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MotoGP: Diogo Moreira To Join Honda LCR in 2026

Brazilian rider Diogo Moreira signs a multi-year deal with Honda Racing Corporation, set to join Honda LCR MotoGP Team for the 2026 season.

Hailing from São Paulo, Moreira made his World Championship debut in Moto3 in 2022, where he achieved one win, three podiums, and two pole positions across 39 races. Upon his move to Moto2, he was named Rookie of the Year in 2024, and since then, he has consistently been a front-runner. In 2025, he continues to battle for the World Championship, having secured impressive victories in Assen, Austria, and Indonesia, alongside five other podium finishes.

Honda LCR, in strong collaboration with HRC, remains deeply committed to several core objectives, including the development of young talent. Moreira’s signing further strengthens both Honda and LCR’s focus on shaping the future of MotoGP, complementing the team’s ongoing dedication to excellence at all levels of the sport.

The entire Honda LCR Team is excited to welcome Diogo to the family and looks forward to the next chapter of his promising career.

 

Lucio Cecchinello | Honda LCR Team Principal: 
 

“We are very pleased to announce the arrival of Diogo Moreira to our team. Without a doubt, Diogo possesses all the qualities to become one of the greats in MotoGP. He has undeniable talent, a deep passion for racing, and has proven his speed across all types of motorcycles and disciplines. On behalf of the entire LCR Team, I extend a warm welcome to Diogo and thank Honda HRC for entrusting us with this exciting project for 2026.”

Diogo Moreira in parc fermé after taking pole position at Balaton Park. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Diogo Moreira in parc fermé after taking pole position at Balaton Park. Photo courtesy Dorna.
 
 
 
Diogo Moreira:
 

“Joining the MotoGP World Championship with Honda LCR is a dream come true. I want to thank Honda and the team for believing in me and giving me this incredible opportunity. I’m excited to learn, to grow, and to fight for strong results at the top level of motorcycle racing.”

 

 

More from a press release issued by Dorna: 

Get to know LCR Honda’s latest recruit, who is looking to make his mark on the sport. 

That’s it then! After months of speculation, the grid for the 2026 MotoGP season is finally complete. The last piece of the puzzle finally fell into place ahead of the Australian GP, when it was announced that Diogo Moreira had signed a multi-year MotoGP deal with LCR Honda.

The young Brazilian was one of the most sought-after prospects in the paddock, with multiple factories reportedly chasing his signature. Ultimately, Honda won the battle, securing a rider who’s been tipped as one of the sport’s brightest young stars.

Moreira will be one of two rookies on the 2026 grid — alongside Toprak Razgatlioglu, who comes from WorldSBK — and notably, he’ll become the first Brazilian MotoGP rider since Alex Barros, an icon of the sport across the 1990s and the early 2000s. But who exactly is Diogo Moreira?

 

From Motocross in São Paulo to the European racing scene

Hailing from Guarulhos, São Paulo, Diogo Moreira began his racing journey in Brazilian motocross before moving to Spain in 2017 to pursue a career on asphalt. Determined to make his mark, he worked his way up through the European junior ranks, scoring impressive results in the junior categories.

It was in the Red Bull Rookies Cup that Moreira truly caught attention, finishing 6th overall in 2021 with four podiums to his name. His speed and consistency earned him a coveted seat in the Moto3 World Championship with MT Helmets – MSI in 2022.

 

Moto3: A breakout star emerges

The Brazilian immediately caught the eye with a string of top 10 finishes on his way to the Rookie of the Year crown. On the opening day of his sophomore season, he delivered his first podium in Portugal, which was quickly followed by another in Argentina.

 

Diogo Moreira during 2023 Indonesian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Diogo Moreira during 2023 Indonesian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

His first-ever World Championship win came in Round 15 in Indonesia as he finished P8 in the Championship, but Moto2’s Italtrans Racing had seen enough as they offered him an intermediate class ride in 2024.

 

Moto2: Proving his mettle

His debut year in the intermediate class started inconsistently, but his pace steadily improved as he adapted to the more demanding machinery. By the end of the season, he took his first Moto2 podium at the Barcelona finale — and with it, another Rookie of the Year crown.

