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MotoAmerica: BrownTown Racing Plans Full 2026 Season

BrownTown Racing Closes Out Limited MotoAmerica Season With Consistent Top Finishes Looking Forward to a Full Season in 2026. 

BrownTown Racing’s Chase Brown finished out the SC-Project Twins Cup season with fast and consistent finishes. Chase ran a limited MotoAmerica season competing in three events running near the front during all portions of each event. A string of 5th place finishes and regularly running near the front of the pack during warm-up and qualifying sessions were the highlights of his limited season. With only one DNF due to a crash beyond his control Chase finished 5th, 8th, 5th, 6th, 5th, DNF.

This consistency and natural talent had the paddock taking notice of Chase’s speed and ability. With this year’s success BrownTown Racing is preparing for a full on assault in the Twins Cup for 2026.

Chase stated “With our results and ability to run near the front with a limited schedule we are planning a full Twins Cup MotoAmerica season in 2026.”We had podium pace at each event so we hope to carry that momentum into next year.” Browntown Racing is already hard at work with their Aprillia 660 preparing for off-season testing and looking to step onto the podium in 2026.

Chase Brown would like to thank his parents and crew as well as Powersport Supply, KWS Motorsports, K-Tech Suspension, Vortex, and Blud Lubricants for the support this season.

MotoGP: Marc Marquez Will Miss Australian and Malaysian GPs

No surgery is required for the #93 but his recovery plan rules out the next two races.

Marc Marquez is confirmed to miss the next two Grands Prix following further medical checks undertaken on his arrival home to Madrid. The newly crowed World Champion is confirmed to have suffered a fracture at the base of the coracoid process and a ligament injury to his right shoulder.

Clinical examination and radiological assessment have ruled out any connection with previous injuries and confirmed the absence of significant bone displacement.

The medical team at Ruber International Hospital in Madrid, led by Dr. Samuel Antuña and Dr. Ignacio Roger de Oña, has therefore opted for a conservative treatment plan, involving rest and immobilization of the affected shoulder until it is fully healed and the fracture is clinically consolidated. This rules out the #93’s participation in the upcoming Grands Prix in Australia and Malaysia.

Marquez will undergo weekly check-ups and his progress will determine the final recovery time and his return to competition.

Marc Marquez: “Fortunately, the injury isn’t severe, but it’s important to respect the recovery timeline. My goal is to be back before the end of the season, but without rushing things beyond the doctors’ recommendations. Both my personal and the team’s main goals have been achieved, so now the priority is to recover properly and return at 100%.”

BSB: Ray and Redding Victorious At Oulton Park

Bradley Ray and Scott Redding shared the Bennetts British Superbike Championship victories in two intense races at Oulton Park today as the title fight goes down to the wire at Brands Hatch in two weeks’ time (17/18/19 October).

30-points separate defending champion Kyle Ryde from fierce rival Ray ahead of the final three races in Kent, but with a maximum of 105 points available, Leon Haslam also remains in mathematical contention after a hat trick of podiums at Oulton Park.

Ray claimed a sensational victory in race two, starting 14th on the grid to pass both Christian Iddon and Haslam on the final lap to return to winning ways for Raceways Yamaha.

The race initially got underway once again in mixed conditions with yesterday’s winner Josh Brookes hitting the front of the pack from Ryde, Lee Jackson and Iddon. The championship leader though hit the front of the pack as Rogers moved into second by the end of the opening lap.

The race was red flagged on lap three when Peter Hickman’s LEW 8TEN Racing BMW Motorrad suffered a technical problem and then there was a subsequent clean-up for track contamination.

On the restart, Iddon hit the front of the pack from Brookes and Jackson, but Ray was on the attack and he was carving his way through the pack. By lap five, he was trailing championship rival Ryde and he made a decisive move into third.

Haslam and Iddon had made a break at the front of the pack, but once Ray had moved ahead of his Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha rival, he had the leading pair in his sights, setting a blistering pace to close the gap ahead of the final lap.

Ray first made a move on Iddon for second at Island, before having Haslam in his sights. The Raceways Yamaha rider dived down the inside at Knickerbrook to snatch the lead, holding it to the chequered flag as the top three were separated by just 0.481s.

Ryde held fourth, with Storm Stacey back in the top five for Bathams AJN Racing BMW and Tommy Bridewell claimed sixth place for Honda Racing UK.

In the final race of the weekend, Redding delivered an incredible win for the Hager PBM Ducati team after an intense ten-way battle for the victory ahead of Ray and Haslam.

Ray knew he needed to outscore Ryde before the title chase heads to Brands Hatch for the season finale, and he instantly hit the front of the pack at the start, ahead of his closest championship rival with Haslam into third place.

A lap later and Ryde had seized the advantage with a move at Old Hall, but Ray instantly fought back and regained the position into Island.

The leading trio initially had begun to break the pack but Redding was closing, and behind him a freight train of riders were also ready to join the battle including Iddon, Stacey, Bridewell, Max Cook, Glenn Irwin and Charlie Nesbitt all in pursuit.

Ray was holding the lead despite the mounting pressure from Ryde, Haslam and Redding as the order continued to change with the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing rider moving into second place at Lakeside on the seventh lap.

A lap later and Haslam grabbed the lead with a move at Old Hall and as he moved ahead, Ryde also saw his opportunity to move forward and a pass at Hizzys put him ahead of his main title rival, pushing Ray into third.

The lead changed again on lap nine, when Ryde made another committed pass into Hizzys. The Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha rider was defending hard, but Haslam was determined and a lap later the lead changed again as he fired ahead at Lakeside.

Ryde was fighting back, making a move back into the lead at Hizzys again, whilst Ray knew he needed to close down his fierce rival and he crucially moved into second place at Knickerbrook on the same lap.

On lap 11, Ray was back at the front of the pack and he was pushing to add to his earlier win in race two, but two laps later Haslam regained the advantage at Old Hall as Redding moved into a podium position on the Hager PBM Ducati.

Redding was into second place by lap 14 as he dived ahead of Ray at Lodge before seizing the lead a lap later at Hizzys.

Redding was pushing for the victory with Haslam holding second as Stacey then was third as he began battling with Ray for the final podium position. The Raceways Yamaha rider moved back ahead for third place with three laps to go and then it would come down to the last corner on the final lap to decide the podium positions.

Redding would ultimately emerge on top to claim his fifth race win of the season, but Haslam hit a false neutral into Lodge for the final time and ran wide, as Ray stormed through into second on the run to the line.

Haslam was trying to regain the ground as Stacey made a final bid for the last podium position on the run to the chequered flag, but the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing rider had the edge by just 0.026s.

Ryde claimed fifth place ahead of Glenn Irwin and Iddon, with Cook, Bridewell and Charlie Nesbitt completing the top ten.

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 2 result:

  1. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha)
  2. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.184s
  3. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +0.481s
  4. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.073s
  5. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +3.894s
  6. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +3.996s
  7. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +5.048s
  8. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) +5.451s
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +5.534s
  10. Billy McConnell (C&L Fairburn Properties /Look Forward Racing Honda) +5.918s 

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 3 result:

  1. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati)
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) +0.462s
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.700s
  4. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +0.726s
  5. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.251s
  6. Glenn Irwin (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.408s
  7. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +2.532s
  8. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +2.615s
  9. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +2.846s
  10. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +3.775s

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship standings:

  1. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) 445
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) 415
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) 344
  4. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 272
  5. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) 272
  6. Rory Skinner (Cheshire Mouldings Ducati) 268
  7. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati) 237.5
  8. Danny Kent (McAMS Racing Yamaha) 217
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 212
  10. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) 204
     

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

 

 

BRADLEY RAY – RACEWAYS YAMAHA

“After a difficult start to the weekend, it was great to be able to turn things around with today’s success. I feel really pleased to have brought home a win for the team, the last couple of rounds haven’t been easy, so it’s nice to pay them back for all of the hard work.

“I’m feeling happy with our performance this weekend; we took some points away from Kyle in the championship standings, and that’s what matters.

“We’ll head towards Brands Hatch with the aim of replicating today’s form in an attempt to put up a hard fight for the championship crown.”

 

 

 

 

SCOTT REDDING – HAGER PBM DUCATI

“This weekend has honestly felt like a baptism of fire! I won at Assen and then I came here and I could barely get the bike around, I think it might be to do with not having a set up in the dry around here like these other guys do with this year and previous years.

“I just took it race by race. In the last race, I thought if I got a top five I’d be happy, and a podium I’d be over the moon, and I just felt good on the bike. I had the bit between my teeth, I wasn’t thinking at all about making mistakes or crashing and I was determined but calm.

“I overrode a little bit, but I was just excited and hats off to these guys, I still don’t believe it, we set up the bike based on sighting laps, which isn’t ideal but somehow we made it work.

“I’d go far as to say that was my best win, even more so than when I was in BSB in 2019, because I literally went off of no dry set up on a track which is difficult for me and I don’t know why or how it happened!

“I was going round the slow down lap thinking how did that just happen? They’re the good days, especially after a difficult weekend.”

 

MotoGP: More From Sunday at Mandalika

More from a press release issued by BK8 Gresini Racing Team: 

Maiden win for Fermin, podium for Alex and best independent rider title. 

 

  • RaceDay – IndonesianGP

1st – FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 

3rd – ALEX MARQUEZ #73 

 

  • World Championship Standings

2nd – ALEX MARQUEZ #73 (362 points)
          🏆 BEST INDEPENDENT RIDER 2025 🏆

8th – FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 (181 points)

 

Fermin Aldeguer on the left and Alex Marquez on the right, on the podium at Mandalika. Photo courtesy BK8 Gresini Team.
Fermin Aldeguer on the left and Alex Marquez on the right, on the podium at Mandalika. Photo courtesy BK8 Gresini Team.

 

FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 : “I didn’t look back, I really wanted to make amends from yesterday. I honestly didn’t know I had this rhythm, I wasn’t sure what tyre to choose, but in the end, thanks to the team, we found the squaring of the circle and had a great race. We narrowly missed out yesterday, but today we got it and I’d like to thank everyone who believed in me. I am the second youngest winner in history? I had hoped to be the first.”

 

ALEX MARQUEZ #73 : “I had an issue at the start, but despite that my start wasn’t a bad one after all. It was a challenging race, but it was important to finish  on a high; I was hoping to make it to second place but had nothing left. Congratulations to Fermín for an incredible weekend. We achieved the goal of clinching the Best Independent Rider title, and we now aim at the runner up spot in the World Championship.”

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Honda HRC Castrol: 

Marini recovers to fifth with podium pace in fiery Indonesian GP.

A star of the most exciting Grand Prix of the year, Luca Marini left nothing on track as he battled across 27-laps for a debut Honda podium – recovering to fifth place in a fantastic recovery after being sent wide.

