MotoAmerica: Who Is Riding Where In Supersport, 2026

MotoAmerica: Who Is Riding Where In Supersport, 2026

© 2026, Roadracing World Publishing, Inc. By Michael Gougis.

Supersport is often a scrum at the front, and 2026 promises to be even more competitive at the sharp end of the MotoAmerica field. With talent coming into the class from above, sideways and below, and the top two finishers in the Championship in 2025 moving up to Superbike, there are unknowns and knowns and questions that will be answered only at the end of the season.

 

Josh Herrin (1) on the Warhorse HSBK Ducati Panigale V4 R Superbike at The Ridge in 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

 

Dropping down from Superbike is former class Champion Josh Herrin. He’ll be on familiar machinery. Herrin dominated the 2022 MotoAmerica Supersport Championship on a Warhorse HSBK Ducati Panigale V2. He rode the team’s Panigale V4 R racebikes in Superbike for three years to multiple race wins and the 2024 MotoAmerica Superbike Championship. And he won the Daytona 200 three straight times on a Warhorse Panigale V2.

 

Josh Herrin will race the Desnuda Tequila Rahal Ducati Moto Panigale V2 in 2026. Photo courtesy Rahal Ducati.

 

Herrin signed for Rahal Ducati Moto for Supersport for 2026, aboard the team’s Panigale V2 racebikes, with a new sponsor, Desnuda Tequila. The team nearly took the Supersport title last season, with PJ Jacobsen winning three times and taking 15 podiums. So the bike, the team and the rider are all known quantities, and expectations are high.

 

Darryn Binder (15) on the Gresini Moto2 racebike at Circuit of The Americas, 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

 

One of the out-of-the-blue signings in the class is the kinda, sorta lateral move of Darryn Binder to the Warhorse HSBK Panigale V2 raced by Cameron Petersen in 2025. Petersen is off to Superbike for 2026, replaced by Binder in the next-to-highest class in the United States after three seasons in the intermediate Moto2 class. Binder has a wealth of experience, having raced in Moto3 and then jumping straight into MotoGP, where he spent a year on a Yamaha YZR-M1 prior to moving to Moto2. But that experience hasn’t translated into results. After 11 seasons of Grand Prix competition and 188 races, Binder has one win and six podiums, all in Moto3. The Warhorse team is well versed in preparing Panigale V2 machines, the unknown is how well Binder will adapt to a motorcycle very, very different from a Moto2 Grand Prix racebike. The famous quote from John Kocinski may apply here. When asked the difference between the 500cc, four-cylinder, two-stroke Grand Prix racebikes he raced and the Superbikes he raced, Kocinski said that after riding the 500s, everything else just felt slow. How fast Binder will prove to be on a slower motorcycle remains to be seen.

 

Alessandro Di Mario (27) in Supersport practice on the Warhorse HSBK Ducati Panigale V2 at The Ridge, 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

 

Moving up to Supersport with Rahal Ducati Moto is Alessandro Di Mario, the double Championship winner in MotoAmerica in 2025. Di Mario successfully defended his Twins Cup title and added the Talent Cup Championship to his resume. He also rode the Warhorse Panigale V2 in practice at the MotoAmerica round at The Ridge last year, and with no prior experience on a Supersport machine, was 12th in his first session and 10th in final qualifying. At times in 2025, Di Mario looked like he was in a different class than the rest of the field. At The Ridge, Di Mario was nearly two seconds faster than anyone else in Twins Cup qualifying. Whether that speed will transfer to the Supersport class is one of the most interesting questions leading into the 2026 season.

 

Blake Davis (22) at The Ridge, 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

 

Another big question coming into 2026 will be the speed of the Yamaha YZF-R9. Mathew Scholtz took the Strack Racing YZF-R9 to the Supersport Championship in its first year of competition, and ripped off five straight wins to end the season. Scholtz is back to Superbike for 2026, where he has won in the past, so his skills at the Supersport level never were in doubt. But there was much muttering in the paddock over the 2025 Supersport rules, inherited from the Supersport World Championship, that allowed the R9 to run with a longer swingarm from one of Yamaha’s other CP3-powered machines. For 2026, the R9 must race with the stock swingarm, according to a competition bulletin issued by MotoAmerica.

Even though Scholtz is going racing with Strack in Superbike next year, Blake Davis, a multi-time winner with the team last year on the R9, is expected to be back for 2026. BPR Racing will once again field R9s for multi-time AMA Pro Racing National Champion Josh Hayes, as well as Brenden Ketelsen, who has extensive experience at the club level.

 

Josh Hayes (4) at The Ridge, 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

 

Brenden Ketelsen, 2025 AFM Overall Champion. Photo by oxymoronphotography.com.

 

Other riders returning to the Supersport grid in 2026 include Wristin Grigg on the second Warhorse machine; Tyler Scott, a multi-time podium finisher in 2025, on the M4 ECSTAR Suzuki GSX-R750; Kayla Yaakov on a Rahal Ducati Moto Panigale V2, and Altus Racing’s Jaret Nassaney, Torin Collins and Maximiliano Gerardo on the team’s Yamaha YZF-R9s (as well as new member Austin Martinez on a Suzuki GSX-R750).

With this level of riding talent and potent machinery, Supersport promises to be a class to watch in MotoAmerica in 2026. And just to kick it off properly, for the first time in the MotoAmerica era, the Daytona 200 will be a points-paying round of the Supersport Championship. That means the teams that sat out the race in prior years are likely to be there, and Rahal has already made it clear that Jacobsen will be on a Supersport bike for the race, meaning four additional Panigale V2 racebikes on the grid for the historic race. This promises to start the season off properly …

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