 

Diogo Moreira during 2025 Austrian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

That was just a taste of what was to come in 2025, with the Brazilian evolving into one of the class’s standout stars. With a string of top-five finishes, back-to-back podiums at Silverstone and Aragon, and a maiden win at Assen, the Brazilian firmly announced himself as a title contender. That was the first of three wins, the other two coming in Austria and Indonesia, which leaves him within nine points of title rival Manu Gonzalez at the time of writing, heading into the Australian GP.

 

Chasing History: Brazil’s next great hope

With a move to the premier class now signed and sealed, he’ll be looking to deliver a first World Championship crown. Brazil have never had a Grand Prix World Champion, and Moreira could become its first if he can outscore Gonzalez in the remaining four rounds.

His MotoGP debut will also coincide with the long-awaited return of the Brazilian Grand Prix to the calendar in March 2026. If all goes to plan, Moreira will race in front of his home fans in just his second MotoGP outing, making it a truly emotional milestone for both him and Brazil’s passionate motorsport community.

 

Number 10 and the dream realised

Throughout his career, Moreira has proudly raced with the number 10, but he’ll have to find a new one for MotoGP as that number is already taken by factory Honda rider Luca Marini. Still, it’s a small price to pay for achieving his lifelong dream: a place in the premier class of world motorcycle racing.

He’s expected to make his MotoGP testing debut at Valencia later this year, but before that, his focus remains firmly on the 2025 Moto2 title fight. So tune in for the Phillip Island Grand Prix, and see for yourself why Honda has placed its faith in Diogo Moreira — Brazil’s next MotoGP superstar.

NHRA: Gadson Wins Texas FallNationals

Richard Gadson raced his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki Gen 3 Hayabusa to his fourth win of the season and extended his lead in the Pro Stock Motorcycle Countdown to the Championship playoffs at the Texas NHRA FallNationals at Texas Motorplex in Ennis, TX, on Sunday.

Race Highlights:

  • Richard Gadson qualified first and increased his lead in the Countdown by winning his fourth race of the season
  • Gaige Herrera qualified second and held onto second place in the Countdown by advancing to the semi-final round

 

Richard Gadson Wins Texas NHRA FallNationals and Extends Championship Lead. Photo courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.
Richard Gadson Wins Texas NHRA FallNationals and Extends Championship Lead. Photo credit Matt Polito / courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.

 

Richard Gadson qualified number one for the second time this year with a 6.747-second/201.59 mph pass in the second of Friday’s qualifying sessions, which also earned him a $5,000 bonus in the ‘JEGS Friday Nite Live’ Battle for the Saddle, part of the 10-day Stampede of Speed festival that marks the Dallas race as a highlight for NHRA fans.

In the first round of eliminations on Sunday, Gadson defeated Lance Bonham (7.306 seconds/177.15 mph) with a 6.750-second/202.00 mph pass, then ran 6.817 seconds at 199.00 mph in round two against Clayton Howey (6.947 seconds/197.26 mph) to advance to the semi-final round. Gadson laid down a 6.813-second/198.62 mph run in the semis against Matt Smith (6.873 seconds/198.03 mph) to advance to his ninth career final round appearance and sixth of the season.

In the finals, Gadson ran 6.796 seconds at 200.37 mph to defeat Vance & Hines rental rider Brayden Davis (6.817 seconds/200.34 mph), claim his fourth win of the season and career and extend his lead in the Countdown to the Championship playoffs. 

By winning his second race since the six-race Countdown began, Gadson extended his lead to 72 points over Herrera in second and 105 points over third-place Matt Smith. Those gaps virtually guarantee Gadson will head into the season finale at Pomona in mid-November as points leader no matter what happens at the penultimate race of the season in Las Vegas in two weeks’ time. 

“We’ve been trying some new things with the clutch setup over the past few races. I really trust my crew chief Eddie Krawiec to find the right setup, and from the first run down the race track this weekend, I knew I had the fastest motorcycle that I’ve had all year. I could feel it. I could almost hear the tire biting into the track. This is the best motorcycle I’ve had and it’s coming at the perfect time of the season,” Gadson said. 