Sunday’s race started in almost identical fashion to Saturday as Luca Marini and the Honda RC213V shot forward from sixth to lead the MotoGP field into Turn 1. As drama unfolded behind, Marini settled into his race strategy – confident in his pace for the podium as he tussled with Pedro Acosta early on. Launching several moves, Marini was unable to make a move stick and bided his time for a cleaner opportunity. Unfortunately, an optimistic move from Raul Fernandez would drop Marini from the top three to barely inside the top ten.

Determination fueled Marini as lap after lap he displayed the pace for the podium, battling in the heart of a ferocious ten-rider group. Fighting right until the end to pass Brad Binder for fourth place, Marini earned fifth right at the line. The result puts him just 20 points shy of fellow Honda HRC rider Johann Zarco in the fight for a top ten championship finish. Content with his undeniable potential despite the lack of final reward, Marini’s podium desires are bound to be answered in MotoGP’s final four races.

Joan Mir made a similarly strong start from 12th on the grid, immediately thrusting himself into the fight for the top ten. Progressing well and with Saturday’s recover still fresh in his mind, Mir forged ahead and began an intense battle with Alex Marquez. Up to eighth, Mir would suffer a fall on lap and retire soon after. Disappointed but unharmed, the #36 will be ready to fight once again next time out in Phillip Island – one of his favourite circuits.

Now a week of rest and recovery await for the Honda HRC Castrol team before another double-header, the Australian and Malaysian GPs the final stop in the MotoGP World Championship’s tour.

 

Luca Marini (10) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.
Luca Marini (10) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.

 

Luca Marini – fifth : “The race started very well, going more or less to plan with another really good start – it’s one of the strong points of the Honda RC213V and myself. I had a really good fight with Acosta at the start, he was protecting his line well and I was managing everything. My pace was there for P2 but then it looks like Fernandez tried to force a move even though both his pace and my pace was better than everyone else. It’s a pity for myself and for his team because we were both out of contention after his move where I lost five positions. After that I was really determined to recover as much as possible, and I pushed Binder right until the end. For sure we had the pace for more, but this is racing. Although the final reward still wasn’t there, we showed our potential – the bike is improving and also myself and it will arrive.”

 

Joan Mir (36) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.
Joan Mir (36) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.

 

Joan Mir – DNF: “As you can imagine, I am angry because we lost a really good opportunity today to fight for a podium. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. We need to understand what happened with the medium rear tyre because it was not what we were expecting, and I wasn’t able to ride in the way I needed to. The pace today was quite slow and that’s why I really think we could have had a nice race; we had been doing well throughout the weekend. It’s important to understand what happened and avoid it happening again. Now when we fall, we miss out on more than in the past which is in some ways a positive, because it means we have improved. A bit of rest and move onto the next set of races.”

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Monster Energy Yamaha: 

Quartararo Takes 7th in Indonesian GP Race, Rins Shines with Mandalika Pace and Top-10 Performance. 

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s Fabio Quartararo made a strategic tyre decision, riding with a hard front and soft rear. The tyre combination allowed the Frenchman to press on to take seventh place in the hot 27-lap Grand Prix of Indonesia Race. Álex Rins delighted the Yamaha fans with a brilliant ride. He put in several overtakes and was riding in second place when he suffered a sudden drop of his soft-soft tyres five laps before the chequered flag. The Spaniard still salvaged a P10 result.

 

 

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s Fabio Quartararo showed masterful tyre management around the Mandalika International Circuit today during the 27-lap Grand Prix of Indonesia Race. Nursing his tyres in extreme heat, he secured a strong seventh place. Álex Rins had his most enjoyable ride of the season so far, riding inside the top 3 for nine laps. While sudden tyre drop took away his chance to keep defending second place, he did well to hold on to tenth position across the finish line.

Quartararo had a good start, holding eighth place in the opening stages before moving up to sixth when Marc Márquez and Marco Bezzecchi had a collision. Avoiding the incident, the number 20 pushed onward and closed the gap to his teammate. He kept shadowing Rins for 7 laps but was then overtaken by Álex Márquez on lap 10. Unshaken, the Frenchman still chased the group fighting for second place. On lap 15, he overtook Luca Marini, but he lost a position to Brad Binder five laps later. The top-11 riders all started to bunch up behind Rins in the final stages, causing frequent changes in the order. Quartararo kept his head down and held steady in 7th place, finishing 9.894s from first.

Rins launched well and put up a fight early on to hold on to fourth place but was overtaken by Raul Fernandez on lap 3. The Yamaha rider’s first half of the race was focused on closing the gap to the front again. He gradually reeled them in, and it didn’t take long for him to pounce. At the end of lap 14, Marini and Raul Fernandez touched and Rins overtook both to take third place. He then made relatively light work of snatching second place from Pedro Acosta on lap 19. The number 42 skilfully kept a long train of riders behind him for four laps. However, with five laps left, Álex Márquez snuck past. With eight more riders bunching up for the fight for second place and his soft-soft tyre combination dropping, Rins was relegated to tenth in a matter of two laps. But he soldiered on and crossed the finish line in tenth place, 13.223s from the winner.

After today’s results, Quartararo stays in 9th place in the overall standings with 158 points, and Rins holds 19th position with 51 points. Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP are 6th in the team championship with 209 points, and Yamaha remain in 5th position in the constructor championship with 190 points.

MotoGP will be back in action in two weeks’ time for the Grand Prix of Australia, held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit from 17-19 October.

 

MASSIMO MEREGALLI – Team Director, Monster Energy Yamaha

“Overall, it was both a tough and a positive weekend. Starting with Álex, we are delighted to see him fighting at the front again where a rider of his talent belongs. It was a shame that his soft tyres couldn’t hold on for the last five laps, but to have him ride in this manner again is already a huge step, especially in these demanding conditions. It’s a confidence boost, and these positive signs have the whole team highly motivated to keep working. Fabio had been struggling on the medium tyres all weekend, and he and his team made the right tyre decision today: he managed to make the hard front and soft rear work well enough throughout the race to earn him a seventh place at the end of it. We leave the Mandalika Circuit with a double top-10 result, and that’s a nice boost as we prepare for the next two fly-away GPs in Australia and Malaysia.”

 

 

Fabio Quartararo (20) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.
Fabio Quartararo (20) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.

 

Fabio Quartararo: “It was super hot! I had to choose a different tyre: the hard front and soft rear, which almost nobody used, but those were the only tyres I was feeling quite okay with. It was a difficult race, but I think I rode pretty well and was quite clever with how I managed the rear tyre. It was a strange weekend overall. I didn’t expect to be so close to the podium today – I finished about 2s from third. My feeling this weekend wasn’t good, but Álex was super fast, and it was nice to share data.”

 

Alex Rins (42) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.

 

Alex Rins: “I hope everyone enjoyed this race. It was quite tough for me, but I am really happy. Not just about the Race, but because of the weekend overall. I was riding quite well: defending my position and overtaking. We did a great weekend. We knew that we would suffer at the end with the soft tyre. I tried to control the rear tyre, and I was there until the last five laps when the tyre dropped. I never stopped believing in myself, I knew I was able to do it. Riding like this in this race was so satisfying, and I enjoyed this weekend a lot. But, for sure, this was just one weekend. We go to Australia next, let’s see what happens there. I will try to do my best.”

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Prima Pramac Yamaha: 

Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP Fights Hard in Indonesia: Oliveira 11th, Miller 14th at Mandalika GP. 

In front of 67,905 spectators on race day (140,324 over the full weekend), the Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP team wrapped up the Indonesian GP, 18th round of the World Championship, with Miguel Oliveira finishing 11th, while Jack Miller, after a late crash, crossed the line in 14th place. The next appointment comes in two weeks at Phillip Island for the Australian GP.

 

 

It was a Sunday of fight and passion at the Indonesian GP, round 18 of the MotoGP World Championship, with a long train of riders battling all the way to the closing laps, ten bikes fighting for the second and third steps of the podium. Spectacular for the packed grandstands at Mandalika — and for those watching on TV — but in the end the race delivered less than the potential shown by Prima Pramac Yamaha during practice and qualifying.

Ultimately, the best finisher was Miguel Oliveira, who crossed the line in 11th, despite being forced to slow his pace in the final laps due to physical issues caused by Indonesia‘s humid heat. Jack Miller finished 14th, after a crash with four laps to go while defending ninth place from Franco Morbidelli. The Australian rider managed to restart and still salvage points.

After 18 races, Miller sits 18th in the standings with 61 points, Oliveira is 21st with 32, and the Prima Pramac Yamaha team holds 11th in the team standings with 95 points. Leaving Indonesia behind, the next challenge will be the Australian GP at Phillip Island, round 19 of the MotoGP World Championship.

 

GINO BORSOI – Team Director, Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP 

“It was a very interesting race up to a certain point for all the Yamahas, showing that we‘re improving. Too bad for Miller‘s crash while running inside the top ten, while Oliveira suffered physically and couldn‘t compete until the very end of what could have been a great weekend for the team. But beyond the issue, I‘m very satisfied with his overall weekend. It was a fun race, and up to a point we weren‘t far from the podium zone. Now we hope to continue like this in Australia, Jack‘s home race, which I hope can be a fresh start for him in terms of results.”

 

Miguel Oliveira (88) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.
Miguel Oliveira (88) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.

 

Miguel Oliveira: “My start wasn‘t too bad, but then the bike started to feel very nervous. I chose the soft rear — it wasn‘t really a gamble, as it was the only tire we felt comfortable with and the one I thought I could manage. But in the final laps it just became too difficult. Physically it was brutal because of the heat. With 8–9 laps to go I was overheating, and I couldn‘t bring my breathing and body temperature down, even when I tried to slow the pace a little. We wrapped up another positive weekend with points, but we were aiming for a bit more, and that‘s the feeling I‘m taking away from Mandalika.”

 

Jack Miller (43) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.

 

Jack Miller: “We were a bit more competitive today and I felt good, sitting just behind the group, two or three tenths back, because every time I caught up to them the front tire turned into chewing gum. With three laps to go, Morbidelli came to pass me between turns 11 and 12. We didn‘t make contact only because, when I closed the throttle, I heard a bike coming on the inside — I moved slightly off line, and the next time I put the bike down on the left-hand side, I crashed. Unfortunate, but we showed good potential today, fighting in the group. It was nice to be there battling with these guys throughout the race. I‘m disappointed about the crash and sorry for the team.”

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Castrol Honda LCR: 

CASTROL Honda LCR rider Johann Zarco crossed the line in 12th place in Sunday’s race in Mandalika.

  • Under extremely hot conditions and facing a comeback race, Frenchman Zarco, as in the Sprint, made a good start and began recovering positions.
  • While trying to break into the top 10, the rider experienced a small technical issue, which prevented him from pushing.
  • Staying focused and avoiding mistakes, Zarco finished 12th, scoring points and showing cleverness and determination even in the toughest moments.
  • The team is now analyzing the data to identify what happened precisely.
 
