text of the regulation changes may be viewed shortly HERE

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Midday Day 1: HRC 2022 bike seen, Aprilia debut new aero

After overnight rain it’s been a damp start to proceedings at the 2021 Official Misano MotoGP™ Test, with mixed track conditions making it difficult for the riders to get some worthwhile running under their belts. So far, as of 13:00 local time (GMT+2), Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) is fastest with a 1:33.895.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Gaviota GASGAS Aspar confirm Garcia and Guevara for 2022

Jorge Martinez “Aspar”: “We are very excited about the 2022 project together with Sergio Garcia and Izan Guevara. It’s been a good season, and in 2022 we will start with a great team, with the support of a great brand such as GASGAS, and with two riders who will fight to be World Champions.”

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Brave Dovi bucks trend to set record

While the world of sport enthuses about the performance of two teenage tennis players, Andrea Dovizioso bucks the trend. The 35-year-old Italian returned to the MotoGP™ fray at Misano on Sunday. He may be almost double the age of 18-year-old Emma Raducanu who won the US Open tennis grand slam last week, but Dovi has committed himself to a Championship that is embracing the surging wave of youth as much as any other sport. Dovi’s return to the saddle after almost a season on the sidelines also produced a record that may never be matched.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Time to level up! The Global Series gets back on track

The second round of 2021 was as thrilling as it was surprising. The wet conditions at the Sachsenring threw a few names off course in race one, with AndrewZh taking the honours from RiccardoBottaro64 and Jack Hammer4658. Piero Ricciuti55_ then stormed to a stunning triumph in race two at Austria’s awesome Red Bull Ring, where fellow contenders Trast73, Adriaan_26 and AndrewZh could only muster third, fifth and sixth respectively.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Martin vs Bastianini: who will win Rookie of the Year?

P6 in Aragon was Bastianini’s best result before the San Marino GP. Four top 10s had been a very solid return for the rookie, but there won’t have been many who really expected a podium challenge at Misano – especially from P12 on the grid. Picking your way through the pack, on a two-year-old bike, and going on to set the fastest lap of the race, is more than a difficult task. But Bastianini made it look easy. If he’d started a row or two further up the grid, a win could well have been on the cards…

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here

Quotes from every single rider in the MotoGP field at Misano

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship
Round 14 – Misano


Francesco Bagnaia – P1

“It was another perfect weekend! It wasn’t an easy race at all: Quartararo was really strong towards the end, but I tried to stay consistent as much as possible. To get another win was important, and to do it here at my home track, in front of so many fans and those who love me, was even more special. Now we won’t have much time to celebrate: Tuesday and Wednesday, we’ll be back on track for two days of testing, but for now, I want to enjoy this success”.

Realistically it will be one of these two men that will win the championship, but the Frenchman still enjoys a significant 48-point advantage but there are 100-points still up for grabs
Fabio Quartararo – P2

“I was thinking about overtaking Pecco on the last lap, but he did an amazing race. I tried everything. To be honest, today I even forgot mostly about the championship. I had some moments with the front, it was close to being a zero today, but in the end a score of 20 here in Misano is very positive. I can’t wait to be back the day after tomorrow for the test. We have some interesting things to do. I have nearly a two-race-wins advantage with four races to go. I think that’s quite nice. I’m so happy about that, and you can imagine how happy I am that it stayed dry. I feel so good. Last year, my weak point was that I was thinking too much about the championship, but today it was the opposite: I didn’t think about it enough. I was super on the limit and I’m happy. My dad said after the finish that I rode like a champion today, which I really appreciated. Let’s see what we can do in Misano 2. I think that will be fun, because this was one of the most fun races I ever did. My pace was so strong, and I came so close. I will give it another try in Misano 2.”

Fabio Quartararo though was again on fire to minimise the damage and rode a calculating but aggressive enough race to secure second place and to limit Bagnaia’s gain over him to only five-points. The difference now is still a huge 48-points, thus Quartararo will have to endure a bad run of form or luck to be beaten to the Title. But it’s never over until it’s over and 100 points are still up for grabs.
Enea Bastianini – P3

“It was an unexpected result, but since this morning I thought it was possible because I saw that I could do good lap times easily. We were able to find a good set-up on the bike and I was able to enjoy. In the middle of the race I felt really good and when I overtook Miller, I kept setting my pace. I knew I had Quartararo and Bagnaia in front of me and I wanted to try to attack them, but I was already pretty much at the limit. I’m very happy with this 3rd position and it was great to get this podium in Misano.”

Bastianini came from 12th on the grid to blast his way up through the field
Marc Marquez – P4

“I am really happy with our performance today because honestly speaking I was not expecting this result today! At the start I was calm and honestly not riding very fast, but step by step we went faster and our feeling improved. The key point was staying calm in the first laps and pushing at the end, I’m quite proud about the last part of the race because I brought Mir with me. In practice it was a little different, I was following him, but in the race, he was following me and we caught Jack. In the last lap I didn’t feel like I could fight, but Mir and Miller went wide and I saw my opportunity! It was nice and now we get ready for a really important two-day test here.”

Marc Marquez took 13-points after what had been a frustrating weekend for the Spaniard. The demands of Misano had seen the Spaniard clutching at his shoulder numerous times during practice and also caused him to fall twice during the weekend and that fourth place result was better than he had expected.
Jack Miller – P5

“Fifth for the second time in a week, some decent points here in Misano … but to be honest there’s not a lot to be happy about after that. I got off to a decent start, had Fabio (Quartararo) behind me after a little fight on the first lap and I sat about a second behind my team-mate Pecco (Bagnaia) for the first seven laps, and then … it ended up as just one of those days. 

Jack Miller

“I ran wide on lap 8 and Fabio did too behind me, but by about lap 14 when he got past me I was already hanging on with the rear tyre. From then on my fight was with the guys behind me really, and I had Marc (Marquez) and (Joan) Mir all over me in the last few laps. I started the last lap fourth, both of them came past so I finished sixth, then Mir had to drop a position for track limits so there I was in fifth again. My final lap was half a second slower than anything I did all race, I didn’t have a lot of edge grip there by the end. 

Fabio Quartararo leads Miller

“Pecco chose the hard front/soft rear tyres like I did and he won the race, so I don’t think it was the combination or the choice of tyres for me that was the problem. Massive congratulations to Pecco, he did a good job for sure. I was struggling with some vibrations from the middle of the race and that was pretty much it, really. I was comfortable and confident in the beginning but after I had that bit of a moment, it was a struggle. This track is particularly hard on the left side of the tyre, so I’ve said my piece about the tyre and we’ll have to analyse it, find the issue and get on top of it. 

Miller had the pace early on

“I’ve always qualified well here but one way or another, I’ve never really finished that great. It was the third time I’d been P2 here on Saturday and the other two times I didn’t even score a point – I fell off and then finished outside the points three years ago and last year we had that bizarre thing when the tear-off from Fabio ended up in my air box and I had to pull in to retire. Speed has never been the issue here, I’ve been really fast at this place in the past but haven’t been able to bring it home. Jerez had been like that for me as well before this year, and we turned things around there … but it wasn’t to be for me today. 

“We’re at that time of the year now when you look more at the championship standings to see what’s possible, and for us the teams’ championship is within reach, for sure. We’re creeping closer and closer to the factory Yamaha boys. Last year we helped Ducati get the constructors’ title and that was fantastic, so get the teams’ one this time would be massive for us. 

Jack Miller’s 11-point score edge the Ducati Lenovo Team closer towards the Team’s Title as the Factory Ducati Team are now only three-points behind the Monster Energery Yamaha Team.