“Going into the last two races of the Countdown with the performance package I have right now really boosts my confidence. I know I have a great horse; I’ve just got to ride it. It’s go-time and I want to win this championship bad, but it’s not done yet by a long shot. Gaige and Matt are right behind me, and I’m not counting any chickens before they’re hatched,” he continued. “I’ve got to keep my hand on the throttle, so I’m just going to try to have fun these last two races, enjoy the ride and let the chips fall where they may in Vegas and Pomona.” 

 

Defending champion Gaige Herrera raced his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki Gen 3 Hayabusa to the semi-final round, maintaining second in the Countdown standings. Photo credit Matt Polito / courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.

 

Defending world champion Gaige Herrera qualified second a tick behind his teammate with a 6.752-second/200.71 mph run in the Friday evening qualifying session.

Herrera opened Sunday eliminations with a 6.749-second/202.52 mph victory in round one over Charles Poskey (foul), then ran a solo 6.780-second/200.95 mph run in round two after his opponent Steve Johnson, who made an unplanned trip into the sand traps in round one, was a no-show. 

In the semi-final round, Herrera ran 6.837 seconds at 199.72 mph against NHRA rookie of the year contender Davis on the Vance & Hines team’s third Hayabusa, but a rare red-light foul scuttled Herrera’s bid against Davis’s quicker 6.831-second/199.72 mph run on the starting line.

With rival Matt Smith also falling in the semi-final round, Herrera held station in second place in the Countdown. He now has a 33-point gap to Smith but lost ground to Gadson, who sits 72 points ahead with two races remaining.

“We qualified well and had a fast motorcycle all weekend, but unfortunately, I beat myself today. Every time I’ve run against Brayden I’ve had the slower bike, so I knew I had to push on the tree, but unfortunately, I cut it too close and went double-oh-five red. All three of our Hayabusas are fast, which is awesome and makes us riders push that much harder when we run against each other,” Herrera said. “I’m still second in points but it’s going to be hard to catch Richard at this point. I’ll need a miracle to happen on my side to change things, but all-in-all, I’ll be glad if it’s either me or him at the end of the season.”

RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki crew chief Andrew Hines said the dominant performance in Dallas of the team’s three Hayabusas, which swept the top three qualifying spots and all advanced to the semi-final round, is the culmination of a series of tuning trials undertaken during race weekends beginning at the two west coast NHRA rounds in July.

“Racing against each other in the late rounds and having three out of the four bikes in the semi-finals is never a bad thing. We’ve been playing around with different tuning variables for each bike from the Western Swing until this weekend. Ed and I started comparing notes, looking at data and asking ourselves what we’ve been doing differently across our three motorcycles. It came down to comparing those notes, figuring out where our shortcomings were and deciding the right direction to go for each one. And it worked on all three motorcycles this weekend,” he said. “We’re trying to give our all as tuners to each motorcycle and may the best rider win. It comes down to desire and execution. Our guys are riding top notch. It’s just a matter of putting the whole run together. A difference of a couple hundredths in elapsed time comes down to the 60-foot time, did they go straight, did they hit their shift points.”

“We feel good about the next two races, especially Vegas. These hot weather races have been challenging but we’ve been able to manage the power and the traction to get our Hayabusas to go,” he said. “Vegas typically has a sticky starting line, which is what we need to get them moving.”

With two races remaining in the Countdown to the Championship, Gadson and Herrera sit first and second in the standings, with 2,507 and 2,435 points, respectively. 

The RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki team returns to action Oct. 30-Nov. 3 at the Dodge NHRA Nevada Nationals powered by Direct Connection at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, NV.

 

For the latest Suzuki team news, race reports, and information visit SuzukiCycles.com/Racing/Drag-Racing

 

About Vance & Hines Motorsports: 

Vance & Hines Motorsports is a powerhouse in the world of motorcycle racing, boasting a rich legacy of success. With a focus on innovation, performance, and a commitment to pushing boundaries, the team continues to redefine excellence in the NHRA and MotoAmerica. For more information, visit www.vanceandhinesmotorsports.com

About Suzuki: 

Suzuki Motor USA, LLC (SMO) distributes Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Accessories, and ECSTAR Oils & Chemicals via an extensive dealer network throughout 49 states. Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC), based in Hamamatsu, Japan, is a diversified worldwide manufacturer of Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automobiles, Outboard Motors, and related products. Founded in 1909 and incorporated in 1920, SMC has business relations with 201 countries/regions. For more information, visit www.suzuki.com.