Johann Zarco (5) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy CASTROL Honda LCR
Johann Zarco (5) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy CASTROL Honda LCR
 
 
Johann Zarco 12th : “I had a good start and was trying to set my rhythm, but then I started to feel something different, we had a small technical issue. I tried to stay focused, avoid mistakes, and finish the race in the best way possible. We did it, and we scored points, which is good for my confidence. Even with the difficulties, we made progress today, and that’s important as we look ahead to the next race in Australia.”
 

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Idemitsu Honda LCR: 

IDEMITSU Honda LCR rider Somkiat Chantra crossed the line in 13th place in Sunday’s race at Mandalika.

  • Under extremely hot conditions and facing the challenge of a comeback race, the Thai rider made a strong start and pushed to stay with the main group.
  • A lack of feeling on the bike, however, limited his ability to maintain a stronger pace throughout the race.
  • Chantra stayed focused, avoided mistakes, and finished in 13th place, scoring points once again. 
 
Somkiat Chantra (35) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Idemitsu Honda LCR
 
Somkiat Chantra 13th : “I’m happy because we secured points, and that’s always good. The race was hard for me because I didn’t have a good feeling on the bike. I wanted to stay with the group, but it was very difficult, so I focused on avoiding mistakes, scoring points, and finishing the race to gather important data ahead of Australia”.

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Red Bull KTM Tech3: 

Lombok island was far from dreamy for the Red Bull KTM Tech3 team during this 4th edition of the Grand Prix of Indonesia. Maverick Viñales chose to withdraw from the remainder of this round on Saturday, to fully focus on shoulder recovery, while Enea Bastianini is going home with two DNFs. Enea faced another letdown on Sunday at Mandalika track, after a technical issue forced the Italian to retire from the main race after 13 laps, a big shame for the Italian who was eager to make it up for yesterday’s sprint crash.

The sprint crash was a tough one for Enea Bastianini on Saturday, and he was willing to make the most of Sunday to try ending Indonesia on a good note before a small break at home. As he lined up in 17th, lights were out at 15:00 LT (UTC+8), Enea moved up to 16th in the first corners behind Miguel Oliveira, and then he managed to luckily go through the chaotic crash between Marc Marquez and Marco Bezzecchi, to exit lap 1 in the top 15. Bastianini passed Johann Zarco in the next lap, and Joan Mir’s crash meant P13 for Enea after two laps, with Fabio Di Giannantonio ahead. Somehow, Enea appeared to struggle to settle into a decent early race pace, and the gap to Di Gia’ had grown, 2 seconds, after 5 laps into the MotoGP™ race. Zarco eventually caught back Enea, and on lap 9, the Frenchman made the move on our Italian, with Enea now in 14th. Unfortunately, a technical issue forced him to retire on the 13th lap. Not the end we wanted for our Grand Prix of Indonesia. Time to work, find solutions to our problems, and come back stronger in the next round, as we will next head to Phillip Island for the Grand Prix of Australia, on October 17-18-19!

 

Enea Bastianini (23) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Red Bull KTM Tech3.
Enea Bastianini (23) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Red Bull KTM Tech3.

 

Enea Bastianini: “It was a tough weekend for me, from start to end sadly. After my crash in the sprint, the mechanics have worked super hard to give me the best bike possible for today, so I want to say thank you. We had a technical issue during the race, but we were not having a fantastic race anyway, the first laps were tough, pace was not good, feeling was bad, so it is less hard to swallow, but retiring from the races is obviously not what we are looking for. We have to keep working to be able to have something more in the next rounds. We have some positives though, because we were more competitive in the fast corners today, in both warm up and race, so it is important for us, and we have understood a few things to work on for the future.”

 
Nicolas Goyon, Team Manager:It seems that things have turned pretty bad for the Red Bull KTM Tech3 team in Indonesia, from start to end. Enea Bastianini never really had a positive feeling, and he was not able to go fast. We know that a bad qualifying makes the weekend tricky, but somehow he was fighting for 13th at some stage in the race, but he had to retire due to a technical issue on the bike, which we are currently investigating. Disappointing situation, but there is clearly room for improvements, as both Pedro Acosta and Brad Binder did a super good race. We need to improve, we need to understand what is happening, and we must bring solutions for Phillip Island. We have ten days to rest and arrive at Phillip Island in better shape. We also extend our best wishes to Maverick Viñales, we hope that he will recover as quickly as possible, and come back stronger.”
 

 

 

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More from a press release issued by Lenovo Ducati Team: 

The Grand Prix of Indonesia draws to a close for the Ducati Lenovo Team: Márquez involved in contact with another rider, Bagnaia retires after a crash. 

 

  • Maiden MotoGP win for Fermín Aldeguer with the Ducati machine of the Gresini Racing Team
  • Alex Márquez, third at the flag, clinches the Best Independent Rider title with the Desmosedici GP of the Gresini Racing Team

The Ducati Lenovo Team completed a challenging Grand Prix of Indonesia at the Mandalika Circuit. Marc Márquez was involved in a crash triggered by another rider, while Francesco Bagnaia crashed out of the encounter during lap eight.

Márquez had enjoyed a good start from row three as he entered turn one in sixth place. At turn seven, he was struck by Bezzecchi and crashed heavily. Marc will return to Spain to undergo further medical checks. Bagnaia, from sixteenth place on the grid, lost the front at the last corner during lap eight.

As the eighteenth Grand Prix of the season draws to a close, Marc Márquez, already crowned MotoGP World Champion, now holds a tally of 545 points. Francesco Bagnaia is third, 88 points behind the rider in second place, Alex Márquez. The Triple Crown is completed by the Teams’ Title secured by the Ducati Lenovo Team and the Constructors’ World Championship clinched by Ducati.

The Ducati Lenovo Team will be back in action on October 17th at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in Australia for the fourth-last event of the season.

 
 
Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.
Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.

Marc Márquez (#93 Ducati Lenovo Team) – DNF

“I’m obviously sad because it’s again the right side – in this case, it appears to be the collarbone. Once back in Madrid, I’ll undergo further medical examinations to verify the real extent of the injury. This is racing, and these things can happen. Marco (Bezzecchi) came to apologise. I’ll try to return as soon as possible, while fully complying with the recovery process.”
 
 
 
Francesco Bagnaia (63) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.

 

Francesco Bagnaia (#63 Ducati Lenovo Team) – DNF

“It was a very disappointing weekend, especially considering how the previous one went. This has never been an easy track for me, although I’ve always achieved good results here in the past. I’d like to apologise to the team for the crash: I was pushing to try to bridge the gap with the riders ahead, despite the lack of feeling. Unfortunately, we didn’t manage to change the momentum of this weekend, but I’m sure that by analysing the data, the engineers will find a solution for the next Grand Prix so I can battle for the top three in the Championship.”
 

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Aprilia Racing: 

Sunday to forget for Aprilia Racing at Mandalika. 

The weekend at the Pertamina Mandalika International Circuit concluded on a sour note for Aprilia Racing.
 
Starting from pole position, Marco Bezzecchi saw his hopes of completing a perfect weekend evaporate on the very first lap. After a less-than-ideal start that dropped him a few places, he made contact with Marc Márquez while attempting to recover, causing both riders to crash. Following the fall, Bezzecchi was taken to the medical centre for checks and was later airlifted to Mataram hospital; after the medical examinations, no fractures have been found for Marco. 
 
Raúl Fernández’s performance for the Trackhouse MotoGP Team was another highlight, as he followed up Saturday’s sprint podium by again showing his confidence on the RS-GP25, finishing sixth – just two seconds off the podium.

 

Massimo Rivola – CEO Aprilia Racing :First of all, our apologies go to Márquez. We’re very sorry about what happened. It has been another painfully disappointing Sunday for us, with Marco having been the fastest rider on track for two days; so naturally our expectation – especially starting from pole – was to secure the best possible result. But that’s racing. We have much to learn this year. Despite the setbacks, our spirit remains unchanged – we’ll keep pushing until the final race to reach the goals we’ve set.”

 

ASBK: Jones Won Race 1 and 2 at One Raceway

A brilliant performance by Mike Jones at One Raceway has incredibly kept alive the 2025 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship presented by Motul (ASBK) until the final round in November.

The Queenslander was at his silky-smooth best on October 5 as he won both SW-Motech Superbike races – his 26th and 27th in the ASBK ranks – from pole position on his Yamaha Racing Team machine around the tight and twisty Goulburn circuit.

Meanwhile, Jones’ heroics also coincided with the lowest scoring round of the season for championship leader Josh Waters (McMartin Racing Ducati).

Waters posted a 5-5 scorecard, which allowed Jones to slash Waters’ lead to 50pts (338 to 288), down from 69pts at the start of the weekend.

A maximum of 51pts are available at The Bend from November 7-9, so it’s clearly still Waters’ championship to lose.

However, Jones is remaining upbeat.

“It’s been a really good feeling today, so special thanks to the Yamaha Racing Team for putting in such a big effort it to give me a great motorbike,” said Jones. “It was really special to get two wins for them.

“I’ll just keep the championship alive and roll onto the next one and see how we go.”

At One Raceway, Jones defeated the mightily impressive 17-year-old Cameron Dunker (MotoGO Yamaha Racing Team) in both races after soaking up relentless pressure, while Troy Herfoss (Yamaha Racing Team) and Anthony West (Addicted to Track Yamaha) shared the third places.

West remains third in the championship on 269pts, while Dunker (215pts) sling-shotted into fourth past Glenn Allerton (Superbike Advocates Racing Ducati, 213pts) and Broc Pearson (DesmoSport Ducati, 212pts).

 

race 1

 

race 2

 

 

  • SW-MOTECH SUPERBIKE RACE ONE

Dunker’s form at One Raceway in 2024 was top-shelf, and this year he took it to the next level as he led race one until lap eight before Jones – fully aware passing opportunities were at a premium – slipped past the teen after he ran slightly wide at turn two.

Jones then put down the hammer for a few laps to weaken Dunker’s resolve, with the final winning margin just under 2.5 seconds.

Herfoss, whose return to his former home track began in measured fashion on Friday, flicked into combat mode when it really mattered, fending off the slow-starting West to finish third. Herfoss also set a new lap record of 58.776 to show he’s lost none of the spark that took him to three Superbike titles, the last in 2023.

Waters was fifth, circulating near the front throughout but just unable to find a way past his main rivals.

The top 10 was completed by Cru Halliday (Stop and Seal Ducati), Pearson, Jack Favelle (Addicted to Track Yamaha), Jonathan Nahlous (Omega Racing Team Honda) and Allerton.

Nahlous was riding a replacement machine after his first bike was badly damaged earlier in the weekend.

 

Jones (#46) leads Dunker (#3), Herfoss (#17), West (#13) and Waters (#1). Photo courtesy ASBK.
Jones (#46) leads Dunker (#3), Herfoss (#17), West (#13) and Waters (#1). Photo courtesy ASBK.