“For me, seventh is the best I’ve done over a season before now so I’d love to get myself on the rostrum, inside the top three, and I reckon that’s possible. I’m only a point off (Johann) Zarco in fourth now and 27 behind Mir in third, so there’s a bit of work to do with four races to go, but it’s achievable so I need to keep chipping away at it. It’s definitely not out of the question for Pecco to win the whole thing too, so I’m happy to help out with whichever way I can. If I can see an opportunity to try and help Pecco, I’ll definitely try and do that. 

“It feels like we’re going to be here at Misano forever because we have a two-day test here this week, and then we’re back here for another race in late October after we go to America for the next one. It seems like so long since we last went to Austin because it is – it’s been two-and-a-half years! I was on the podium there last time in 2019, my first dry podium, so it’s been a while. A lot has changed since then, that’s for sure. It’ll definitely be good to get back to Texas because it’s a track that I like.”

Jack Miller
Joan Mir – P6

“Honestly I expected things to be different today – I was struggling a lot and that was quite a surprise. At the beginning my feeling wasn’t very good, but it got much better as the race went on, although by then it was too late to really challenge. Our potential is much higher than this, and I really want to demonstrate that in the next races. I actually really enjoyed the last laps, overtaking Marc and fighting with Jack; it was tough but it was fun. We all swapped places many times and unfortunately I was just over the track limits on the last lap which meant I had to move back one place to sixth. It could be worse, and I will keep my head up and look to the next rounds. Texas is an exciting circuit and I’m keen to get there.”

Joan Mir
Pol Espargaro – P7

“At the end of the day I am surprised with the rhythm we had in the race because during the weekend I was struggling to get under the 33.0 time, but we did the race under this every lap. We were also able to finish just three seconds behind my teammate, of course the position is not what we are aiming for but this is a better situation than I was expecting. We started in the second row and finished seventh, a little off the top four and we should be happy with this result. We’ll carry the positive vibe into the Tuesday and Wednesday test and keep working. Of course there are still some things to work on and it will be a busy test but I feel like we have made a step and there’s more to come.”

Pol Espargaro #44
Aleix Espargaro – P8

“I’m not disappointed with the end result. I stayed with the group that was battling for fourth basically throughout the entire race. The reality is that it was very difficult to take the RS-GP to the limit here. We were lacking stability. Because of this, I made several mistakes that cost me positions. Historically, Misano makes life difficult for us. It will be important for us to try some things during the tests in anticipation of the second race on this circuit. I have a few ideas that I’ll be discussing with the technicians.”

Aleix Espargaro
Brad Binder – P9

“I gave my max today from lap one until the end. I feel we made an improvement from yesterday to today and that was clear from the morning and warm-up. We finished 9th when I struggled to break through the top 17 all weekend, so hats off to the boys, they are working hard. We need to keep grafting. We have the test coming up so we need some more understanding and then we’ll be back to where we need to be.”

Brad Binder
Takaaki Nakagami – P10

“It was a tough race from P13, but we managed to finish in the top 10 in the team’s home GP. We found some improvement during the race which is good, so that will help us make another step forward in the next race in Austin. On Tuesday and Wednesday, we have a two-day test here in Misano, so we’ll keep trying to improve the bike and improve our pace and potential. These two days of testing will be really important for us and hopefully we can find more improvement for our base set-up. I want to thank my team and all the sponsors who came here to Misano.”

Takaaki Nakagami
Michele Pirro – P11

“As I am not riding in MotoGP full time, I lacked a bit of pace today. I used a tyre that was too soft in the race, and when it started to drop, I was forced to slow down after taking a few risks. Anyway, I had a lot of fun, and I am really happy for Bagnaia! Our package proved to work well! I hope to get a better result when I race here again in October in the Emilia Romagna and Made in Italy GP. I want to thank Ducati and the Ducati Test Team for their support this weekend”.

Michele Pirro
Johann Zarco – P12

“Not the result I had hoped for. I didn’t start well and immediately lost a couple of positions. As soon as I was able to regain a good race pace, I made a mistake in T1, and was given a long lap penalty. After this, it was impossible to comeback and stay with the leading group.”

Maverick Vinales – P13

“Another 27 laps to get to know the RS-GP – a race where I also tried different movements in the saddle and different trajectories to figure out how to get the most out of this bike. I expected a bit more, to be honest. I lost a lot of ground at the start and in general I had to battle with the bike more than expected. We are well aware that we need time. We can’t expect a spike in performance from one day to the next, but we’ve reduced the gap and there are positive aspects in any case, like the ease of overtaking or the good tyre management with the Aprilia.”

Maverick Vinales
Stefan Bradl – P14

“I am pleased with what we have been able to do this weekend, to score points again was the objective. Of course, as a racer I would have liked to have finished higher, but this result is acceptable. We were able to help Honda HRC this weekend, show our speed and ultimately finish ahead of some very strong riders. It is good to be able to reward the Test Team with a result like this after a busy time testing to show our speed overall.”

Álex Márquez – P15

“The good thing is we finished the race and have one point, but we were slow from the beginning, had no feeling with the rear tyre and it was difficult to get grip. All weekend I had felt ok from that point and in the warm-up today I felt good with the used tyre and was able to do some 33-zeros. In the race I don’t know what happened, but from the beginning I struggled to get grip and traction, so we need to analyse what the problem was. I don’t want to make a conclusion too early, but we now have an important test here so we’ll try to understand things and improve.”

Danilo Petrucci – P16

“It was a really difficult race. We managed to have a better pace compared to practice. I didn’t expect to be faster and consistent like this, to be honest. I struggled a lot but I tried my best to at least score one point. in the last four laps, I was pretty much done with myself and fought with the bike. In the end, we finished the race and we have a test coming up, in which we will try to work on our weaknesses.”

Danilo Petrucci
Valentino Rossi – P17

“The crash yesterday meant that I started the race today from 23rd, which was a problem. In the first corner I was able to recover some positions, but then in Turn 4 there was some contact and I had to go off track, which put me last. After that I tried to push, my pace was decent and I was able to complete some overtakes. It’s a shame that it wasn’t enough to earn some points. After the flag it was really nice with the fans, a really emotional moment for me, and I enjoyed being able to do a lap of honour. We have a test this week, so we will try the tyres and see what we can improve with the setting. After that we go to Austin, which was a great race for me last time, and we will see what our potential can be there.”

No points for Rossi but the fans were still out in force
Franco Morbidelli – P18

“It was tough, but anyway it was nice to get back to racing. I had a good start, and it was nice to stay in the pack for a few laps. I enjoyed it and it was the right thing to do. This morning I wasn’t thinking that it was possible to face this race because I was struggling a little bit with the leg. But with some pain killers and adrenaline, I managed to do the whole race and also be quite consistent. I understood a few things about the bike, so this is positive, and I’m really happy to be back. It will be very important to keep improving the setting of the bike, my feeling on the bike, and try some new items as well, so the Misano test will be really important. It’s great, and I’m happy to do it.”

Franco Morbidelli
Luca Marini – P19

“I didn’t have a bad start, but from the beginning I didn’t have enough speed to overtake riders in my group like Pirro, Binder or Nakagami. In the slipstream, the temperature of the front tyre went up and that’s something I have to work on, because I’m still not used to managing it to the maximum. I went long at Turn 1, then I tried to lose time to let other riders pass me, but I still got a long lap penalty that pushed me back to the last positions. I struggled to recover, I suffered a lot with the front tyre and, with seven laps to go, the left side of the rear tyre was badly damaged. We have to work, we are at a standstill and the two days of testing this week will be very important.”