Polaris Spins Off Indian Motorcycle, Kennedy Named CEO

MINNEAPOLIS (October 13, 2025)— Polaris Inc. (NYSE: PII) (“Polaris” or “the Company”) todayannounced its decision to separate Indian Motorcycle (“the Business”) from its portfolio and into a standalone business. The Company has entered into a definitive agreement to sell a majority stake in Indian Motorcycle to Carolwood LP, an independent private equity firm founded in 2014 and headquartered in Los Angeles, California. Indian Motorcycle contributed approximately $478 million, or 7.0%, of Polaris’ revenues for the trailing twelve-month period ended June 30, 2025.

Upon close, the transaction is expected to be accretive to Polaris’ annualized adjusted EBITDA by approximately $50 million and to adjusted earnings per share (“EPS”) by approximately $1.00. The close of the transaction is expected to occur in the first quarter of 2026, subject to the satisfaction or waiver of customary closing conditions. Polaris is confident in Indian Motorcycle’s future success under Carolwood ownership and will maintain a small equity position in the Business after the transaction closes. Additional terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“Polaris and Indian Motorcycle both stand to benefit from this deal, which will enable each business to move faster, deliver industry-leading innovation, and lean further into our respective market strengths,” said Polaris Chief Executive Officer Mike Speetzen. “For Polaris, the sale will further strengthen our focus on the areas of our portfolio that offer the strongest growth potential and allow us to accelerate investments in key initiatives and create wins with customers and dealers. It also will unlock greater long-term value for Polaris and our shareholders, with immediate value creation that we expect will
become increasingly meaningful over time.”

Speetzen continued, “Under Polaris’ ownership and investment, Indian Motorcycle has been reestablished as a celebrated brand and major player in the global motorcycle market. With its current product portfolio, global dealer network, category expertise and manufacturing resources, the Business is well positioned to succeed as a standalone company with a dedicated focus on its industry. We were highly intentional and selective in our search and planning efforts for Indian Motorcycle’s next chapter of growth. In Carolwood, Indian Motorcycle has a partner that believes in building on the Business’ current momentum and supporting its next stage of success. We are confident and committed to making this a seamless transition for Indian Motorcycle dealers, customers and employees.”

“Indian Motorcycle is an iconic brand built on American heritage, craftsmanship, and most importantly, a community of riders,” said Andrew Shanfeld, Principal at Carolwood. “We’re honored to help usher in its next chapter as an independent company and to support its continued growth as a symbol of performance and pride. At Carolwood, we target iconic brands that we can passionately impact. Indian Motorcycle allows us to do just that.”

Future Indian Motorcycle Leadership

Carolwood has selected Mike Kennedy to serve as CEO of the new independent Indian Motorcycle organization once the deal closes. A more than 30-year motorcycle industry veteran, Kennedy has a proven track record as a leader in and around the motorcycle industry. He previously served as CEO of RumbleOn, the nation’s largest powersports dealership group; CEO and President of Vance & Hines, a leading manufacturer of high-performance aftermarket motorcycle exhaust systems and accessories; and spent 26 years at Harley-Davidson in various leadership roles. Adam Rubin, Principal at Carolwood, said, “Indian Motorcycle has defined American motorcycling for over a century, and Carolwood’s role is to ensure that legacy thrives for the next hundred years. Mike Kennedy brings over 30 years of experience leading iconic motorcycle and performance brands and will play a critical role in stewarding Indian Motorcycle’s growth. At Carolwood, we’re deeply committed to preserving what makes Indian Motorcycle special, supporting its growth, and empowering the team to write its next great chapter.”

Continuity for Indian Motorcycle

As a part of the deal, approximately 900 employees will transition as a part of the new Indian Motorcycle Company. Indian Motorcycle will retain the majority of its team, including engineers, designers and staff, along with manufacturing resources. Manufacturing facilities in Spirit Lake, Iowa, and Monticello, Minn., as well as the industrial design and technology center in Burgdorf, Switzerland, will transition to the new standalone motorcycle company as a part of the deal. Indian Motorcycle will continue to provide sales, service, and support for dealers and customers throughout this transition. After the sale is finalized, Indian Motorcycle will operate independently of Polaris and continue selling motorcycles and parts, garments and accessories (PG&A) and providing service through its global Indian Motorcycle dealer network.