 

 

  • SW-MOTECH SUPERBIKE RACE TWO

Riders were greeted with slightly tougher conditions in the afternoon, including a higher track temperature and a stiff breeze – but no-one told Dunker, who broke Herfoss’ hours-old lap record to set a new benchmark of 58.626.

That was on lap five as he tried to keep Jones in his orbit as both riders cleared away from the main pack in the shortened 10-lapper – the first attempt red-flagged after Favelle went down hard at turn four.

With the leaders firmly ensconced at the front, West slotted into third ahead of Herfoss, Waters and Halliday, and that’s how they remained for the balance of the race.

Nahlous was seventh from Pearson, Allerton and John Lytras (Caboolture Yamaha).

MotoAmerica Racer Bodie Paige 7th Again In Asia Talent Cup

(Editorial Note: MotoAmerica Talent Cup race winner Bodie Paige of Australia finished 7th again in Asia Talent Cup Race 2 held on Sunday of the MotoGP event weekend in Indonesia.)

Daquigan doubles up as Asia Talent Cup title race heads for Sepang showdown

After the dramas of Race 1, Race 2 delivered a second win for the Philippines whilst the title battle goes to Malaysia

Sunday, 05 October 2025

Another fine ride from Alfonsi Daquigan saw him consolidate his P3 overall in the standings with a second victory of the weekend, defeating Seiryu Ikegami who took a ninth P2 of the season and polesitter Haruki Matsuyama who made it a double rostrum in Indonesia. In the title race, Ryota Ogiwara came home in sixth after three Long Lap penalties, meaning the gap comes down to 30 with a maximum of 50 up for grabs next time out.

A whole host of riders battled at the front, including Daquigan, Ikegami, Ogiwara in the early stages, Shingo Iidaka and Noprutpong Bunprawes. Ogiwara served his double Long Lap and after dropping outside the points, climbed back into them before a third Long Lap was issued for short-cutting at Turn 9. At the front, a group of five all traded places but on the last lap, it was recently-turned 16-year-old Daquigan who doubled up on his birthday weekend. Ikegami stays in title contention whilst Matsuyama took P3 ahead of Bunprawes and Iidaka.

The Championship fight goes to Sepang on the 24th – 26th of October, where Ogiwara has match-point number two!

IATC_2025_INA_MotoGP_SUN_Race_2_Clasification

 

 

 

 

 

American Fernandez Crowned 2025 Aprilia Trofeo (Pro) Champion

Jayden Fernandez Crowned 2025 Italian Champion – Aprilia Trofeo (Pro) and Overall Winner Podium in every round; titles sealed at Mugello after a near-perfect season Mugello, Italy.

Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown today at the iconic Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello, capping a season defined by relentless pace, consistency, and race-craft. Across seven rounds, Fernandez finished on the podium every single time, converting pressure into points and momentum into championships.

Arriving at the finale with a 12-point cushion over closest rival Alessio Mattei, Fernandez refused to simply manage the gap. In Race 1, he delivered P2, extending his advantage to 21 points after a fierce five-rider duel. In Race 2, he deliberately avoided unnecessary risks and managed the race in the smartest, safest way, bringing home a composed P4—exactly what he needed to seal both titles and put an exclamation mark on a standout campaign.

Qualifying & Race Craft Fernandez built speed methodically through free practice, then locked P2 in Qualifying for a front-row start. In Race 1, a perfect launch put him in clean air before a measured slipstream chess match among five riders. He managed tire life, track position, and traffic with veteran composure to take second at the flag.

 

Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.
Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.

 

Quotes Jayden Fernandez (Rider, 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro & Overall Champion): “This title means everything. We set a clear target at Round 1: be fast every weekend and never leave points on the table. Mugello is special—today we finished the job the right way. A huge thank-you to the entire MMR Team for the outstanding work all season, and especially to my Crew Chief, Edy, who always gave me a very competitive bike. Thank you to my crew, my family, and everyone who believed in me.”

 

race 1 2

BSB: Brookes Back On Top With Win at Oulton Park

Josh Brookes was back on top in the Bennetts British Superbike Championship, winning the opening race at Oulton Park following a decisive last lap move on Leon Haslam to become the ninth different race winner of the season, as Showdown drama hit the penultimate round.

The race started but was red flagged on the opening lap when the rain shower hit, the riders returned to pitlane and then after a slight delay the race was restarted and declared dry after the conditions changed again. Both Brookes and Haslam opted for the intermediate tyre choice and it proved to be the winning combination, as the DAO Racing Honda and Moto Rapido Ducati Racing teams’ gamble paid off.

At the start, the riders with the wet combination tyre choice led the pack, with Storm Stacey leading Fraser Rogers off the front row before Bradley Ray moved into second. Rogers then grabbed the lead at Lodge, but Kyle Ryde was moving forward too, moving ahead of closest rival Ray at Old Hall two laps later.

Haslam was carving his way through the order for the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing team; and by lap six, he had grabbed the lead at Hizzys to push Rogers and Stacey down the order with Ryde in fourth place ahead of Brookes.

By lap eight, Brookes had moved into second and was closing down Haslam who had bridged a slight advantage over the chasing pack. The DAO Racing Honda rider was stalking Haslam ahead of him, and then was looking to make his move over the final three laps.

The Australian executed his move at Brittens on the final lap and despite Haslam looking to fight back, Brookes had the edge to take the chequered flag to take victory for the first time since 2023.

Ryde had delivered a decisive race, to claim the final podium position and extend his lead to 43-points in the standings, with Rogers and Stacey securing strong top five positions and Tommy Bridewell completing the top six.

Max Cook held sixth place on the leading AJN Steelstock Kawasaki with Billy McConnell back in the top ten, snatching the position from Ray in the closing stages. The Raceways Yamaha rider will be ready to fight back tomorrow, whilst Omologato pole-sitter Charlie Nesbitt was tenth for MasterMac Honda.

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 1 result:

  1. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda)
  2. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.358s
  3. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +20.385s
  4. Fraser Rogers (TAG Honda) +22.877s
  5. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +22.941s
  6. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +23.493s
  7. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +25.848s
  8. Billy McConnell (C&L Fairburn Properties /Look Forward Racing Honda) +33.464s
  9. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) +36.611s
  10. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +38.978s

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship standings:

  1. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) 411
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) 368
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) 302
  4. Rory Skinner (Cheshire Mouldings Ducati) 268
  5. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) 250
  6. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 240
  7. Danny Kent (McAMS Racing Yamaha) 217
  8. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati) 207.5
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 194
  10. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) 182

 

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

 

 

JOSH BROOKES – DAO RACING HONDA

“It felt like Leon [Haslam] was more confident in the damper conditions, so I was just trying to use him as a gauge and as the track started to dry out more I could feel my tyre was starting to head up more on the dry areas of the track.

“It looked like Leon wasn’t able to pull away as much when it got to those conditions and I started to catch him and then it started to sprinkle with rain and he gapped me again, so it was clear again that the cooler and damper conditions was favouring his bike. Then fortunately the rain went away finally and the last few laps the track was drying, and I felt like I had a package that was working better on those tyres.

“Our pace was so evenly matched, that I knew a regular pass wasn’t going to be enough to make Leon just accept second, so I thought I needed to make a pass in an unconventional place just to catch him off guard and gain a couple of tenths so he couldn’t immediately attack back in the next turn.

“In the last sector I just took a lot of risks to make sure he couldn’t attack back and obviously fighting hard to get this result. t’s not a conventional way to win a race but I don’t care, I didn’t know if I’d ever get another one of these again on my recent results, so it’s just nice to be back up here again.”

 

 

Jose Antonio Rueda: Meet The 2025 Moto3™ World Champion

Get to know the #99’s path up the Road to MotoGP™ as he’s crowned 2025 Moto3 World Champion in Indonesia. 

Jose Antonio Rueda (Red Bull KTM Ajo) is the 2025 Moto3 World Champion! The #99 has mixed domination with consistency to wrap up the crown with four races still to go this season, with his win in a dramatic Pertamina Grand Prix of Indonesia sealing the deal.

Off to a flying start

Rueda’s talent was clear all the way up the Road to MotoGP™. In 2018, he began to make his mark in the European Talent Cup, winning and taking podiums in his two seasons there before moving up to JuniorGP™ for 2020. After a season of adaptation, he took podiums in 2021 to set himself up as a Championship challenger the following year – and he took the JuniorGP™ crown as well as winning the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup in the same year, the first rider to do that.

 

Rookie impressions 

Rueda made the full-time leap to the Moto3™ World Championship in 2023 with longstanding frontrunners Red Bull KTM Ajo. A podium in Barcelona was a highlight and he finished the year in the top ten overall, but 2024 was a more difficult story. Appendicitis, crashes, and technical problems interrupted his season, but he nevertheless still took his first GP win at MotorLand – becoming the 400th GP winner across all classes.

 

 

Potential: fulfilled 

2025 saw Rueda shoot out the blocks as the rider to beat. He won in Thailand, took a podium in Argentina and then won again in the USA. In Qatar, technical issues hit, handing the lead to key rival to Ángel Piqueras (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI), but Rueda bounced back in style with three consecutive victories at Jerez, Le Mans, and Silverstone, making it five wins in the first seven races.

Aragon and Mugello saw the #99 finish off the podium for the first time in 2025, but a win in Assen, podium in Germany and win at Brno underlined his lead as his title bid marched on. Austria and Hungary were two fifth places, before a podium in Barcelona preceded a win in San Marino and a second place in Japan – setting up his first Championship point in Indonesia.

As the first rider to win the Rookies and JuniorGP in the same year, Rueda’s arrival promised much and the #99 has more than delivered in 2025. Another victory in Lombok, added to drama for his fellow contenders, sees the #99 secure the 2025 Moto3 World Championship.

Congratulations, Jose Antonio!

MotoAmerica: BrownTown Racing Plans Full 2026 Season

Chase Brown (186) in Action. Photo courtesy BrownTown Racing
Chase Brown (186) in Action. Photo courtesy BrownTown Racing

BrownTown Racing Closes Out Limited MotoAmerica Season With Consistent Top Finishes Looking Forward to a Full Season in 2026. 

BrownTown Racing’s Chase Brown finished out the SC-Project Twins Cup season with fast and consistent finishes. Chase ran a limited MotoAmerica season competing in three events running near the front during all portions of each event. A string of 5th place finishes and regularly running near the front of the pack during warm-up and qualifying sessions were the highlights of his limited season. With only one DNF due to a crash beyond his control Chase finished 5th, 8th, 5th, 6th, 5th, DNF.

This consistency and natural talent had the paddock taking notice of Chase’s speed and ability. With this year’s success BrownTown Racing is preparing for a full on assault in the Twins Cup for 2026.

Chase stated “With our results and ability to run near the front with a limited schedule we are planning a full Twins Cup MotoAmerica season in 2026.”We had podium pace at each event so we hope to carry that momentum into next year.” Browntown Racing is already hard at work with their Aprillia 660 preparing for off-season testing and looking to step onto the podium in 2026.

