There’s a better way to punish riders who break MotoGP’s hated tyre-pressure rule
MotoGP’s minimum pressure rule isn’t only arbitrary, it could also have an unexpected effect on the championship outcome. Luckily, there’s an easy fix…
Quartararo tested a more powerful Yamaha engine, which he may race next week at Le Mans, Aprilia evaluated new seat aero, Honda tried MotoGP’s first chassis parts incorporating ground-effect elements and Ducati worked on the problem that’s hampering its factory riders
There was hardly a dry eye in the house when Alex Márquez swept to his first MotoGP victory at sold-out Jerez on Sunday, but there were plenty of worried faces in the factory Ducati garage. Why so?
MotoGP has never had a more unpopular technical regulation than its tyre-pressure rule, which robbed Maverick Viñales of a podium finish in last week’s Qatar GP. But that’s just one of many dozens of new rules over the past two decades – so what’s the story?
Honda’s MotoGP project currently has huge momentum, which is why it’s jumping early into the 2026/2027 rider market, chasing Toprak Razgatlıoğlu and Pedro Acosta
Marc Márquez was on another level at Losail, while Viñales magicked amazing speed out of nowhere in the 2025 MotoGP Qatar GP, Honda made another step and Martin put himself back in hospital
Bagnaia won his first race of 2025 at COTA but he’s still 5-1 down to his team-mate Marc Márquez, so how will their duel go this weekend in Qatar, which is supposed to better suit Bagnaia’s riding style?
Quartararo tested a more powerful Yamaha engine, which he may race next week at Le Mans, Aprilia evaluated new seat aero, Honda tried MotoGP’s first chassis parts incorporating ground-effect elements and Ducati worked on the problem that’s hampering its factory riders
There was hardly a dry eye in the house when Alex Márquez swept to his first MotoGP victory at sold-out Jerez on Sunday, but there were plenty of worried faces in the factory Ducati garage. Why so?
During the past half century or so, British motorcycle racers haven’t enjoyed the same success as British Formula 1 drivers. Far from it. Between 1949 and 1977, Geoff Duke, John…
MotoGP has never had a more unpopular technical regulation than its tyre-pressure rule, which robbed Maverick Viñales of a podium finish in last week’s Qatar GP. But that’s just one of many dozens of new rules over the past two decades – so what’s the story?