Polaris Leadership Update

Until the transaction closes, Polaris President of On Road and International Mike Dougherty will continue to lead the On Road and International businesses, including Indian Motorcycle, at Polaris. Over the next several months, he will help shepherd Indian Motorcycle in its transition to becoming a standalone company. Dougherty, with a distinguished nearly 28-year career with Polaris, has announced his intent to retire upon the closing of the transaction.

“During his tenure with Polaris, Mike’s passionate leadership is responsible for countless contributions. As a result of his tenacity and guidance, Mike shaped our international business into what it is today, scaling it over the last 25 years and establishing a direct presence in more than fifteen countries. He has expanded our business outside of North America, growing revenue from under $100 million in 2000 to more than $1 billion today, as well as strengthened our On Road businesses within their respective markets, including Indian Motorcycle achieving the No. 1 market share position in the United States for mid-size cruisers last year,” said Speetzen. “More than that, Mike is known for the teams he builds, the talent he cultivates and the culture he fosters, and I want to thank Mike for his dedication to Polaris all these years. We wish him the very best in his future retirement.”

Commenting on preliminary Third Quarter results, Speetzen said: “As we prepare to report our third quarter results, we’re encouraged by improving retail trends with ORV ex-Youth up low double digits and continued strong share gains in ORV. Based on preliminary data, we expect third quarter sales to be at the high end of our previously issued guidance range of $1.6 billion to $1.8 billion. We anticipate third quarter adjusted EPS to be in the range of $0.31 to $0.41, which is meaningfully higher than our original expectations, driven by higher-than-expected shipments, strong cost management and ongoing progress
within our operational efficiency initiatives.”

MotoGP: Márquez Undergoes Successful Surgery On Right Shoulder

After a checkup for his right shoulder blade injury, Marc Márquez has undergone a successful operation at the Ruber Internacional Hospital in Madrid, Spain. The same medical team who had examined him seven days earlier found that the coracoid fracture and ligament damage were not showing sufficient signs of stabilization after a week of being immobilized. Therefore, given the risk of residual instability, it was decided to go ahead with surgical stabilization and repair the acromioclavicular ligaments.

Surgery was one of the options considered by doctors from the outset in the event that the planned conservative treatment failed. In any case, Marc Márquez, who is already at home, will continue his recovery process, and his progress will determine the timing of his return to racing competition.

R3 BluCru World Cup: American Clark Finished Fifth Overall

Chris Clark has finished fifth overall in the 2025 R3 BLU CRU World Cup. 
 

Clark, the first American rider to win a race in the series was one of the standouts of the year – claiming a sensational win in the opening round at Portimão in Portugal followed by a two more podiums during his front running campaign. 
 

The final round of the championship took place in Estoril, Portugal, yesterday and whilst he may have crashed out in the closing stages he was once again fighting for the podium. 
 

In addition to his on track success, Clark was invited to the Yamaha Mastercamp in Spain where he got to ride some of the biggest names in the sport – impressing as he turned his hand to off road disciplines such as flat track for the first time and even jet skiing.  

 

Overall, it was a positive debut season in the Yamaha R3 BLU CRU World Cup – a season that Chris can be proud of. 

 

An announcement regarding the #5’s future will be made in the coming weeks. 

 
Chris Clark: “Race one didn’t go to plan. I was given two long lap penalties after an incident in qualifying which left me with a lot to do. I did my best to manage it, but I ended up losing the group and it was too hard to catch them. My full focus was on trying to win the final race of the year and after starting eighteenth I fought hard and put myself in the position to win. I was in the front group, and I had a real chance for the podium. Unfortunately, I made contact with another rider and we both went down. Nobody can say that I didn’t go down without a fight and that is important – I gave it my all. I want to thank my Smrz Racing BGR guys for all their hard work this year, all my sponsors, my family, my manager, and everyone involved with the Yamaha BLU CRU series. I can’t wait to announce my 2026 plans!”

Oxley Bom MotoGP Podcast: Q&A About All Things Racing!

It started with us asking our listeners for some questions. Then you responded. Now we’re here, with the longest episode in the show’s history. Funny how those things go, eh?