Chase Brown would like to thank his parents and crew as well as Powersport Supply, KWS Motorsports, K-Tech Suspension, Vortex, and Blud Lubricants for the support this season.

MotoGP: Marc Marquez Will Miss Australian and Malaysian GPs

Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Ducati Lenovo Team.
Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Ducati Lenovo Team.

No surgery is required for the #93 but his recovery plan rules out the next two races.

Marc Marquez is confirmed to miss the next two Grands Prix following further medical checks undertaken on his arrival home to Madrid. The newly crowed World Champion is confirmed to have suffered a fracture at the base of the coracoid process and a ligament injury to his right shoulder.

Clinical examination and radiological assessment have ruled out any connection with previous injuries and confirmed the absence of significant bone displacement.

The medical team at Ruber International Hospital in Madrid, led by Dr. Samuel Antuña and Dr. Ignacio Roger de Oña, has therefore opted for a conservative treatment plan, involving rest and immobilization of the affected shoulder until it is fully healed and the fracture is clinically consolidated. This rules out the #93’s participation in the upcoming Grands Prix in Australia and Malaysia.

Marquez will undergo weekly check-ups and his progress will determine the final recovery time and his return to competition.

Marc Marquez: “Fortunately, the injury isn’t severe, but it’s important to respect the recovery timeline. My goal is to be back before the end of the season, but without rushing things beyond the doctors’ recommendations. Both my personal and the team’s main goals have been achieved, so now the priority is to recover properly and return at 100%.”

BSB: Ray and Redding Victorious At Oulton Park

British Superbikes race start at Oulton Park. Photo courtesy BSB.
British Superbikes race start at Oulton Park. Photo courtesy BSB.

Bradley Ray and Scott Redding shared the Bennetts British Superbike Championship victories in two intense races at Oulton Park today as the title fight goes down to the wire at Brands Hatch in two weeks’ time (17/18/19 October).

30-points separate defending champion Kyle Ryde from fierce rival Ray ahead of the final three races in Kent, but with a maximum of 105 points available, Leon Haslam also remains in mathematical contention after a hat trick of podiums at Oulton Park.

Ray claimed a sensational victory in race two, starting 14th on the grid to pass both Christian Iddon and Haslam on the final lap to return to winning ways for Raceways Yamaha.

The race initially got underway once again in mixed conditions with yesterday’s winner Josh Brookes hitting the front of the pack from Ryde, Lee Jackson and Iddon. The championship leader though hit the front of the pack as Rogers moved into second by the end of the opening lap.

The race was red flagged on lap three when Peter Hickman’s LEW 8TEN Racing BMW Motorrad suffered a technical problem and then there was a subsequent clean-up for track contamination.

On the restart, Iddon hit the front of the pack from Brookes and Jackson, but Ray was on the attack and he was carving his way through the pack. By lap five, he was trailing championship rival Ryde and he made a decisive move into third.

Haslam and Iddon had made a break at the front of the pack, but once Ray had moved ahead of his Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha rival, he had the leading pair in his sights, setting a blistering pace to close the gap ahead of the final lap.

Ray first made a move on Iddon for second at Island, before having Haslam in his sights. The Raceways Yamaha rider dived down the inside at Knickerbrook to snatch the lead, holding it to the chequered flag as the top three were separated by just 0.481s.

Ryde held fourth, with Storm Stacey back in the top five for Bathams AJN Racing BMW and Tommy Bridewell claimed sixth place for Honda Racing UK.

In the final race of the weekend, Redding delivered an incredible win for the Hager PBM Ducati team after an intense ten-way battle for the victory ahead of Ray and Haslam.

Ray knew he needed to outscore Ryde before the title chase heads to Brands Hatch for the season finale, and he instantly hit the front of the pack at the start, ahead of his closest championship rival with Haslam into third place.

A lap later and Ryde had seized the advantage with a move at Old Hall, but Ray instantly fought back and regained the position into Island.

The leading trio initially had begun to break the pack but Redding was closing, and behind him a freight train of riders were also ready to join the battle including Iddon, Stacey, Bridewell, Max Cook, Glenn Irwin and Charlie Nesbitt all in pursuit.

Ray was holding the lead despite the mounting pressure from Ryde, Haslam and Redding as the order continued to change with the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing rider moving into second place at Lakeside on the seventh lap.

A lap later and Haslam grabbed the lead with a move at Old Hall and as he moved ahead, Ryde also saw his opportunity to move forward and a pass at Hizzys put him ahead of his main title rival, pushing Ray into third.

The lead changed again on lap nine, when Ryde made another committed pass into Hizzys. The Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha rider was defending hard, but Haslam was determined and a lap later the lead changed again as he fired ahead at Lakeside.

Ryde was fighting back, making a move back into the lead at Hizzys again, whilst Ray knew he needed to close down his fierce rival and he crucially moved into second place at Knickerbrook on the same lap.

On lap 11, Ray was back at the front of the pack and he was pushing to add to his earlier win in race two, but two laps later Haslam regained the advantage at Old Hall as Redding moved into a podium position on the Hager PBM Ducati.

Redding was into second place by lap 14 as he dived ahead of Ray at Lodge before seizing the lead a lap later at Hizzys.

Redding was pushing for the victory with Haslam holding second as Stacey then was third as he began battling with Ray for the final podium position. The Raceways Yamaha rider moved back ahead for third place with three laps to go and then it would come down to the last corner on the final lap to decide the podium positions.

Redding would ultimately emerge on top to claim his fifth race win of the season, but Haslam hit a false neutral into Lodge for the final time and ran wide, as Ray stormed through into second on the run to the line.

Haslam was trying to regain the ground as Stacey made a final bid for the last podium position on the run to the chequered flag, but the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing rider had the edge by just 0.026s.

Ryde claimed fifth place ahead of Glenn Irwin and Iddon, with Cook, Bridewell and Charlie Nesbitt completing the top ten.

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 2 result:

  1. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha)
  2. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.184s
  3. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +0.481s
  4. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.073s
  5. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +3.894s
  6. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +3.996s
  7. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +5.048s
  8. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) +5.451s
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +5.534s
  10. Billy McConnell (C&L Fairburn Properties /Look Forward Racing Honda) +5.918s 

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 3 result:

  1. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati)
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) +0.462s
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.700s
  4. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +0.726s
  5. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.251s
  6. Glenn Irwin (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +2.408s
  7. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +2.532s
  8. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +2.615s
  9. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +2.846s
  10. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +3.775s

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship standings:

  1. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) 445
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) 415
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) 344
  4. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 272
  5. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) 272
  6. Rory Skinner (Cheshire Mouldings Ducati) 268
  7. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati) 237.5
  8. Danny Kent (McAMS Racing Yamaha) 217
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 212
  10. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) 204
     

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

 

 

BRADLEY RAY – RACEWAYS YAMAHA

“After a difficult start to the weekend, it was great to be able to turn things around with today’s success. I feel really pleased to have brought home a win for the team, the last couple of rounds haven’t been easy, so it’s nice to pay them back for all of the hard work.

“I’m feeling happy with our performance this weekend; we took some points away from Kyle in the championship standings, and that’s what matters.

“We’ll head towards Brands Hatch with the aim of replicating today’s form in an attempt to put up a hard fight for the championship crown.”

 

 

 

 

SCOTT REDDING – HAGER PBM DUCATI

“This weekend has honestly felt like a baptism of fire! I won at Assen and then I came here and I could barely get the bike around, I think it might be to do with not having a set up in the dry around here like these other guys do with this year and previous years.

“I just took it race by race. In the last race, I thought if I got a top five I’d be happy, and a podium I’d be over the moon, and I just felt good on the bike. I had the bit between my teeth, I wasn’t thinking at all about making mistakes or crashing and I was determined but calm.

“I overrode a little bit, but I was just excited and hats off to these guys, I still don’t believe it, we set up the bike based on sighting laps, which isn’t ideal but somehow we made it work.

“I’d go far as to say that was my best win, even more so than when I was in BSB in 2019, because I literally went off of no dry set up on a track which is difficult for me and I don’t know why or how it happened!

“I was going round the slow down lap thinking how did that just happen? They’re the good days, especially after a difficult weekend.”

 

MotoGP: More From Sunday at Mandalika

Fermin Aldeguer (54) won the MotoGP Race at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Dorna.

More from a press release issued by BK8 Gresini Racing Team: 

Maiden win for Fermin, podium for Alex and best independent rider title. 

 

  • RaceDay – IndonesianGP

1st – FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 

3rd – ALEX MARQUEZ #73 

 

  • World Championship Standings

2nd – ALEX MARQUEZ #73 (362 points)
          🏆 BEST INDEPENDENT RIDER 2025 🏆

8th – FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 (181 points)

 

Fermin Aldeguer on the left and Alex Marquez on the right, on the podium at Mandalika. Photo courtesy BK8 Gresini Team.
Fermin Aldeguer on the left and Alex Marquez on the right, on the podium at Mandalika. Photo courtesy BK8 Gresini Team.

 

FERMIN ALDEGUER #54 : “I didn’t look back, I really wanted to make amends from yesterday. I honestly didn’t know I had this rhythm, I wasn’t sure what tyre to choose, but in the end, thanks to the team, we found the squaring of the circle and had a great race. We narrowly missed out yesterday, but today we got it and I’d like to thank everyone who believed in me. I am the second youngest winner in history? I had hoped to be the first.”

 

ALEX MARQUEZ #73 : “I had an issue at the start, but despite that my start wasn’t a bad one after all. It was a challenging race, but it was important to finish  on a high; I was hoping to make it to second place but had nothing left. Congratulations to Fermín for an incredible weekend. We achieved the goal of clinching the Best Independent Rider title, and we now aim at the runner up spot in the World Championship.”

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Honda HRC Castrol: 

Marini recovers to fifth with podium pace in fiery Indonesian GP.

A star of the most exciting Grand Prix of the year, Luca Marini left nothing on track as he battled across 27-laps for a debut Honda podium – recovering to fifth place in a fantastic recovery after being sent wide.

Sunday’s race started in almost identical fashion to Saturday as Luca Marini and the Honda RC213V shot forward from sixth to lead the MotoGP field into Turn 1. As drama unfolded behind, Marini settled into his race strategy – confident in his pace for the podium as he tussled with Pedro Acosta early on. Launching several moves, Marini was unable to make a move stick and bided his time for a cleaner opportunity. Unfortunately, an optimistic move from Raul Fernandez would drop Marini from the top three to barely inside the top ten.

Determination fueled Marini as lap after lap he displayed the pace for the podium, battling in the heart of a ferocious ten-rider group. Fighting right until the end to pass Brad Binder for fourth place, Marini earned fifth right at the line. The result puts him just 20 points shy of fellow Honda HRC rider Johann Zarco in the fight for a top ten championship finish. Content with his undeniable potential despite the lack of final reward, Marini’s podium desires are bound to be answered in MotoGP’s final four races.

