A lawyer would listen to the riders and then get stuck in with Dorna, because that’s what lawyers do. They are the prosecution or the defence, so they live their lives in the middle of that fight. A lawyer would have the muscle a riders’ rep would never have and know exactly how to leverage the power of the riders to get what the riders want.
F1 drivers have had lawyers looking after their interests for decades.
MotoGP riders could comfortably fund a lawyer to follow the entire championship: £25,000 from each factory rider and £10,000 from each independent rider would give them a purse of £350,000.
Although Liberty now owns Dorna, it is Dorna that’s pushing through the current changes to take MotoGP in its new direction.
This includes transforming the Moto3 world championship into a one-make series, primarily to reduce costs. This move has been under discussion for the last couple of years and rumours at Misano suggested that Moto3 will soon switch to chassis made by Moto2 dominators Kalex, powered by Yamaha YZF-R7 twin-cylinder road-bike engines.
Moto3’s 250cc KTM and Honda singles are likely to be replaced by Kalex machines powered by 700cc Yamaha road-bike engines
Dorna
Apart from reducing costs, another concern has been the huge difference in machine dynamics between Moto3 and Moto2 bikes, which can make the graduation from the junior class to the intermediate class a real problem, even for very talented riders.
Current single-cylinder 250cc Moto3 bikes make around 60 horsepower, 12 less than a stock R7, so a race version might make around 80 horsepower, 60 less than a Triumph 765 Moto2 engine.
Dorna is also planning to segregate the MotoGP paddock from the Moto2 and Moto3 paddocks, to further focus attention on the big class, another concept borrowed from Formula 1.