Luca Marini #10
Miguel Oliveira – P20

“In the third corner I tangled with Iker and it broke my left wing. It was tough after that because the bike was unbalanced but I guess that’s’ what can happen when we qualify down the grid. We need to find some more speed to qualify better; that’s the immediate goal now. We had made a step with the bike in the right direction in the morning and the race looked promising until the incident with the wing. I didn’t have the tools then to do anything better than we did. We’ll now split the work at the test between what we might need for the rest for the season and for next year.”

Miguel Oliveira – You can see the broken aero on the LHS
 Andrea Dovizioso – P21

“It was a really strange experience to start the race from 24th, but it was good because we wanted to be consistent throughout the race and learn, which is what we did. Unfortunately I had to do a long lap penalty and I lost the group, but after that I was able to play a little and understand more things. I’m happy with that and also that my best lap of the race was towards the end, plus it wasn’t a bad lap time. I felt a lot of good things from the bike at this point, but we need to work together to analyse why it happened then to make sure I can feel that at the beginning of a race as well. I’m happy that I will get two days of testing this week and I hope that the weather will be good for it.”

Andrea Dovizioso #04
Alex Rins – DNF

“I’m OK after the crash, just disappointed because I was doing a good race with nice pace. I was pretty consistent across all the laps, and I felt confident. I was riding very hard and I was trying to follow Bastianini, but he was super strong all race and he was braking harder than me. I lost a lot of time at the beginning of the race trying to make up places, and I was pushing to the limit to stay with Bastianini and get the best position possible, then I went down. I was pushing, but not more than normal, so we need to look at the data to realise exactly what happened. It’s disappointing but I’m glad that I’m uninjured, and now I’ll focus on the test days we have here. Then I’ll be looking forward to arriving in Austin in a couple of weeks.”

Alex Rins #42 was in the mix early on
Jorge Martín – DNF

“It’s a shame; I was riding well. I was in the leading group and could have fought for the podium. I made a mistake and slipped. I then tried to restart but the bike was moving too much; I didn’t want take further risks.”

Iker Lecuona – DNF

“We changed the bike a lot during the weekend. This morning in the Warm Up we tried a different base. For the race, we tried another base but somehow nothing was working. In the first ten laps I was in the mid-group of the race, fighting close to the top 10. Finally, I lost the rear in Turn 4. We don’t understand why. We will see if we can improve something during the test as we have another race here in Misano.”

Iker Lecuona

MotoGP Team Managers

Luigi Dall’Igna – General Manager of Ducati Corse

“Pecco did another great race. It wasn’t easy, especially towards the end when the tyres started to drop, but he rode impeccably. It’s a shame for Jack that had some issues that hindered his performance. Enea also had a sensational race! I’m thrilled, and I congratulate them both and all the guys at Ducati Corse”.

Bagnaia embraced by Luigi Dall’Igna – General Manager of Ducati Corse – after an important victory at Misano
Claudio Domenicali – CEO of Ducati Motor Holding

“It was really an awesome weekend. We are in the heart of the Motor Valley, and Ducati is at home here in Misano, so winning with an Italian rider and an Italian bike is a great emotion. Yesterday in qualifying, we were first and second with Pecco and Jack, and today we have two of our bikes on the podium. Bagnaia was incredible: he built up the race from the first laps and didn’t make any mistakes. He also reacted by setting his second fastest lap in the race with a few laps to go. Enea was also amazing! He made a great comeback and got his first podium in MotoGP! We got two victories in just two weeks, so we can only be happy”.

Massimo Meregalli – Monster Yamaha Team Director

“Fabio did an amazing job, as always. Unfortunately, he lost some metres at the start, but our calculations showed that the soft rear, which our rivals used, would drop with 10 laps to go. That was exactly what happened. Fabio kept the pressure on, but in the end the gap was just a bit too big for him to close. But his performance was still incredibly impressive. Franky enjoyed his first race after a long period away. To do 27 laps in his condition after the surgery and the recovery process is really hard. I think he did a very good job. He‘s not at 100% fitness yet, so naturally it‘s a building process. He will just keep improving as his knee heals and he makes more kilometres with the Factory M1. We end the San Marino GP feeling satisfied with the work we’ve done. We look forward to the second round here, but first we have an important test before we make our way to the next round at COTA.”

Fabio Quartararo is single-handedly keeping Yamaha’s Constructor’s hopes alive as his fellow Yamaha riders again failed to score any points.
Shinichi Sahara – Suzuki Project Leader and Team Director

“We knew that Joan and Alex’s race pace was strong despite yesterday’s qualifying results, so I had confidence and expected them to recover positions quite quickly. But Joan struggled a bit to do good lap times in the first half of the race, maybe because of our tyre choice or the track conditions, then the feeling became better towards the end and he started to catch up with the front guys. I think he did his maximum today and believe he can fight for the top positions for the rest of season. It was pity for Alex today with the crash because his pace was good enough to fight for a podium, but we should learn a lot from this race. We will check and investigate all the data to come back stronger and on the podium in the next races.”

Ken Kawauchi – Suzuki Technical Manager

“We had good pace with the race tyres, in FP4 and this morning in Warm-Up, but in the race we couldn’t fight for the podium. Alex and Joan both fought during the race, Joan felt stronger as the laps went on and he was in a good battle at the end but he could only get sixth after the penalty. This isn’t a really bad result, but also we had hoped for more. Alex started the race well and he was pushing but then he had an unfortunate crash. It was a difficult day for us, but we have another race here in a few weeks and we will try again to get much better results.”

Suzuki Pits
Razlan Razali – Petronas SRT Team Principal

“Unfortunately it was not the home Grand Prix that Rossi expected, but he did the best that he could. He was still able to continue celebrating his career with the fans and we hope that the second Misano race next month will be better for him. Andrea Dovizioso has joined the team and today was his first MotoGP race in nearly ten months, plus it’s the first time that he’s been on a Yamaha YZR-M1 since 2012. He has shown some good potential on the bike and his times during the race were credible. I think it’s only a matter of time before he gets up to speed.”

No points for Rossi but the fans were still out in force
Mike Leitner – Red Bull KTM Race Manager

“A top ten is not a bad result and we were close to 8th today. It was another tough start for us at this GP with the wet sessions. As a group we are not satisfied with 9th but we have to be realistic and the competitiveness of this category means that if everything is not 100% then it is hard to fight for anything more. Miguel was unlucky to have some contact on the first corner and broke part of the fairing that meant it was horrible for him to ride. It was as shame because he was feeling good after warm-up and had a good feeling [for the race]. We cannot really judge this result today. The team worked well and worked hard. We have a two-day test ahead now with some ideas for next year and I hope we’ll have a few features that might also help us for these last four races.”

Hervé Poncharal – Tech3 KTM Team Manager

“It was a tough race for the Tech3 KTM Factory Racing Team. Honestly, we were expecting better. The last round was quite a good one for us, but here we struggled quite a lot more – for whatever reason. We were still quite confident to show a better race pace than what we did on a fast flying lap. But to celebrate something, you have to finish the race.”

“Iker had a great start, some strong maneuvers in the first part of the race like last weekend in Aragón. We were right behind Brad (Binder), which is always a reference point and I think when Iker and Brad are together, this is a fantastic show and this is where we should be. But then we started to drop positions, to make mistakes, to lose time and that ended up in a crash, which is very unfortunate and sad. It was a big shame for Iker, because we know Iker is getting a better and better MotoGP rider, which he is showing every weekend and we would have loved to see him finishing that race.”

“Danilo pushed hard. His pace was really good, steady. He managed to keep the home hero behind, which I know they were fighting for. I think he did a good race. I want to thank him and congratulate him for pushing until the very last lap. Unfortunately, he ended up 16th, which is the first position without any point. But we are pretty happy to see Danilo pushing and trying to do the best he can.”