Joan Mir made a similarly strong start from 12th on the grid, immediately thrusting himself into the fight for the top ten. Progressing well and with Saturday’s recover still fresh in his mind, Mir forged ahead and began an intense battle with Alex Marquez. Up to eighth, Mir would suffer a fall on lap and retire soon after. Disappointed but unharmed, the #36 will be ready to fight once again next time out in Phillip Island – one of his favourite circuits.

Now a week of rest and recovery await for the Honda HRC Castrol team before another double-header, the Australian and Malaysian GPs the final stop in the MotoGP World Championship’s tour.

 

Luca Marini (10) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.
Luca Marini (10) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.

 

Luca Marini – fifth : “The race started very well, going more or less to plan with another really good start – it’s one of the strong points of the Honda RC213V and myself. I had a really good fight with Acosta at the start, he was protecting his line well and I was managing everything. My pace was there for P2 but then it looks like Fernandez tried to force a move even though both his pace and my pace was better than everyone else. It’s a pity for myself and for his team because we were both out of contention after his move where I lost five positions. After that I was really determined to recover as much as possible, and I pushed Binder right until the end. For sure we had the pace for more, but this is racing. Although the final reward still wasn’t there, we showed our potential – the bike is improving and also myself and it will arrive.”

 

Joan Mir (36) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.
Joan Mir (36) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Honda HRC Castol.

 

Joan Mir – DNF: “As you can imagine, I am angry because we lost a really good opportunity today to fight for a podium. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose. We need to understand what happened with the medium rear tyre because it was not what we were expecting, and I wasn’t able to ride in the way I needed to. The pace today was quite slow and that’s why I really think we could have had a nice race; we had been doing well throughout the weekend. It’s important to understand what happened and avoid it happening again. Now when we fall, we miss out on more than in the past which is in some ways a positive, because it means we have improved. A bit of rest and move onto the next set of races.”

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Monster Energy Yamaha: 

Quartararo Takes 7th in Indonesian GP Race, Rins Shines with Mandalika Pace and Top-10 Performance. 

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s Fabio Quartararo made a strategic tyre decision, riding with a hard front and soft rear. The tyre combination allowed the Frenchman to press on to take seventh place in the hot 27-lap Grand Prix of Indonesia Race. Álex Rins delighted the Yamaha fans with a brilliant ride. He put in several overtakes and was riding in second place when he suffered a sudden drop of his soft-soft tyres five laps before the chequered flag. The Spaniard still salvaged a P10 result.

 

 

Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP’s Fabio Quartararo showed masterful tyre management around the Mandalika International Circuit today during the 27-lap Grand Prix of Indonesia Race. Nursing his tyres in extreme heat, he secured a strong seventh place. Álex Rins had his most enjoyable ride of the season so far, riding inside the top 3 for nine laps. While sudden tyre drop took away his chance to keep defending second place, he did well to hold on to tenth position across the finish line.

Quartararo had a good start, holding eighth place in the opening stages before moving up to sixth when Marc Márquez and Marco Bezzecchi had a collision. Avoiding the incident, the number 20 pushed onward and closed the gap to his teammate. He kept shadowing Rins for 7 laps but was then overtaken by Álex Márquez on lap 10. Unshaken, the Frenchman still chased the group fighting for second place. On lap 15, he overtook Luca Marini, but he lost a position to Brad Binder five laps later. The top-11 riders all started to bunch up behind Rins in the final stages, causing frequent changes in the order. Quartararo kept his head down and held steady in 7th place, finishing 9.894s from first.

Rins launched well and put up a fight early on to hold on to fourth place but was overtaken by Raul Fernandez on lap 3. The Yamaha rider’s first half of the race was focused on closing the gap to the front again. He gradually reeled them in, and it didn’t take long for him to pounce. At the end of lap 14, Marini and Raul Fernandez touched and Rins overtook both to take third place. He then made relatively light work of snatching second place from Pedro Acosta on lap 19. The number 42 skilfully kept a long train of riders behind him for four laps. However, with five laps left, Álex Márquez snuck past. With eight more riders bunching up for the fight for second place and his soft-soft tyre combination dropping, Rins was relegated to tenth in a matter of two laps. But he soldiered on and crossed the finish line in tenth place, 13.223s from the winner.

After today’s results, Quartararo stays in 9th place in the overall standings with 158 points, and Rins holds 19th position with 51 points. Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP are 6th in the team championship with 209 points, and Yamaha remain in 5th position in the constructor championship with 190 points.

MotoGP will be back in action in two weeks’ time for the Grand Prix of Australia, held at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit from 17-19 October.

 

MASSIMO MEREGALLI – Team Director, Monster Energy Yamaha

“Overall, it was both a tough and a positive weekend. Starting with Álex, we are delighted to see him fighting at the front again where a rider of his talent belongs. It was a shame that his soft tyres couldn’t hold on for the last five laps, but to have him ride in this manner again is already a huge step, especially in these demanding conditions. It’s a confidence boost, and these positive signs have the whole team highly motivated to keep working. Fabio had been struggling on the medium tyres all weekend, and he and his team made the right tyre decision today: he managed to make the hard front and soft rear work well enough throughout the race to earn him a seventh place at the end of it. We leave the Mandalika Circuit with a double top-10 result, and that’s a nice boost as we prepare for the next two fly-away GPs in Australia and Malaysia.”

 

 

Fabio Quartararo (20) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.
Fabio Quartararo (20) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.

 

Fabio Quartararo: “It was super hot! I had to choose a different tyre: the hard front and soft rear, which almost nobody used, but those were the only tyres I was feeling quite okay with. It was a difficult race, but I think I rode pretty well and was quite clever with how I managed the rear tyre. It was a strange weekend overall. I didn’t expect to be so close to the podium today – I finished about 2s from third. My feeling this weekend wasn’t good, but Álex was super fast, and it was nice to share data.”

 

Alex Rins (42) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Monster Energy Yamaha.

 

Alex Rins: “I hope everyone enjoyed this race. It was quite tough for me, but I am really happy. Not just about the Race, but because of the weekend overall. I was riding quite well: defending my position and overtaking. We did a great weekend. We knew that we would suffer at the end with the soft tyre. I tried to control the rear tyre, and I was there until the last five laps when the tyre dropped. I never stopped believing in myself, I knew I was able to do it. Riding like this in this race was so satisfying, and I enjoyed this weekend a lot. But, for sure, this was just one weekend. We go to Australia next, let’s see what happens there. I will try to do my best.”

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Prima Pramac Yamaha: 

Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP Fights Hard in Indonesia: Oliveira 11th, Miller 14th at Mandalika GP. 

In front of 67,905 spectators on race day (140,324 over the full weekend), the Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP team wrapped up the Indonesian GP, 18th round of the World Championship, with Miguel Oliveira finishing 11th, while Jack Miller, after a late crash, crossed the line in 14th place. The next appointment comes in two weeks at Phillip Island for the Australian GP.

 

 

It was a Sunday of fight and passion at the Indonesian GP, round 18 of the MotoGP World Championship, with a long train of riders battling all the way to the closing laps, ten bikes fighting for the second and third steps of the podium. Spectacular for the packed grandstands at Mandalika — and for those watching on TV — but in the end the race delivered less than the potential shown by Prima Pramac Yamaha during practice and qualifying.

Ultimately, the best finisher was Miguel Oliveira, who crossed the line in 11th, despite being forced to slow his pace in the final laps due to physical issues caused by Indonesia‘s humid heat. Jack Miller finished 14th, after a crash with four laps to go while defending ninth place from Franco Morbidelli. The Australian rider managed to restart and still salvage points.

After 18 races, Miller sits 18th in the standings with 61 points, Oliveira is 21st with 32, and the Prima Pramac Yamaha team holds 11th in the team standings with 95 points. Leaving Indonesia behind, the next challenge will be the Australian GP at Phillip Island, round 19 of the MotoGP World Championship.

 

GINO BORSOI – Team Director, Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP 

“It was a very interesting race up to a certain point for all the Yamahas, showing that we‘re improving. Too bad for Miller‘s crash while running inside the top ten, while Oliveira suffered physically and couldn‘t compete until the very end of what could have been a great weekend for the team. But beyond the issue, I‘m very satisfied with his overall weekend. It was a fun race, and up to a point we weren‘t far from the podium zone. Now we hope to continue like this in Australia, Jack‘s home race, which I hope can be a fresh start for him in terms of results.”

 

Miguel Oliveira (88) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.
Miguel Oliveira (88) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.

 

Miguel Oliveira: “My start wasn‘t too bad, but then the bike started to feel very nervous. I chose the soft rear — it wasn‘t really a gamble, as it was the only tire we felt comfortable with and the one I thought I could manage. But in the final laps it just became too difficult. Physically it was brutal because of the heat. With 8–9 laps to go I was overheating, and I couldn‘t bring my breathing and body temperature down, even when I tried to slow the pace a little. We wrapped up another positive weekend with points, but we were aiming for a bit more, and that‘s the feeling I‘m taking away from Mandalika.”

 

Jack Miller (43) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Prima Pramac Yamaha.

 

Jack Miller: “We were a bit more competitive today and I felt good, sitting just behind the group, two or three tenths back, because every time I caught up to them the front tire turned into chewing gum. With three laps to go, Morbidelli came to pass me between turns 11 and 12. We didn‘t make contact only because, when I closed the throttle, I heard a bike coming on the inside — I moved slightly off line, and the next time I put the bike down on the left-hand side, I crashed. Unfortunate, but we showed good potential today, fighting in the group. It was nice to be there battling with these guys throughout the race. I‘m disappointed about the crash and sorry for the team.”

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Castrol Honda LCR: 

CASTROL Honda LCR rider Johann Zarco crossed the line in 12th place in Sunday’s race in Mandalika.

  • Under extremely hot conditions and facing a comeback race, Frenchman Zarco, as in the Sprint, made a good start and began recovering positions.
  • While trying to break into the top 10, the rider experienced a small technical issue, which prevented him from pushing.
  • Staying focused and avoiding mistakes, Zarco finished 12th, scoring points and showing cleverness and determination even in the toughest moments.
  • The team is now analyzing the data to identify what happened precisely.
 
Johann Zarco (5) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy CASTROL Honda LCR
Johann Zarco (5) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy CASTROL Honda LCR
 
 
Johann Zarco 12th : “I had a good start and was trying to set my rhythm, but then I started to feel something different, we had a small technical issue. I tried to stay focused, avoid mistakes, and finish the race in the best way possible. We did it, and we scored points, which is good for my confidence. Even with the difficulties, we made progress today, and that’s important as we look ahead to the next race in Australia.”
 

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Idemitsu Honda LCR: 

IDEMITSU Honda LCR rider Somkiat Chantra crossed the line in 13th place in Sunday’s race at Mandalika.

