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Argentina MotoGP Post Race Notes, Part 1: Marquez vs Marquez, And The Importance Of Statistics

By David Emmett | Wed, 19/Mar/2025 - 23:26

After the sprint race on Saturday in Argentina, I wrote about how Marc Márquez' victories are the natural consequence of putting the best rider on the best bike. On Sunday, he rather proved my point, even though brother Alex made it considerably tougher for him than he had in Thailand. Tougher or not, the outcome was the same: Marc Márquez took another win with a comfortable margin, making it a clean sweep of the first two races. At both Buriram and Termas de Rio Hondo, the Ducati Lenovo rider took pole, sprint win, GP win, and a new lap record.

Once again, Márquez dropped behind his brother Alex after a few laps, before passing him again at the end. But this time, it wasn't because of tire pressure or a sign of control. At the start of lap 4, Marc made a mistake and outbraked himself going into Turn 1, running wide and allowing Alex through. And then the elder Márquez brother found himself stuck behind the younger, incapable of getting past again. Until 5 laps to the end.

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Editor's Blog: Argentina Sunday Round Up Will Be Late

By David Emmett | Mon, 17/Mar/2025 - 21:36

I continue to be hounded and frustrated by health issues. This time, I managed to strain my back by performing the strenuous and unwise action of * checks notes * pulling my jogging pants on.

However, that has meant that I have spent all of Monday in bed, resting my back. I should be fit enough to sit properly and write on Tuesday, to bring you insights into what happened in Argentina, whether Marc Marquez was playing with his brother again, whether Pecco Bagnaia is in trouble or not, and how Ai Ogura managed to get himself disqualified, through no fault of his own.

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Argentina MotoGP Saturday Subscriber Notes: A New Era Beckons

By David Emmett | Sat, 15/Mar/2025 - 23:59

There is an entirely unsubstantiated rumor, which I have personally decided to believe regardless of the evidence, that Dorna CEO Carmelo Ezpeleta worked hard to prevent Ducati from signing Marc Márquez to the factory team. After two sprints and a GP, you have to concede that he would have been right to try to interfere. So far, Márquez has looked pretty much unstoppable. Exactly as you would expect when you put the best rider on the best bike.

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Argentina MotoGP Friday Round Up: Why Marc Marquez Isn't As Far Ahead As You Might Think

By David Emmett | Sat, 15/Mar/2025 - 00:34

At the end of every Friday practice, the riders like to remind us that it is only Friday, and we shouldn't read too much into the times. Fat chance, of course, but they have a point. But "it's only Friday" takes on extra potency at the Termas de Rio Hondo circuit, given the changing nature of the track. Especially after it rained heavily overnight, and the track started the day wet and took a long time to dry out. High humidity and low temperatures add another layer of complexity, just to liven things up.

The track started off cleaner than expected. "Yesterday when I made the track walk, I thought that the track was more dirty," Marco Bezzecchi said at the end of the first day. "But when I rode the bike this morning, to be honest it was much much better compared to the past times we came here."

The track may have started from a better base, but the grip levels were still changing on pretty much every exit as more and more rubber got laid down. That makes working out where riders stand relatively complicated, though we can take a stab at it by looking at the timesheets.

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Argentina MotoGP Thursday Round Up: Martin Missing Texas, A Cautious Approach To Injury, And Riders React To Pirelli

By David Emmett | Thu, 13/Mar/2025 - 23:20

MotoGP is back at Termas de Rio Hondo in Argentina, so what better way to start than with news about Austin, Texas? The reigning world champion isn't in Argentina, and wasn't scheduled to be in the pre-event press conference, but he called in anyway, phoning in from his car. His recovery from the scaphoid injury he suffered in a training crash wasn't proceeding as quickly as he hoped, he said, and he wouldn't be able to ride at the Grand Prix Of The Americas in Austin, Texas. And probably not in Qatar either.

"I'm really suffering," Martin said. "It's not my moment, I'm struggling to recover as fast as I would like." He would skip Austin and maybe also Qatar, and would really like to test himself before he returned to racing. "I would like to make some kind of test before coming back to racing, because I'm not feeling really good. And I know Massimo [Rivola, Aprilia Racing CEO] is also working on that, let's see if we can make it possible."

