Moto3: World Championship Race Results From COTA

Moto3: World Championship Race Results From COTA

© 2026, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc. By Mathilde Gasnier.

Guido Pini won the FIM Moto3 World Championship race Sunday at Circuit Of The Americas, in Texas. Using his Pirelli-shod Leopard Racing Honda, the Italian rider won the 14-lap race by just 0.056 second, making it his first Moto3 victory.

Maximo Quiles was the runner-up on his CFMOTO Valresa Aspar Team KTM.

Red Bull KTM Ajo’s Alvaro Carpe was third, just 0.254 second behind race winner Pini.

Valentin Perrone crossed the finish line fourth on his Red Bull KTM Tech3 machine and Pini’s teammate, Adrian Fernandez got fifth.

Maximo Quiles leads the championship with 65 points, 23 ahead of Alvaro Carpe who has 42 points. Valentin Perrone is third with 38 points.

 

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More from a press release issued by MotoGP:

Pini pockets last corner win in Moto3 COTA classic. The Italian takes his maiden victory as the podium fight delivers a show to remember – right to the wire.

Guido Pini (Leopard Racing) is a Moto3 Grand Prix winner! The Italian came out on top in final corner fisticuffs at COTA, claiming victory by just 0.056. Maximo Quiles (CFMoto Valresa Aspar Team) took second, with Alvaro Carpe (Red Bull KTM Ajo) completing the podium after his final corner attack on Valentin Perrone (Red Bull KTM Tech3) saw both head wide and lose out on a 1-2.

Carpe took the holeshot from pole ahead of Perrone, with Casey O’Gorman (SIC58 Squadra Corse) losing out off the start as Quiles went full send into Turn 1 and grabbed third. The two orange machines were streaking away in the lead early doors, but Quiles got the hammer down to tag back on, with the Leopard Racing duo of Pini and Adrian Fernandez next up the road.

 

Guido Pini in the parc fermé after chis victory at COTA. Photo courtesy MotoGP

 

After it had been a seven-rider fight early doors, Joel Esteban (LEVELUP – MTA) and Veda Pratama (Honda Team Asia) were out of that with 10 to go as Pratama crashed out and Esteban couldn’t avoid the bike. Both riders were ok but the group was down to five before Fernandez started to fade, leaving four riders fighting for three places on the podium.

By three to go, the gloves started to come off. Pini attacked Quiles at Turn 11 and got the lead momentarily before being denied and then tried again at Turn 12 – this time hooking it up and keeping it. With that shuffle at the front, Carpe was right back in it and the four-rider fight really started to heat up.

Onto the last lap, Perrone led Pini, but Carpe slotted into second early doors. Pini then lost out to Quiles at Turn 11, with the long back straight seeing everyone absolutely pinned – but it was Carpe who led out of 12. Then Perrone attacked at 13, Carpe repaid him through 17-18, Perrone was back through in style at Turn 19 and Carpe took it back again a corner later. But it all went down to the final corner.

Carpe went for the win and sliced up the inside, with Perrone pushed out wide and the #83 only just keeping it on track too. The door was open for the duo behind them, and neither Pini nor Quiles needed a second invitation. In their drag race to the line, Pini took it by 0.056, with Quiles second and Carpe holding on to third. Perrone, after a stunning race, was forced to settle for fourth.

Fernandez took fifth, with a huge fight behind going to the wire too. Adrian Cruces (CIP Green Power) took P6 right at the line as rookie Brian Uriarte (Red Bull KTM Ajo) got bumped aside at the finish line, allowing fellow rookie Rico Salmela (Red Bull KTM Tech3) to just steal P7 too. Matteo Bertelle (LEVELUP – MTA) took ninth ahead of Scott Ogden (CIP Green Power), with compatriot Eddie O’Shea (GRYD – Mlav Racing) just missing out on the top ten but taking his best Moto3 finish yet. Front row starter O’Gorman crashed out from that group.

 

Moto3 race at COTA. Photo courtesy MotoGP

 

Check out full results from Moto3 at the Red Bull US GP here. Now we wait for the Spanish GP with a few weekends off – chance for the field to recharge and come back out swinging on turf that’s much more familiar for many. Will the order shuffle again? Join us in Jerez to find out!

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