Yes, it’s Q&A-time! Our wonderful Patrons brought the questions, and now Mat and Peter will have to find the answers. We’ve got tires, brakes, bikes, riders, conspiracies, mountain bikes and even clowns and badgers! Trust me: you are not ready.

https://oxleybom.buzzsprout.com/2181509/episodes/17999070-questions-and-answers-clowns-and-badgers

Opinion: Can A 690cc Flat-Tracker Replace 250cc Moto3 Singles?

FIRST PERSON/OPINION & SPECULATION:

COULD A FLAT-TRACKER SOLVE DORNA’s MOTO3 PROBLEM?

By Michael Esdaile

Could the machine that not too long ago revitalized AMA-sanctioned American Flat Track (AFT) and also provided the preferred platform for the Lightweight class at the Isle of Man Tourist Trophy do the same for Moto3 Grand Prix racing?

We’re talking about the 650cc Kawasaki Parallel Twin that has been in production since 2006 and has been winning races for 18 years. And still is. The words “tried and true” spring to mind.

Another contender that has followed the same route is Yamaha’s 690cc Parallel Twin, with more recent success than the Kawasaki. The 690 Yamaha won the AFT Production Twins Championship in 2019 and 2021 with Corey Texter and in 2025 clinched the AFT SuperTwins Championship during the season finale at Eldon Missouri’s Lake Ozark Speedway, ridden by Dallas Daniels.

 

Dallas Daniels (32) at the American Flat Track season finale at the Lake Ozark Short Track. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor USA.
Dallas Daniels (32) at the American Flat Track season finale at the Lake Ozark Short Track. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor USA.

 

Either one of these Japanese Twins could provide the platform for the planned major revision in the Moto3 class of Grand Prix racing where there is concern that many of the current crop of riders are simply too big for the little 250cc single-cylinder racebikes built by Honda and KTM.

When the Moto3 class was launched, the minimum age for riders was 15. In recent years that has been slowly raised and is now 18 years. There are now several riders who struggle to fit onto the small, lithe 250cc Singles and this is a concern for Dorna executives.
There is another concern — the step up from Moto3 to the Moto2 class is now difficult for some riders. There is a big difference between a 185-pound (84 kg) 250cc 55-horsepower Moto3 Single and a 330-pound (150 kg) 765cc Moto2 Triple. When the Moto2 class was initiated as a replacement for the 250cc GP class, the Honda CBR600 engine was used in bikes weighing 308 lbs. (140 kg).

Riders stepping up from Moto3 today have to deal with heavier machines than before, but more importantly, they need to adjust to the vastly different torque output of the Triumph 765cc engines used in Moto2.

This has been a topic of conversation within Dorna Sports S.L., the Spanish company that has held the commercial and audiovisual rights for MotoGP since 1991.

What has been discussed is a completely new set of technical rules. In the near future, likely 2028, the 250cc Singles will be replaced.

But with what? Grand Prix officials are not saying openly but clearly there has been back-channel dialogue, with production-based 500cc twin-cylinder machines mentioned in 2024, while early this year there has been speculation about twin-cylinder engines up to 780cc.

 

Price Cap

The key to the new regulations is price. In 2024, a $88,000 U.S. (75,000 Euro) price cap for the new Moto3 machines was under consideration. Now a price cap of $59,000 U.S. (50,000 Euro) is being discussed, with bikes weighing as little as 120 kg and producing about 90 horsepower. The price cap for the current Moto3 machines is $205,000 U.S. (175,000 Euro).

 

Cost Considerations

Escalating costs for racing machines is not confined to the GP classes. It has been a concern in U.S. racing, too.

Concerned at the escalating costs of maintaining the legendary Harley-Davidson XR750s in American Flat Track racing, in 2009 the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) asked former long-time Harley engineer and tuner Bill Werner to find a cheap but competitive (and reliable) XR alternative.

Werner opted for the Kawasaki EX650 Parallel Twin. He had some experience with that model, having prepared a road-racing version for a 300-mile MotoST endurance race at Daytona in March 2007. With 49-year-old Jay Springsteen and 45-year-old Jim Filice riding the Kawasaki entered by the Pair of Nines team and managed by Gary Nixon, the 650 Twin won its class in the MotoST endurance race — by a lap.