“Now it’s time to fly to the other side of the Atlantic Ocean and start another adventure in COTA, Texas.”


MotoGP Misano 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 41m48.305
2 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha +0.364
3 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +4.789
4 Marc MARQUEZ Honda +10.245
5 Jack MILLER Ducati +10.469
6 Joan MIR Suzuki +10.325
7 Pol ESPARGARO Honda +13.234
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +15.698
9 Brad BINDER KTM +16.129
10 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +18.519
11 Michele PIRRO Ducati +20.373
12 Johann ZARCO Ducati +21.066
13 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +21.258
14 Stefan BRADL Honda +28.142
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +30.686
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM +32.654
17 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +33.853
18 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +36.272
19 Luca MARINI Ducati +36.839
20 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM +37.202
21 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha +42.587
Not Classified
DNF Alex RINS Suzuki 10 Laps
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 13 Laps
DNF Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17 Laps

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 234
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 186
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 167
4 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 141
5 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 140
6 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 124
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 104
8 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 98
9 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 92
10 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 87
11 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 71
12 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 70
13 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 68
14 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 64
15 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 61
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 50
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 40
18 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
19 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
20 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 28
21 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 28
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 13
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 8
24 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
25 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
26 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1
Constructor Standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 275
2 YAMAHA 262
3 SUZUKI 184
4 KTM 178
5 HONDA 148
6 APRILIA 105
Team Points
Team Standings
Pos Team Points
1 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP  329
2 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 326
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 235
4 PRAMAC RACING 216
5 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 211
6 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 163
7 LCR HONDA 120
8 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 111
9 ESPONSORAMA RACING 89

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

Joel Kelso tops CEV Repsol Moto3 at Misano

2021 FIM CEV Repsol – Round 7
Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli


Australia’s Joel Kelso (AGR Team) has taken his second victory of the 2021 FIM Junior Moto3 World Championship at Misano over the weekend, after a thrilling race saw close racing between Kelso, Ivan Ortola, and Dani Holgado who crashed out on the final lap.

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

Kelso had just announced he’d landed a contract for 2022 with CIP Greenpower in the Moto3 World Championship, having previously run as a wildcard with the team at Sachsenring and Assen.

He also set a new lap record, as well as the fastest ever lap set in practice at Misano, making for a truly memorable weekend.

The Australian pulling off an audacious move in the final sector to beat Ivan Ortola (Team MTA) and David Muñoz (Avatel Cardoso Racing), Championship leader Holgado saw his lead shrink as a result of his crash.

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

Fellow Aussie Senna Agius qualified in 16th for the weekend, and battled to a 23rd place finish 26-seconds off leading pace.


Muñoz fired away from pole position but drifted across to his right before then colliding with Kelso on the run down to Turn 1. The Australian, unbothered by the contact, took the holeshot and quickly put his head down. The number 66’s pace was too hot for many to handle, with only Ortola, Muñoz and Holgado able to go with him.

Start - Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 - Misano
Start – Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 – Misano

Further back, Aspar Junior Team’s Scott Ogden was left frustrated after his race ended prematurely following a collision with Avatel Cardoso Racing’s Dani Muñoz. At the front though, it was a leading group of four. As they flicked left for Turn 15 on Lap 4, the rear of Holgado’s GASGAS machine let go and the young Spaniard made his first error of 2021 as he crashed out of the victory fight.

We were left with three at the front and Kelso was quite happy to lead the way. Both Ortola and Muñoz sat and studied the 18-year-old until with three laps to go the fight for victory sparked into life. Muñoz pounced on Ortola at Turn 1 before then being handed the lead as Kelso ran wide at Turn 4.

Ivan Ortola - Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 - Misano
Ivan Ortola – Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 – Misano

Ortola, not happy to sit in second behind his compatriot, was able to find an instant response and dived through on the brakes into Turn 8. It would go from bad to worse for Muñoz as Kelso sprung a surprise move at Turn 15 to move up to second. Two laps now left and Kelso was back at the front thanks to brave move at the fast Turn 12.

Kelso started the final lap at the front and for the first half a lap was inch-perfect, until he made a costly error at Turn 10. The Australian went wide and Ortola pounced. The Spaniard was half a lap away from a debut victory and went defensive as a result. However, Kelso was able to magic something up at Turn 12 as he rolled around the outside of Ortola to hit the front and eventually take victory.

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

Ortola remains in the title fight, now 43 points adrift, after a fifth podium of the year, whilst Muñoz, who eased off on the final lap, now sits 26 behind Holgado thanks to a fourth straight podium. Three men, two races, one title all to be decided at Valencia in two months’ time.

AC Racing Team’s Collin Veijer put in one of the rides of the day to take fourth having started 23rd. Josito Garcia (SIC58 Squadra Corse) clinched fifth, a fraction clear of Luca Lunetta (AC Racing Team) and Zonta Van Den Goorbergh (Team Super B) who both enjoyed career-best finishes in sixth and seventh.

Astra Honda Racing Team’s Mario Aji was only half a second behind Veijer in eighth, before the top ten was rounded out by David Salvador (TM Racing Factory Team) and Josh Whatley (Team MTA).

Joel Kelso topped the podium from Ortola and - Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 - Misano
Joel Kelso topped the podium from Ortola and Munoz – Junior Moto3 Repsol CEV Round 7 – Misano

Source: MCNews.com.au

Title contenders battle to the flag at Misano

2021 FIM MotoGP World Championship
Round 14 – Misano


Francesco Bagnaia took a very important victory overnight to keep his chances of claiming the 2021 MotoGP World Championship alive, and in-turn extend Ducati’s lead in the Constructor’s Championship to 13-points over Yamaha.

Bagnaia embraced by Luigi Dall’Igna – General Manager of Ducati Corse – after an important victory at Misano

Fabio Quartararo though was again on fire to minimise the damage and rode a calculating but aggressive enough race to secure second place and to limit Bagnaia’s gain over him to only five-points. The difference now is still a huge 48-points, thus Quartararo will have to endure a bad run of form or luck to be beaten to the Title. But it’s never over until it’s over and 100 points are still up for grabs.

This year though Quartararo appears to be mentally significantly stronger than last season, has been the most impressive rider of the season thus far and shows no signs of falling apart. He is also single-handedly keeping Yamaha’s Constructor’s hopes alive as his fellow Yamaha riders again failed to score any points.

Realistically it will be one of these two men that will win the championship, but the Frenchman still enjoys a significant 48-point advantage but there are 100-points still up for grabs

Enea Bastianini took a brilliant first MotoGP podium after riding strongly from the start. The 23-year-old started from 12th on the grid but steadily worked his way through the field before moving past Jack Miller to take third place with eight-laps remaining, he then pulled away from the Australian to take a clear third place.

Enea Bastianini’s stocks continue to rise after his best performance to date.

Marc Marquez, Jack Miller and Joan Mir engaged in battle over fourth place during the final laps but ultimately it was Marquez that took the 13-points after what had been a frustrating weekend for the Spaniard. The demands of Misano had seen the Spaniard clutching at his shoulder numerous times during practice and also caused him to fall twice during the weekend and that result was better than he had expected.

Jack Miller’s 11-point score edge the Ducati Lenovo Team closer towards the Team’s Title as the Factory Ducati Team are now only three-points behind the Monster Energery Yamaha Team.

Defending champion Mir took sixth and is third in the championship chase. The only other riders with a mathematical chance of taking the title are Johann Zarco and Jack Miller, but those two are not in the game unless the three riders in front of them fail to score any more points this season. In reality only Bagnaia is in with a decent chance of winning the championship if Quartararo falters drastically, and Mir only a slim outsider.

