Sports & Fitness

MotoGP tells Suzuki they have to stay and race

Promoters Dorna respond to reports late yesterday constructor was considering quitting

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 03 May 2022 10:41PM

MotoGP tells Suzuki they have to stay and race
Spanish rider Joan Mir competes for Suzuki in the MotoGP Spanish Grand Prix at the Jerez racetrack last Sunday. The constructor has won multiple world titles, including with Mir in 2020, but is considering quitting the premier class of motorcycle road racing. – AFP pic, May 3, 2022

PARIS – MotoGP’s promoters Dorna today responded to reports that Suzuki were thinking of quitting by telling the manufacturers they had to stick to their contract.

“Dorna Sports has officially contacted the factory in order to remind them that the conditions of their contract to race in MotoGP do not allow for them to take this decision unilaterally,” said the statement.

The warning followed a report on specialist site Motorsport.com that “the heads of Suzuki gathered all members of the MotoGP team yesterday and communicated its decision to quit the series at the end of the year.”

Suzuki had already left the premier class of motorcycle road racing at the end of 2011, before returning in 2015.

Dorna did not rule out the possibility that the Japanese team would quit again.

“Should Suzuki depart following an agreement between both parties, Dorna will decide on the ideal number of riders and teams racing in the MotoGP class from 2023,” read a statement.

Dorna said it “continues to receive high levels of interest from a number of both official factories and independent teams looking to join the MotoGP grid.”

“Interest from these parties has been re-confirmed in the past 24 hours,” it added.

In the 500cc era, Barry Sheene, Marco Lucchinelli, Franco Uncini, Kevin Schwantz and Kenny Roberts Jr won world titles riding Suzukis.

Since the company returned in 2015, they have won one rider title in 2020 when Joan Mir topped the standings while teammate Alex Rins was third.

Rins is fourth in this season’s standings with Mir sixth.

Motorsport.com said Mir was likely to join Honda, replacing Pol Espargaro.

While they won the team championship in 2020, Suzuki struggled in the separate manufacturers’ standings because, unlike Ducati, Yamaha, Honda and KTM, they do not have a satellite team.

In the current format, there are 24 bikes on the starting grid in each race, although wildcard entries increased the number to 25 in the last two races.

Ducati have eight bikes on the grid this season. Suzuki and Aprilia are the only manufacturers with just two bikes on the starting grid.

The 24-bike format is fixed until 2026, when the current contract between the International Motorcycling Federation, Dorna and the International Road Racing Teams Association, which represents the six manufacturers, ends. – AFP, May 3, 2022

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