A test is going to be hard. Martin is able to ride a production bike, but Aprilia is in category C as far as concessions are concerned. That means no testing for contracted riders (i.e. riders on the official MotoGP entry list for 2025) outside of official IRTA tests. The first IRTA test is at Jerez. And if Martin is going to ride at the test in Jerez, he might as well try to ride at the weekend.

Patience is a virtue

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Argentina MotoGP Preview: The Least Predictable Racing At A Glorious Track

By David Emmett | Wed, 12/Mar/2025 - 23:25

The vagaries of politics meant that MotoGP missed out on going to the Termas de Rio Hondo in Argentina in 2024, and the vagaries of politics mean we are going back again in 2025. Probably for the very last time, as next year there will be a race in Brazil, at Goiania, and possibly another near Buenos Aires, where Dorna Chief Sporting Officer Carlos Ezpeleta visited in February.

The vagaries of politics are why Termas de Rio Hondo was built and then upgraded to host MotoGP in the first place, the regional government hoping to attract tourism and economic activity to a relatively remote part of Argentina. That makes it one of the longest and most tiring journeys for everyone in the MotoGP paddock, and also one of the most expensive. And given the diminishing returns from all forms of journalism, it means there are fewer reporters on the ground than there are working class people on an F1 grid.

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Michelin's Piero Taramasso: "We're Still Focused On 2025 And 2026"

By David Emmett | Tue, 11/Mar/2025 - 17:53

The news that Pirelli was to replace Michelin as official tire supplier for the MotoGP class from 2027 was something of a bombshell. Though rumors that the Italian tire maker wanted to replace their French counterparts in MotoGP had been circulating for some time, Michelin had consistently and repeatedly insisted they wanted to remain as offical tire supplier to both MotoGP and MotoE.

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Buriram MotoGP Sunday Race Notes, Part 2: Blisters, Settling For Third, And A Remarkable Rookie

By David Emmett | Tue, 11/Mar/2025 - 16:24

MotoGP riders learned a new English word last Sunday at Buriram. Typical of this was Joan Mir, who had crashed out shortly after the halfway mark. "I have burns," he explained to journalists, before turning to the Honda HRC Castrol press officer to ask "como se dice? (how do you say that in English), before journalists jumped in with the word "blisters". "Ah, the tire also!" Mir joked.

Blisters were a common theme. Official air temperature of 36°C (measured in the shade) meant there was little respite for rider nor machine. The combination of blazing sun, 300 horsepower, and hot air meant that the heat produced by the engines was not being dissipated to the air, but heating up frames and chassis as well. Temperatures of metal parts were reaching nearly 100°C.

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Officially Confirmed: Pirelli To Take Over As Single Tire Supplier In MotoGP From 2027

By David Emmett | Thu, 06/Mar/2025 - 09:55

As I reported last night, Pirelli is to take over from Michelin as the official tire supplier for the MotoGP class from 2027. The Italian tire manufacturer will become the official supplier for all three Grand Prix classes (MotoGP, Moto2, Moto3), as well as MotoE and the support classes. 

This means Pirelli will be the official tire supplier for both motorcycle racing world championships - MotoGP and WorldSBK - as well  as F1 in 2027. Whether Pirelli will continue as tire supplier in F1 beyond 2027 is unknown.

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Thursday News Round Up: Jerez Flooding, Ducati Engines, Pierer Out

By David Emmett | Thu, 06/Mar/2025 - 08:30

The news never stops, and so after an interesting, if not entertaining opening round of MotoGP at Buriram, a round up of a few interesting stories from around the world of motorcycle racing.

Jerez - drowned by not out

The MotoGP paddock has vivid memories of the end of October last year, when we heard about the unfolding tragedy of flooding in and around Valencia. The deaths, the destruction left a deep impact, and caused the final MotoGP round of 2024 to be moved from the Ricardo Tormo Circuit in Cheste, near Valencia, to Barcelona. Fortunately the track itself was not damaged, but the infrastructure around the circuit was badly hit.

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