Next stop Texas…. Can he keep the wins going and pile the pressure on Quartararo?

Bagnaia has two wins in succession to buoy him with confidence as MotoGP now heads to Texas where MotoGP will regroup for the next points scoring opportunity on October 3. There is then a three-week break before MotoGP reconvenes at Misano once again.  The rollercoaster that is the magnificient Portimao will then host the penultimate round on November 7 before the finale unfolds the following weekend at Valencia.


Misano MotoGP Race Report


Bagnaia on pole

Bagnaia took the holeshot from pole and immediately put his head down as team-mate Jack Miller stayed second and the two gained some early breathing space.

Bagnaia started strongly while Miller did his best to keep the throng at bay

Quartararo initally duelled Jorge Martin (Pramac Racing) for third just behind, before the Spaniard then fell early at Turn 14.

Jorge Martin battled Quartararo early on but the Ducati man ended up on the deck

Bagnaia, Miller, Quartararo then remained in an evenly-spaced top three, with Marc Marquez fighting Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) just behind.

Bastianin came from 12th on the grid to blast his way up through the field

Enea Bastianini had something to say about that though, the Italian rookie blasting through to pass first the Aprilia and then home in on the Honda. And he made his first move stick, taking fourth but as the podium fight pulled away into the distance… for now.

Bastianini chased down and made short work of Marc Marquez

As Bagnaia pushed on at the front, Quartararo was homing in on Miller, aided a little as the Aussie headed slightly wide at Turn 13. With 14 laps to go the Frenchman was on the scene and sliced past Miller, with the gap to Bagnaia up to 2.7 and Miller remaining on his rear wheel. However, it didn’t take long for the Yamaha to pull away and Bastianini to close down Miller, the rookie gaining over two and a half seconds on the #43 to take over in third.

Quartararo chased down Bagnaia

Lap by lap, Quartararo was able to home in on Bagnaia as in turn Bastianini pulled away from Miller. Marc Marquez had Aleix Espargaro and Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) for company in the fight for fifth too, but Miller held firm in fourth for the moment.

Bastianini worked his way past Mir and Marquez

As the laps ticked down, the gap between Bagnaia and Quartararo did too and there was a frisson of tension for the race leader on the horizon: by four to go, El Diablo got within eight tenths and then half a second, making it game on.

Quartararo was relentless in the chase

The Yamaha kept pushing and pushing, gaining here and there and really tagging onto the back of the Ducati as the final few kilometres dawned. It was just over a tenth as the two crossed the line to start the last lap, with Quartararo setting his sights on victory. But he couldn’t make the move early and Pecco was impeccable through Curvone, stretching the gap back out and laying down the gauntlet with one final push. Could Quartararo go for a lunge? Not in the end, Bagnaia once again proving impervious under pressure, painting Misano red and taking his second win in a week.

Bagnaia held on under pressure once again to take a great victory

Behind that duel, it was beauty from the ‘Beast’. Bastianini kept his stunning pace to the end, taking a comfortable third place. Comfortable is an understatement, however, as the rookie put together a truly stunning race on best lap record pace to take his first premier class podium, and on home turf to boot.

2021 Misano I MotoGP Podium
1 Francesco Bagnaia – Ducati Lenovo Team – Ducati – 41:48.305
2 Fabio Quartararo – Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP – Yamaha – +0.364
3 Enea Bastianini – Avintia Esponsorama – Ducati – +4.789

The fight for fourth became Miller vs Marquez vs Mir and it was a last gasp thriller. The reigning Champion attacked the number 93 first to move through onto the back of Miller, and the Suzuki then punched his way through on the Ducati at Turn 14. But both went wide and Marquez swept through into fourth. They stayed glued together but out the penultimate corner, Marquez just kept it in but Mir touched the green. So the eight-time World Champion keeps fourth, and Mir crossed the line fifth but is classified as sixth as Miller gains back that P5.

Behind that shuffle, Aleix Espargaro lost some ground and also lost out to brother Pol Espargaro (Repsol Honda Team) after a tougher last few laps for the former, with the 44 in seventh and the 41 in eighth. Ninth was another Sunday charge from Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) as the South African shot through from P17 on the grid, only four tenths off the Aprilia ahead by the flag.

Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda Idemitsu) completed the top ten ahead of Michele Pirro wildcarding for Ducati in P11, and he had Johann Zarco (Pramac Racing) close behind after the Frenchman also did a Long Lap for having shortcutted Turns 1 and 2.

Maverick Viñales (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) scored some points in P13 and close behind the number 5, with HRC test rider Stefan Bradl and Alex Marquez (LCR Honda Castrol) completing those points.

Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) had crashed out with 10 to go while Martin retired after trying to finish the race after his early fall while duelling with Quartararo. Iker Lecuona also failed to finish.

MotoGP Misano 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati 41m48.305
2 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha +0.364
3 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati +4.789
4 Marc MARQUEZ Honda +10.245
5 Jack MILLER Ducati +10.469
6 Joan MIR Suzuki +10.325
7 Pol ESPARGARO Honda +13.234
8 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia +15.698
9 Brad BINDER KTM +16.129
10 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda +18.519
11 Michele PIRRO Ducati +20.373
12 Johann ZARCO Ducati +21.066
13 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia +21.258
14 Stefan BRADL Honda +28.142
15 Alex MARQUEZ Honda +30.686
16 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM +32.654
17 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha +33.853
18 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha +36.272
19 Luca MARINI Ducati +36.839
20 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM +37.202
21 Andrea DOVIZIOSO Yamaha +42.587
Not Classified
DNF Alex RINS Suzuki 10 Laps
DNF Iker LECUONA KTM 13 Laps
DNF Jorge MARTIN Ducati 17 Laps

2021 MotoGP Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Fabio QUARTARARO Yamaha FRA 234
2 Francesco BAGNAIA Ducati ITA 186
3 Joan MIR Suzuki SPA 167
4 Johann ZARCO Ducati FRA 141
5 Jack MILLER Ducati AUS 140
6 Brad BINDER KTM RSA 124
7 Aleix ESPARGARO Aprilia SPA 104
8 Maverick VIÑALES Aprilia SPA 98
9 Marc MARQUEZ Honda SPA 92
10 Miguel OLIVEIRA KTM POR 87
11 Jorge MARTIN Ducati SPA 71
12 Takaaki NAKAGAMI Honda JPN 70
13 Alex RINS Suzuki SPA 68
14 Pol ESPARGARO Honda SPA 64
15 Enea BASTIANINI Ducati ITA 61
16 Alex MARQUEZ Honda SPA 50
17 Franco MORBIDELLI Yamaha ITA 40
18 Iker LECUONA KTM SPA 38
19 Danilo PETRUCCI KTM ITA 37
20 Luca MARINI Ducati ITA 28
21 Valentino ROSSI Yamaha ITA 28
22 Stefan BRADL Honda GER 13
23 Michele PIRRO Ducati ITA 8
24 Dani PEDROSA KTM SPA 6
25 Lorenzo SAVADORI Aprilia ITA 4
26 Tito RABAT Ducati SPA 1
Constructor Standings
Pos Constructor Points
1 DUCATI 275
2 YAMAHA 262
3 SUZUKI 184
4 KTM 178
5 HONDA 148
6 APRILIA 105
Team Points
Team Standings
Pos Team Points
1 MONSTER ENERGY YAMAHA MOTOGP  329
2 DUCATI LENOVO TEAM 326
3 TEAM SUZUKI ECSTAR 235
4 PRAMAC RACING 216
5 RED BULL KTM FACTORY RACING 211
6 REPSOL HONDA TEAM 163
7 LCR HONDA 120
8 APRILIA RACING TEAM GRESINI 111
9 ESPONSORAMA RACING 89

Moto2

Moto2 race was a thriller, particularly over the final laps when the riders really started to struggle for rear grip

Raul Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Ajo) put in another stunner at Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli, taking his sixth win of the season and securing Rookie of the Year. But it was a pretty close run affair, with teammate and Championship leader Remy Gardner (Red Bull KTM Ajo) taking second and four tenths off, hindered by a moment on a last lap charge for victory. Aron Canet (Inde Aspar Team) fought at the front throughout too, coming home well in sight of the win and taking third for another podium in 2021.