  • Under extremely hot conditions and facing the challenge of a comeback race, the Thai rider made a strong start and pushed to stay with the main group.
  • A lack of feeling on the bike, however, limited his ability to maintain a stronger pace throughout the race.
  • Chantra stayed focused, avoided mistakes, and finished in 13th place, scoring points once again. 
 
Somkiat Chantra (35) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Idemitsu Honda LCR
 
Somkiat Chantra 13th : “I’m happy because we secured points, and that’s always good. The race was hard for me because I didn’t have a good feeling on the bike. I wanted to stay with the group, but it was very difficult, so I focused on avoiding mistakes, scoring points, and finishing the race to gather important data ahead of Australia”.

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Red Bull KTM Tech3: 

Lombok island was far from dreamy for the Red Bull KTM Tech3 team during this 4th edition of the Grand Prix of Indonesia. Maverick Viñales chose to withdraw from the remainder of this round on Saturday, to fully focus on shoulder recovery, while Enea Bastianini is going home with two DNFs. Enea faced another letdown on Sunday at Mandalika track, after a technical issue forced the Italian to retire from the main race after 13 laps, a big shame for the Italian who was eager to make it up for yesterday’s sprint crash.

The sprint crash was a tough one for Enea Bastianini on Saturday, and he was willing to make the most of Sunday to try ending Indonesia on a good note before a small break at home. As he lined up in 17th, lights were out at 15:00 LT (UTC+8), Enea moved up to 16th in the first corners behind Miguel Oliveira, and then he managed to luckily go through the chaotic crash between Marc Marquez and Marco Bezzecchi, to exit lap 1 in the top 15. Bastianini passed Johann Zarco in the next lap, and Joan Mir’s crash meant P13 for Enea after two laps, with Fabio Di Giannantonio ahead. Somehow, Enea appeared to struggle to settle into a decent early race pace, and the gap to Di Gia’ had grown, 2 seconds, after 5 laps into the MotoGP™ race. Zarco eventually caught back Enea, and on lap 9, the Frenchman made the move on our Italian, with Enea now in 14th. Unfortunately, a technical issue forced him to retire on the 13th lap. Not the end we wanted for our Grand Prix of Indonesia. Time to work, find solutions to our problems, and come back stronger in the next round, as we will next head to Phillip Island for the Grand Prix of Australia, on October 17-18-19!

 

Enea Bastianini (23) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Red Bull KTM Tech3.
Enea Bastianini (23) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Red Bull KTM Tech3.

 

Enea Bastianini: “It was a tough weekend for me, from start to end sadly. After my crash in the sprint, the mechanics have worked super hard to give me the best bike possible for today, so I want to say thank you. We had a technical issue during the race, but we were not having a fantastic race anyway, the first laps were tough, pace was not good, feeling was bad, so it is less hard to swallow, but retiring from the races is obviously not what we are looking for. We have to keep working to be able to have something more in the next rounds. We have some positives though, because we were more competitive in the fast corners today, in both warm up and race, so it is important for us, and we have understood a few things to work on for the future.”

 
Nicolas Goyon, Team Manager:It seems that things have turned pretty bad for the Red Bull KTM Tech3 team in Indonesia, from start to end. Enea Bastianini never really had a positive feeling, and he was not able to go fast. We know that a bad qualifying makes the weekend tricky, but somehow he was fighting for 13th at some stage in the race, but he had to retire due to a technical issue on the bike, which we are currently investigating. Disappointing situation, but there is clearly room for improvements, as both Pedro Acosta and Brad Binder did a super good race. We need to improve, we need to understand what is happening, and we must bring solutions for Phillip Island. We have ten days to rest and arrive at Phillip Island in better shape. We also extend our best wishes to Maverick Viñales, we hope that he will recover as quickly as possible, and come back stronger.”
 

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Lenovo Ducati Team: 

The Grand Prix of Indonesia draws to a close for the Ducati Lenovo Team: Márquez involved in contact with another rider, Bagnaia retires after a crash. 

 

  • Maiden MotoGP win for Fermín Aldeguer with the Ducati machine of the Gresini Racing Team
  • Alex Márquez, third at the flag, clinches the Best Independent Rider title with the Desmosedici GP of the Gresini Racing Team

The Ducati Lenovo Team completed a challenging Grand Prix of Indonesia at the Mandalika Circuit. Marc Márquez was involved in a crash triggered by another rider, while Francesco Bagnaia crashed out of the encounter during lap eight.

Márquez had enjoyed a good start from row three as he entered turn one in sixth place. At turn seven, he was struck by Bezzecchi and crashed heavily. Marc will return to Spain to undergo further medical checks. Bagnaia, from sixteenth place on the grid, lost the front at the last corner during lap eight.

As the eighteenth Grand Prix of the season draws to a close, Marc Márquez, already crowned MotoGP World Champion, now holds a tally of 545 points. Francesco Bagnaia is third, 88 points behind the rider in second place, Alex Márquez. The Triple Crown is completed by the Teams’ Title secured by the Ducati Lenovo Team and the Constructors’ World Championship clinched by Ducati.

The Ducati Lenovo Team will be back in action on October 17th at the Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit in Australia for the fourth-last event of the season.

 
 
Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.
Marc Marquez (93) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.

Marc Márquez (#93 Ducati Lenovo Team) – DNF

“I’m obviously sad because it’s again the right side – in this case, it appears to be the collarbone. Once back in Madrid, I’ll undergo further medical examinations to verify the real extent of the injury. This is racing, and these things can happen. Marco (Bezzecchi) came to apologise. I’ll try to return as soon as possible, while fully complying with the recovery process.”
 
 
 
Francesco Bagnaia (63) at Mandalika. Photo courtesy Lenovo Ducati Team.

 

Francesco Bagnaia (#63 Ducati Lenovo Team) – DNF

“It was a very disappointing weekend, especially considering how the previous one went. This has never been an easy track for me, although I’ve always achieved good results here in the past. I’d like to apologise to the team for the crash: I was pushing to try to bridge the gap with the riders ahead, despite the lack of feeling. Unfortunately, we didn’t manage to change the momentum of this weekend, but I’m sure that by analysing the data, the engineers will find a solution for the next Grand Prix so I can battle for the top three in the Championship.”
 

 

 

—– 

More from a press release issued by Aprilia Racing: 

Sunday to forget for Aprilia Racing at Mandalika. 

The weekend at the Pertamina Mandalika International Circuit concluded on a sour note for Aprilia Racing.
 
Starting from pole position, Marco Bezzecchi saw his hopes of completing a perfect weekend evaporate on the very first lap. After a less-than-ideal start that dropped him a few places, he made contact with Marc Márquez while attempting to recover, causing both riders to crash. Following the fall, Bezzecchi was taken to the medical centre for checks and was later airlifted to Mataram hospital; after the medical examinations, no fractures have been found for Marco. 
 
Raúl Fernández’s performance for the Trackhouse MotoGP Team was another highlight, as he followed up Saturday’s sprint podium by again showing his confidence on the RS-GP25, finishing sixth – just two seconds off the podium.

 

Massimo Rivola – CEO Aprilia Racing :First of all, our apologies go to Márquez. We’re very sorry about what happened. It has been another painfully disappointing Sunday for us, with Marco having been the fastest rider on track for two days; so naturally our expectation – especially starting from pole – was to secure the best possible result. But that’s racing. We have much to learn this year. Despite the setbacks, our spirit remains unchanged – we’ll keep pushing until the final race to reach the goals we’ve set.”

 

ASBK: Jones Won Race 1 and 2 at One Raceway

The SW-Motech Superbike overall top three: (L to R): Dunker, Jones and West. Photo courtesy ASBK
The SW-Motech Superbike overall top three: (L to R): Dunker, Jones and West. Photo courtesy ASBK

A brilliant performance by Mike Jones at One Raceway has incredibly kept alive the 2025 mi-bike Motorcycle Insurance Australian Superbike Championship presented by Motul (ASBK) until the final round in November.

The Queenslander was at his silky-smooth best on October 5 as he won both SW-Motech Superbike races – his 26th and 27th in the ASBK ranks – from pole position on his Yamaha Racing Team machine around the tight and twisty Goulburn circuit.

Meanwhile, Jones’ heroics also coincided with the lowest scoring round of the season for championship leader Josh Waters (McMartin Racing Ducati).

Waters posted a 5-5 scorecard, which allowed Jones to slash Waters’ lead to 50pts (338 to 288), down from 69pts at the start of the weekend.

A maximum of 51pts are available at The Bend from November 7-9, so it’s clearly still Waters’ championship to lose.

However, Jones is remaining upbeat.

“It’s been a really good feeling today, so special thanks to the Yamaha Racing Team for putting in such a big effort it to give me a great motorbike,” said Jones. “It was really special to get two wins for them.

“I’ll just keep the championship alive and roll onto the next one and see how we go.”

At One Raceway, Jones defeated the mightily impressive 17-year-old Cameron Dunker (MotoGO Yamaha Racing Team) in both races after soaking up relentless pressure, while Troy Herfoss (Yamaha Racing Team) and Anthony West (Addicted to Track Yamaha) shared the third places.

West remains third in the championship on 269pts, while Dunker (215pts) sling-shotted into fourth past Glenn Allerton (Superbike Advocates Racing Ducati, 213pts) and Broc Pearson (DesmoSport Ducati, 212pts).

 

race 1

 

race 2

 

 

  • SW-MOTECH SUPERBIKE RACE ONE

Dunker’s form at One Raceway in 2024 was top-shelf, and this year he took it to the next level as he led race one until lap eight before Jones – fully aware passing opportunities were at a premium – slipped past the teen after he ran slightly wide at turn two.

Jones then put down the hammer for a few laps to weaken Dunker’s resolve, with the final winning margin just under 2.5 seconds.

Herfoss, whose return to his former home track began in measured fashion on Friday, flicked into combat mode when it really mattered, fending off the slow-starting West to finish third. Herfoss also set a new lap record of 58.776 to show he’s lost none of the spark that took him to three Superbike titles, the last in 2023.

Waters was fifth, circulating near the front throughout but just unable to find a way past his main rivals.

The top 10 was completed by Cru Halliday (Stop and Seal Ducati), Pearson, Jack Favelle (Addicted to Track Yamaha), Jonathan Nahlous (Omega Racing Team Honda) and Allerton.

Nahlous was riding a replacement machine after his first bike was badly damaged earlier in the weekend.

 

Jones (#46) leads Dunker (#3), Herfoss (#17), West (#13) and Waters (#1). Photo courtesy ASBK.
Jones (#46) leads Dunker (#3), Herfoss (#17), West (#13) and Waters (#1). Photo courtesy ASBK.

 

 

  • SW-MOTECH SUPERBIKE RACE TWO

Riders were greeted with slightly tougher conditions in the afternoon, including a higher track temperature and a stiff breeze – but no-one told Dunker, who broke Herfoss’ hours-old lap record to set a new benchmark of 58.626.