Any hopes Raul Fernandez had of an instant breakaway win after taking the holeshot were quickly dashed, going wide at Turn 9 as he tried to fight off a challenge from Sam Lowes (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team), but the Brit nudged ahead and led at the end of the first lap. There were also strong starts from Canet, Xavi Vierge (Petronas Sprinta Racing) and Marco Bezzecchi (Sky Racing Team VR46) as they occupied the top five spots, with Gardner and front row starter Augusto Fernandez (Elf Marc VDS Racing Team) dropping a little further down the field.

After four laps, the race lost Simone Corsi (MV Augusta Forward Racing) after an incident with Jorge Navarro, which earned the +Ego Speed Up rider a Long Lap penalty. But back at the front, Canet got the gloves off as he moved ahead of Raul Fernandez and set a race lap record in the process, while he soon had Lowes’ number to boot. A mistake from the Brit then let the number 44 through for the lead and Lowes dropped to third, with Gardner working his way back into the top four.

As the laps were chalked off, the front four formed a breakaway group and the Red Bull KTM Ajos began to find some pace, with Raul Fernandez eating away at Canet’s advantage until he eventually made what would prove the race winning overtake on Lap 15 at Turn 1. That prompted Championship leader Gardner to take action, the Aussie making his move on the outside of Lowes at the same corner.

Some small specks of rain threatened but it didn’t affect the on-track action, with Raul Fernandez soon responding to pressure from Canet with the first ever 1:36 lap around Misano. Despite his impressive speed, he couldn’t shake off the close attention of the men in P2 and P3 though.

In the closing laps, the number 25 looked like he’d finally pulled the pin and he extended his lead to nearly a second, but Gardner wasn’t done. Disposing of Canet on the penultimate lap, the Australian then began taking huge chunks out of his teammate’s time and we were set for a grandstand finish. The gap was down to less than half a second, and with a track limits warning not helping matters for Raul Fernandez it was game on.

Gardner was pushing to the absolute limit and setting up a move, but the decisive moment came at Turn 11. A wobble – at the scene of a crash last year – forced him from attack to defence, but he clung onto P2 and 20 crucial Championship points. Canet was forced to settle for third but took another podium, with Lowes fading slightly to fourth as Raul Fernandez took his incredible sixth win of the season.

Raul Fernandez – P1

Another really difficult race. I didn’t sleep well Saturday night so I’m really happy with this. The track was different to yesterday and I didn’t have much grip. I want to thank the team for an incredible bike and also the Clinica Mobile because the hand was still not good. I don’t know how I could ride or brake but we did it today.”

Remy Gardner – P2

I definitely had my heart in my mouth on the last lap! I had to come back from a long way. I was pushing hard and I honestly felt that I wouldn’t win it today but on the last lap a bit of hope came back and I pushed so hard to close the gap. I was lucky to save the bike through the fast kink. There have been worst days! I’m pretty happy and onto the next one.”

Home hero Bezzecchi, on his fabulous pink-liveried machine, headed what had been a hard-fought group, the Italian holding off front row starter Augusto Fernandez as the number 37 was forced to settle for sixth. Ai Ogura (Idemitsu Honda Team Asia) got right in that mix fighting for fifth and ultimately took seventh.

Vierge was a little further back in P8, but had some seriously close company from Fabio Di Giannantonio (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2) as the two crossed the line split by less than a tenth. Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) made some good progress up to tenth on Sunday.

Tom Lüthi (Pertamina Mandalika SAG Team), Marcel Schrötter (Liqui Moly Intact GP), Navarro, who served that Long Lap, Marcos Ramirez (American Racing) and Tony Arbolino (Liqui Moly Intact GP) completed the points.

2021 Misano I Moto2 Podium
1 Raul Fernandez – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – 40’40.563
2 Remy Gardner – Red Bull KTM Ajo – Kalex – +0.402
3 Aron Canet – Inde Aspar Team – Boscoscuro – +0.569

Moto2 Misano 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Remy GARDNER Kalex AUS 271
2 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 237
3 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex ITA 190
4 Sam LOWES Kalex GBR 140
5 Aron CANET Boscoscuro SPA 119
6 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex SPA 118
7 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex ITA 108
8 Ai OGURA Kalex JPN 104
9 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex GER 84
10 Xavi VIERGE Kalex SPA 75
11 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro SPA 74
12 Joe ROBERTS Kalex USA 59
13 Celestino VIETTI Kalex ITA 53
14 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex ITA 41
15 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex NED 40
16 Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex THA 35
17 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex USA 28
18 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro SPA 23
19 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex SPA 22
20 Jake DIXON Kalex GBR 21
21 Thomas LUTHI Kalex SWI 21
22 Stefano MANZI Kalex ITA 20
23 Fermín ALDEGUER Boscoscuro SPA 13
24 Simone CORSI MV Agusta ITA 13
25 Hector GARZO Kalex SPA 12
26 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex ITA 12
27 Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex ITA 10
28 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS MAL 8
29 Alonso LOPEZ Boscoscuro SPA 4
30 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta ITA 3
31 Barry BALTUS NTS BEL 2

2021 Moto2 Standings

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Raul FERNANDEZ Kalex 40m40.563
2 Remy GARDNER Kalex +0.402
3 Aron CANET Boscoscuro +0.569
4 Sam LOWES Kalex +1.578
5 Marco BEZZECCHI Kalex +4.92
6 Augusto FERNANDEZ Kalex +5.361
7 Ai OGURA Kalex +6.236
8 Xavi VIERGE Kalex +7.468
9 Fabio DI GIANNANTONIO Kalex +7.562
10 Celestino VIETTI Kalex +13.23
11 Thomas LUTHI Kalex +15.596
12 Marcel SCHROTTER Kalex +16.172
13 Jorge NAVARRO Boscoscuro +20.234
14 Marcos RAMIREZ Kalex +22.819
15 Tony ARBOLINO Kalex +23.015
16 Stefano MANZI Kalex +26.152
17 Nicolò BULEGA Kalex +26.987
18 Hafizh SYAHRIN NTS +27.231
19 Jake DIXON Kalex +28.15
20 Hector GARZO Kalex +28.526
21 Cameron BEAUBIER Kalex +29.864
22 Albert ARENAS Boscoscuro +33.14
23 Joe ROBERTS Kalex +36.098
24 Lorenzo BALDASSARRI MV Agusta +43.861
25 Bo BENDSNEYDER Kalex +47.329
Not Classified
DNF Somkiat CHANTRA Kalex 3 Laps
DNF Lorenzo DALLA PORTA Kalex 6 Laps
DNF Barry BALTUS NTS 13 Laps
DNF Yari MONTELLA Boscoscuro 13 Laps
DNF Simone CORSI MV Agusta 23 Laps

Moto3

Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) remains the man with the momentum in Moto3 as the Italian took another home win, this time in the Gran Premio Octo di San Marino e della Riviera di Rimini as he made up yet more ground in the Championship fight. Niccolo Antonelli (Avintia VR46) took another impressive second place, with Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) completing an all-Italian podium on the Riviera di Rimini. It was nearly an Italian 1-2-3-4 too as Romano Fenati (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) had looked on for victory as the Italian disappeared in the lead, but a heartbreaker of a crash ended his chances of a near-certain win.

Fenati took the holeshot from pole, off like a shot with Antonelli in second and Migno duelling Foggia just behind, a reshuffled Italian armada at the front with Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) shadowing early on.

Fenati had the hammer down at the front though, setting a new best race lap with a few ticked off, and Antonelli was the rider on the chase as the two kept some clean air between themselves and the chasing group. But the number 55 was stretching his legs and his lead, with fellow Championship players Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Ajo), Sergio Garcia (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) and Foggia all stuck in the second group.

Bit by bit though, Acosta was losing some ground and by 15 to go, the Spaniard was in the fringes of the top ten as Migno, Foggia, Masia, Garcia and Darryn Binder (Petronas Sprinta Racing) bolted on the chase behind Fenati and Antonelli. The latter then headed wide soon after though, slotting back into the group and leaving Fenati with a sizeable – by Moto3 standards – gap at the front.

With 10 to go though, heartbreak struck. Fenati suddenly went down out the lead, the Italian sliding off into the gravel and rider ok, but a near-certain win gone from his grasp. That left Foggia at the front of what was now a fight for victory, and the Leopard rider took over in the task of trying to break away.

Six riders were fighting for three places on the podium, and for two it was also chance to gain huge ground on Acosta as the Spaniard fought it out for seventh in the second group. By a handful to go, Foggia had got it done and pulled out a small gap back to Migno, Antonelli, Garcia and Masia, with Binder having dropped off the back into a lonelier ride for sixth.

Onto the final lap, Foggia was in free air and just needed to keep it clean to take another victory, and a very different one to Aragon. Antonelli had got past Migno and only had to keep the hammer down and the door closed there too, and that they all did. Foggia crossed the line half a second clear for his fourth win of the season, taking back more ground in the title fight and tasting the top step on home turf once again. The tricolore delight continued as Antonelli held off Migno but both were back on the podium, making it an Italian 1-2-3.

2021 Misano I Moto3 Podium
1 Dennis Foggia – Leopard Racing – Honda – 39’17.002
2 Niccolo Antonelli – Avtina VR46 Academy – KTM – +0.565
3 Andrea Migno – Rivacold Snipers Team – Honda – +0.817

The fight for fourth had some elbows further out, with Garcia and Masia nearly side-by-side over the line to start the final lap and the number 11 heading through. As Masia tried to hang in there there was a touch of contact, leaving him back in fifth and with no time left to get back on terms with Garcia. So the GASGAS rider took P4, Masia completed the top five, and Binder took P6.

Acosta managed to take seventh and limit the damage, with Carlos Tatay (Avintia Esponsorama Moto3), Stefano Nepa (BOE Owlride) and Ayumu Sasaki (Red Bull KTM Tech3) completing the top ten in a big group fight, Riccardo Rossi (BOE Owlride) in touch with them in P11. Just behind, another group of Izan Guevara (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team), John McPhee (Petronas Sprinta Racing), Kaito Toba (CIP Green Power) and Tatsuki Suzuki (SIC58 Squadra Corse) completed the points.

Moto3 Misano 2021 Race Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Dennis FOGGIA Honda 39m17.002
2 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM +0.565
3 Andrea MIGNO Honda +0.817
4 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS +2.14
5 Jaume MASIA KTM +3.098
6 Darryn BINDER Honda +7.633
7 Pedro ACOSTA KTM +9.991
8 Carlos TATAY KTM +10.184
9 Stefano NEPA KTM +10.341
10 Ayumu SASAKI KTM +10.344
11 Riccardo ROSSI KTM +10.36
12 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS +14.626
13 John MCPHEE Honda +14.898
14 Kaito TOBA KTM +15.019
15 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda +15.072
16 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda +18.859
17 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM +18.874
18 Matteo BERTELLE KTM +18.921
19 Lorenzo FELLON Honda +19.303
20 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna +21.363
21 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM +26.962
22 Maximilian KOFLER KTM +30.466
23 Alberto SURRA Honda +46.656
24 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda +53.47
Not Classified
DNF Filip SALAC KTM 6 Laps
DNF Xavier ARTIGAS Honda 9 Laps
DNF Romano FENATI Husqvarna 10 Laps
DNF Elia BARTOLINI KTM 22 Laps

2021 Moto3 Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Pedro ACOSTA KTM SPA 210
2 Dennis FOGGIA Honda ITA 168
3 Sergio GARCIA GASGAS SPA 168
4 Romano FENATI Husqvarna ITA 134
5 Jaume MASIA KTM SPA 122
6 Niccolò ANTONELLI KTM ITA 118
7 Darryn BINDER Honda RSA 114
8 Ayumu SASAKI KTM JPN 93
9 Andrea MIGNO Honda ITA 84
10 Izan GUEVARA GASGAS SPA 76
11 Deniz ÖNCÜ KTM TUR 73
12 Kaito TOBA KTM JPN 64
13 Tatsuki SUZUKI Honda JPN 62
14 Jeremy ALCOBA Honda SPA 60
15 Gabriel RODRIGO Honda ARG 60
16 John MCPHEE Honda GBR 56
17 Filip SALAC KTM CZE 46
18 Ryusei YAMANAKA KTM JPN 42
19 Stefano NEPA KTM ITA 37
20 Xavier ARTIGAS Honda SPA 30
21 Riccardo ROSSI KTM ITA 29
22 Carlos TATAY KTM SPA 28
23 Jason DUPASQUIER KTM SWI 27
24 Adrian FERNANDEZ Husqvarna SPA 20
25 Yuki KUNII Honda JPN 15
26 Maximilian KOFLER KTM AUT 10
27 Elia BARTOLINI KTM ITA 7
28 Syarifuddin AZMAN Honda MAL 3
29 Andi Farid IZDIHAR Honda INA 3
30 Daniel HOLGADO KTM SPA 1

MotoE

The final race of the 2021 FIM Enel MotoE World Cup had everything on the line. On the way in, Jordi Torres (HP Pons 40) had eight points in hand over Dominique Aegerter (Dynavolt Intact GP), and the two at the top in the standings would also prove the key protagonists in the drama. After an almighty duel between the duo, with the crown on the line, the contest ended in contact as Aegerter dived up the inside. Torres fell, although he remounted, and in parc ferme the verdict from the Stewards was in: Aegerter was given a Ride Through penalty, or the equivalent time, which was 38 seconds. That put him just ahead of Torres after the Spaniard made it to the line.. which wasn’t enough for the Swiss rider. So it’s #TwoTimeTorres at Misano.

That drama also decided the podium, with what had been a fight for third becoming the fight for victory. And it was King of Misano Matteo Ferrari (Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE) who came out on top, winning the last race of the season to get back on the podium for the first time in 2021 – and extending his record at Misano to 5 wins from 7 races. Mattia Casadei (Ongetta SIC58 Squadra Corse) took second after more impressive speed, the only rider on the rostrum in both races at the season finale, with Miquel Pons (LCR E-Team) rounding out the year in third.

It was Casadei who got the holeshot going into the first corner, with Aegerter attacking Eric Granado (ONE Energy Racing) and Ferrari taking the long way around the outside to jump both and slot into third. He duelled Aegerter briefly, with Granado just behind, as Torres took the lead and then took off in the lead too.

On the second lap, the race leader had begun to open up a considerable gap, jolting Aegerter into action and the Swiss rider moving past Ferrari into P2. He then got the hammer down, and was able to close back up on his race-leading rival.