That was on lap five as he tried to keep Jones in his orbit as both riders cleared away from the main pack in the shortened 10-lapper – the first attempt red-flagged after Favelle went down hard at turn four.

With the leaders firmly ensconced at the front, West slotted into third ahead of Herfoss, Waters and Halliday, and that’s how they remained for the balance of the race.

Nahlous was seventh from Pearson, Allerton and John Lytras (Caboolture Yamaha).

MotoAmerica Racer Bodie Paige 7th Again In Asia Talent Cup

Bodie Paige (26) in Asia Talent Cup action in Indonesia. Asia Talent Cup photo.

(Editorial Note: MotoAmerica Talent Cup race winner Bodie Paige of Australia finished 7th again in Asia Talent Cup Race 2 held on Sunday of the MotoGP event weekend in Indonesia.)

Daquigan doubles up as Asia Talent Cup title race heads for Sepang showdown

After the dramas of Race 1, Race 2 delivered a second win for the Philippines whilst the title battle goes to Malaysia

Sunday, 05 October 2025

Another fine ride from Alfonsi Daquigan saw him consolidate his P3 overall in the standings with a second victory of the weekend, defeating Seiryu Ikegami who took a ninth P2 of the season and polesitter Haruki Matsuyama who made it a double rostrum in Indonesia. In the title race, Ryota Ogiwara came home in sixth after three Long Lap penalties, meaning the gap comes down to 30 with a maximum of 50 up for grabs next time out.

A whole host of riders battled at the front, including Daquigan, Ikegami, Ogiwara in the early stages, Shingo Iidaka and Noprutpong Bunprawes. Ogiwara served his double Long Lap and after dropping outside the points, climbed back into them before a third Long Lap was issued for short-cutting at Turn 9. At the front, a group of five all traded places but on the last lap, it was recently-turned 16-year-old Daquigan who doubled up on his birthday weekend. Ikegami stays in title contention whilst Matsuyama took P3 ahead of Bunprawes and Iidaka.

The Championship fight goes to Sepang on the 24th – 26th of October, where Ogiwara has match-point number two!

IATC_2025_INA_MotoGP_SUN_Race_2_Clasification

 

 

 

 

 

American Fernandez Crowned 2025 Aprilia Trofeo (Pro) Champion

Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown today at the iconic Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.
Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown today at the iconic Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.

Jayden Fernandez Crowned 2025 Italian Champion – Aprilia Trofeo (Pro) and Overall Winner Podium in every round; titles sealed at Mugello after a near-perfect season Mugello, Italy.

Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown today at the iconic Autodromo Internazionale del Mugello, capping a season defined by relentless pace, consistency, and race-craft. Across seven rounds, Fernandez finished on the podium every single time, converting pressure into points and momentum into championships.

Arriving at the finale with a 12-point cushion over closest rival Alessio Mattei, Fernandez refused to simply manage the gap. In Race 1, he delivered P2, extending his advantage to 21 points after a fierce five-rider duel. In Race 2, he deliberately avoided unnecessary risks and managed the race in the smartest, safest way, bringing home a composed P4—exactly what he needed to seal both titles and put an exclamation mark on a standout campaign.

Qualifying & Race Craft Fernandez built speed methodically through free practice, then locked P2 in Qualifying for a front-row start. In Race 1, a perfect launch put him in clean air before a measured slipstream chess match among five riders. He managed tire life, track position, and traffic with veteran composure to take second at the flag.

 

Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.
Jayden Fernandez clinched the 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro title and the Overall Trofeo crown. Photo courtesy Fernandez Racing.

 

Quotes Jayden Fernandez (Rider, 2025 Italian Aprilia Trofeo Pro & Overall Champion): “This title means everything. We set a clear target at Round 1: be fast every weekend and never leave points on the table. Mugello is special—today we finished the job the right way. A huge thank-you to the entire MMR Team for the outstanding work all season, and especially to my Crew Chief, Edy, who always gave me a very competitive bike. Thank you to my crew, my family, and everyone who believed in me.”

 

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BSB: Brookes Back On Top With Win at Oulton Park

Brookes back on top to win dramatic Bennetts BSB opener at Oulton Park. Photo courtesy BSB
Brookes back on top to win dramatic Bennetts BSB opener at Oulton Park. Photo courtesy BSB

Josh Brookes was back on top in the Bennetts British Superbike Championship, winning the opening race at Oulton Park following a decisive last lap move on Leon Haslam to become the ninth different race winner of the season, as Showdown drama hit the penultimate round.

The race started but was red flagged on the opening lap when the rain shower hit, the riders returned to pitlane and then after a slight delay the race was restarted and declared dry after the conditions changed again. Both Brookes and Haslam opted for the intermediate tyre choice and it proved to be the winning combination, as the DAO Racing Honda and Moto Rapido Ducati Racing teams’ gamble paid off.

At the start, the riders with the wet combination tyre choice led the pack, with Storm Stacey leading Fraser Rogers off the front row before Bradley Ray moved into second. Rogers then grabbed the lead at Lodge, but Kyle Ryde was moving forward too, moving ahead of closest rival Ray at Old Hall two laps later.

Haslam was carving his way through the order for the Moto Rapido Ducati Racing team; and by lap six, he had grabbed the lead at Hizzys to push Rogers and Stacey down the order with Ryde in fourth place ahead of Brookes.

By lap eight, Brookes had moved into second and was closing down Haslam who had bridged a slight advantage over the chasing pack. The DAO Racing Honda rider was stalking Haslam ahead of him, and then was looking to make his move over the final three laps.

The Australian executed his move at Brittens on the final lap and despite Haslam looking to fight back, Brookes had the edge to take the chequered flag to take victory for the first time since 2023.

Ryde had delivered a decisive race, to claim the final podium position and extend his lead to 43-points in the standings, with Rogers and Stacey securing strong top five positions and Tommy Bridewell completing the top six.

Max Cook held sixth place on the leading AJN Steelstock Kawasaki with Billy McConnell back in the top ten, snatching the position from Ray in the closing stages. The Raceways Yamaha rider will be ready to fight back tomorrow, whilst Omologato pole-sitter Charlie Nesbitt was tenth for MasterMac Honda.

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship, Oulton Park, Race 1 result:

  1. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda)
  2. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) +0.358s
  3. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) +20.385s
  4. Fraser Rogers (TAG Honda) +22.877s
  5. Storm Stacey (Bathams AJN Racing BMW) +22.941s
  6. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) +23.493s
  7. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) +25.848s
  8. Billy McConnell (C&L Fairburn Properties /Look Forward Racing Honda) +33.464s
  9. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) +36.611s
  10. Charlie Nesbitt (MasterMac Honda) +38.978s

 

 

Bennetts British Superbike Championship standings:

  1. Kyle Ryde (Nitrous Competitions Racing Yamaha) 411
  2. Bradley Ray (Raceways Yamaha) 368
  3. Leon Haslam (Moto Rapido Ducati Racing) 302
  4. Rory Skinner (Cheshire Mouldings Ducati) 268
  5. Tommy Bridewell (Honda Racing UK) 250
  6. Christian Iddon (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 240
  7. Danny Kent (McAMS Racing Yamaha) 217
  8. Scott Redding (Hager PBM Ducati) 207.5
  9. Max Cook (AJN Steelstock Kawasaki) 194
  10. Josh Brookes (DAO Racing Honda) 182

 

For more information on the Bennetts British Superbike Championship visit www.britishsuperbike.com

 

 

JOSH BROOKES – DAO RACING HONDA

“It felt like Leon [Haslam] was more confident in the damper conditions, so I was just trying to use him as a gauge and as the track started to dry out more I could feel my tyre was starting to head up more on the dry areas of the track.

“It looked like Leon wasn’t able to pull away as much when it got to those conditions and I started to catch him and then it started to sprinkle with rain and he gapped me again, so it was clear again that the cooler and damper conditions was favouring his bike. Then fortunately the rain went away finally and the last few laps the track was drying, and I felt like I had a package that was working better on those tyres.

“Our pace was so evenly matched, that I knew a regular pass wasn’t going to be enough to make Leon just accept second, so I thought I needed to make a pass in an unconventional place just to catch him off guard and gain a couple of tenths so he couldn’t immediately attack back in the next turn.

“In the last sector I just took a lot of risks to make sure he couldn’t attack back and obviously fighting hard to get this result. t’s not a conventional way to win a race but I don’t care, I didn’t know if I’d ever get another one of these again on my recent results, so it’s just nice to be back up here again.”

 

 

Jose Antonio Rueda: Meet The 2025 Moto3™ World Champion

Jose Antonio Rueda: the new 2025 Moto3 World Champion. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Jose Antonio Rueda: the new 2025 Moto3 World Champion. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Get to know the #99’s path up the Road to MotoGP™ as he’s crowned 2025 Moto3 World Champion in Indonesia. 

Jose Antonio Rueda (Red Bull KTM Ajo) is the 2025 Moto3 World Champion! The #99 has mixed domination with consistency to wrap up the crown with four races still to go this season, with his win in a dramatic Pertamina Grand Prix of Indonesia sealing the deal.

Off to a flying start

Rueda’s talent was clear all the way up the Road to MotoGP™. In 2018, he began to make his mark in the European Talent Cup, winning and taking podiums in his two seasons there before moving up to JuniorGP™ for 2020. After a season of adaptation, he took podiums in 2021 to set himself up as a Championship challenger the following year – and he took the JuniorGP™ crown as well as winning the Red Bull MotoGP Rookies Cup in the same year, the first rider to do that.

 

Rookie impressions 

Rueda made the full-time leap to the Moto3™ World Championship in 2023 with longstanding frontrunners Red Bull KTM Ajo. A podium in Barcelona was a highlight and he finished the year in the top ten overall, but 2024 was a more difficult story. Appendicitis, crashes, and technical problems interrupted his season, but he nevertheless still took his first GP win at MotorLand – becoming the 400th GP winner across all classes.

 

 

Potential: fulfilled 

2025 saw Rueda shoot out the blocks as the rider to beat. He won in Thailand, took a podium in Argentina and then won again in the USA. In Qatar, technical issues hit, handing the lead to key rival to Ángel Piqueras (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI), but Rueda bounced back in style with three consecutive victories at Jerez, Le Mans, and Silverstone, making it five wins in the first seven races.

Aragon and Mugello saw the #99 finish off the podium for the first time in 2025, but a win in Assen, podium in Germany and win at Brno underlined his lead as his title bid marched on. Austria and Hungary were two fifth places, before a podium in Barcelona preceded a win in San Marino and a second place in Japan – setting up his first Championship point in Indonesia.

As the first rider to win the Rookies and JuniorGP in the same year, Rueda’s arrival promised much and the #99 has more than delivered in 2025. Another victory in Lombok, added to drama for his fellow contenders, sees the #99 secure the 2025 Moto3 World Championship.

Congratulations, Jose Antonio!

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