From there, a duel for the ages erupted as Aegerter threw the kitchen sink at trying to take over at the front, and it was spectacular as the two exchanged the lead. Torres wasn’t backing down and Aegerter was putting it all on the line. But with just a handful of corners to go, it hit boiling point. Aegerter lunged for it, the two made contact, and Torres found himself on the floor… leaving Aegerter free in the lead to cross the line first. The Spaniard managed to remount and finish in P13, but it seemed the Cup was decided.

The incident was immediately put under investigation, however. After a tense wait in parc ferme, a penalty was announced and 38 seconds were added to Aegerter’s race time for irresponsible riding. That’s the equivalent of a ride through penalty in MotoE as Misano as per the regulations, and it dropped him to 12th – just ahead of Torres. The Spaniard had, therefore, taken the crown after all.

2021 MotoE Misano Race 2 Podium
1 Matteo Ferrari – Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE – Energica – 13’54.140
2 Mattia Casadei – Ongetta SIC58 Squadra Corse – Energica – +0.348
3 Miquel Pons – LCR E-Team – Energica – +1.038

Behind all that drama for the overall Cup, there was a race to be decided too. The trio who’d been locked in their own battle for much of the race; Ferrari, Casadei and Pons, were on the podium. The Gresini rider was back on top, just ahead of Casadei, with Pons a few more tenths back but the rookie fast once again.

Fourth went to the absolute wire, with Kevin Zannoni (LCR E-Team) putting in a stunner but only just, just, holding off the final electric samba of the season from Granado. Hikari Okubo (Avant Ajo MotoE) was next up, with Fermín Aldeguer (Openbank Aspar Team), Xavi Cardelus (Avintia Esponsorama Racing), Andrea Mantovani (Indonesian E-Racing Gresini MotoE) and Corentin Perolari (Tech 3 E-Racing) completing the top ten.

Aegerter was P12 and Torres P13, and with a helping hand from his teammate. Jasper Iwema saw the Spaniard had crashed, waited for him, and followed him home. Every point can count.

Torres v Aegerter was the scenes of the season

In the end, it was a one-point swing as the dust settles, with Torres ending the season seven clear of Aegerter. Ferrari leapfrogged Granado by just two points to take third overall, with Alessandro Zaccone (Octo Pramac MotoE) ending the year in fifth overall after his Race 1 crash and sitting Sunday out. And that’s a wrap on a dramatic, thrilling and truly electric season. We hope you enjoyed it… now recharge for 2022!

Matteo Ferrari – P1

“l’m really happy. During the race I didn’t expect this result because I started very well and at the first corner I was third, but every rider today pushed a lot in the first laps so fortunately I maintained the position and continued ti improve ap by lap. With the used tyre I was comfortable so I did a very good lap mid-race and fortunately closed all the corners, compare to last year where Domi passed me. Happy to be here, and to finish third in the standings.”

Jordi Torres – MotoE Champion
Jordi Torres – MotoE Champion

I never could imagine that I could win again this year. Maybe last year, our win had some luck, calculating very well how our points were, but this year we’re more concentrating on our way, in the sense of improving the bike and trying to be as calm-minded as possible in the races to avoid mistakes. But arriving in the last two races with many options to win the title is a lot of satisfaction for our team, but to arrive here with these options it means we continued to push and be aggressive, very fast, during all the season. But we know that doing many races we tried to save points, coming fifth or seventh, but if we were able to do a great race we tried do. And we tried all season to not make a mistake and in these last two races we tried to be aggressive, fast, at the beginning of the weekend, in any condition, and put all the cards on the table and show how the performance is in the last two races.

“Trying to do all races at this pace and as aggressive as today, in some races we would fall. All season we tried to be at 90 or 95%, but for sure this weekend, and not just me, four or five guys tried to do 100% to stay on top, it’s the one chance to win the title. And that’s what we did, to fight for victory.

“I knew Domi needed to overtake me and win the race to win the title, he’s also a great racer and did a great championship, able to win it. But I knew that if you try to overtake under these conditions – when I’m trying to brake late – and he saw two or three times that it was difficult to overtake me like that because he went wide. I knew on the last lap he’d try everything but in this condition he wasn’t able to do it well, we crossed lines and I couldn’t enter the corner, I tried to pick the bike up as fast as possible. But he hit me, I hit the ground and I went to my bike, tried to run and get to the end because you never know if you take one or two points it could be necessary in the title. And I saw Jasper Iwema waited for me to give me some help, if I took one point more it could have been needed. I want to say thanks to him.

“When I saw the result and the flag I started to cry, I felt down, I felt like I was a loser and lost the title. I tried to squeeze the maximum in this race and focus 100% to do my pace, and when Domi tried to overtake me I tried to be calm to not make a mistake and manage well the situation. But all this work I did, and the work my team did all this year to arrive here, it’s like well.. all this in the rubbish and start again! I cried and arrived to my people, when I entered the pits they all said ‘ok take a break, don’t worry, we’ll see what happens’. I was still crying, and then when I saw the result from Race Direction it became happy tears, a rollercoaster of emotion, and I’m tired now after that! But we’re happy for this happy ending, and we make a lot of notes for next season to continue in this direction; fast, aggressive, great results, but we know where we need to change to be safer in that performance.”

MotoE Misano 2021 Race Two Results

Pos Rider Bike Time/Gap
1 Matteo FERRARI Energica 13m54.140
2 Mattia CASADEI Energica +0.348
3 Miquel PONS Energica +1.038
4 Kevin ZANNONI Energica +3.402
5 Eric GRANADO Energica +3.484
6 Hikari OKUBO Energica +3.899
7 Fermín ALDEGUER Energica +7.274
8 Xavi CARDELUS Energica +11.109
9 Andrea MANTOVANI Energica +10.779
10 Corentin PEROLARI Energica +15.25
11 Maria HERRERA Energica +15.428
12 Dominique AEGERTER Energica +37.83
13 Jordi TORRES Energica +45.57
14 Jasper IWEMA Energica +46.449
15 Lukas TULOVIC Energica +56.267
Not Classified
DNF Yonny HERNANDEZ Energica 4 Laps

2021 MotoE Final Standings

Pos Rider Bike Nation Points
1 Jordi TORRES Energica SPA 97
2 Dominique AEGERTER Energica SWI 89
3 Alessandro ZACCONE Energica ITA 80
4 Eric GRANADO Energica BRA 73
5 Lukas TULOVIC Energica GER 61
6 Matteo FERRARI Energica ITA 61
7 Mattia CASADEI Energica ITA 59
8 Miquel PONS Energica SPA 57
9 Yonny HERNANDEZ Energica COL 47
10 Fermín ALDEGUER Energica SPA 42
11 Hikari OKUBO Energica JPN 35
12 Kevin ZANNONI Energica ITA 31
13 Corentin PEROLARI Energica FRA 25
14 Andrea MANTOVANI Energica ITA 22
15 Maria HERRERA Energica SPA 22
16 Xavi CARDELUS Energica AND 13
17 Andre PIRES Energica POR 12
18 Jasper IWEMA Energica NED 11
19 Stefano VALTULINI Energica ITA 1
19 Stefano VALTULINI Energica ITA 1

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

Get set for a “very important” two-day Misano Test

“The list of items to try is huge for 2022. We have chassis, aerodynamics, a lot of things. But at the same time, I hope I have some space to try something to improve the bike to make it a bit better performing in stopping power, more stability, where we struggled a lot this weekend. It’s going to be a very busy two-day test schedule, but hopefully we can do everything if the weather respects us,” said the British GP podium finisher.

Source: MotoGP.comRead Full Article Here