So for the flat track racing “proof of concept” Werner bought an EX650 off eBay for $1,500, removed all the fittings needed for road use and with this stripped-down machine, Bryan Smith scored Kawasaki’s first AMA Grand National win at the August 28, 2010 Indianapolis Mile, run the same weekend as the MotoGP at Indianapolis.

Werner says that in addition to the $1,500 for eBay purchase “my total investment to build the bike was $6,000, for suspension, wheels, motor modifications, etc., as opposed to $25,000 plus for the XR750 Harley.”

Werner had backing from Monster Energy and Kawasaki Motors Corp. USA but adds, “It was my way to give back to the sport that did so much for me. I loved the challenge!”

Of the 19 finishers at the 2010 Indy Mile, only two other riders were not racing Harley-Davidson XR750s: 12th-placed Larry Pegram (Ducati) and 16th-place Shawn Baer (Triumph).

Proving that the win at Indy was not a fluke, Smith again beat Harley-Davidson’s Chris Carr the following weekend at the Springfield Mile. This time there was one other Kawasaki 650 Twin in the results, ridden by Johnny Lewis, who finished 10th.

The seed had been planted. A year later there were six Kawasaki Twins among the 54 entries at the September Springfield Mile, with four making it to the 26-lap main event. Of those, Lewis was the best finisher, less than three-10ths of a second behind the winning XR750 Harley-Davidson, with Australian Luke Gough finishing 15th on his EX650.

Another year saw eight of the Kawasaki Twins at the Springfield Mile in September, with Bryan Smith winning on an EX650, this time mounted in a dirt-track frame built by Howerton Motorsports that had been campaigned by the Australian Gough in 2011.

By the 2015 September Springfield Mile, an astounding 27 Kawasaki EX650s made up the GNC2 class’s 35-bike entry, with another 23 in the GNC1 class. That’s 50 Kawasaki 650 Twins…

Once again, Bryan Smith won the GCN1 class, on a Kawasaki, this time prepared by Howerton Motorsports in Indianapolis.

Werner’s effort in the 2010 season had paid off for the AMA and brought a lot more young racers into the sport they had previously been shut out of by the prohibitively-expensive-to-run XR750 Harley-Davidson.

 

Lightweight TT

But it was not only in AMA flat track racing that the Kawasaki 650 Twin was proving popular. On the other side of the Atlantic, the British Auto Cycle Union decided to re-establish the Lightweight class at the 2012 Isle of Man TT. Rather than using 250cc GP machines, the race was now for series production 650cc Twins. Right away the Kawasaki 650 proved the popular choice, with all but 11 of the 43 starters in the inaugural race on EX650-based machines, Ryan Farquhar winning at a race average speed of 114.15 mph.
This class allowed almost unlimited engine modifications but mandated use of the standard road bike chassis. Private British tuners soon boosted the power output of the 650 Kawasaki Twin and in 2013 James Hillier on the winning Kawasaki averaged 117.69 mph.
Again, Kawasaki 650s dominated the class, 32 of them making up the majority of the 43-bike field. By 2014 all but five of the 49 Lightweight TT entries were 650 Kawasakis.

One of them was an Italian Paton, a 650 Kawasaki engine in a chrome moly frame raced by Ollie Linsdell to sixth.

 

TT 2013 - Lightweight TT - Michael Rutter (Kawasaki 650) at Braddan Bridge. H crashed on lap2. Photo courtesy Barry Clay.
TT 2013 – Lightweight TT – Michael Rutter (Kawasaki 650 powered) at Braddan Bridge. He crashed on lap2. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

The 2015 edition of the race saw the winning average speed upped to 118.936 mph by Ivan Lintin and this time Michael Rutter brought a Paton home in third place, at 117.657 mph.

For the 2016 Lightweight TT, a staggering 53 riders faced the starter, all but 12 of them using 650 Kawasaki power.

Michael Rutter finally gave the Kawasaki-powered Paton a win, when he topped the 39-rider field in 2017, by now almost all on Kawasakis. Despite the custom Italian chassis, his race average of 118.645 mph was a whisker under Lintin’s 2015 record.

 

TT 2019 – Lightweight Race Winner Michael Dunlop on a Paton powered by a Kawasaki 650 engine. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

Rutter made amends in 2018, establishing a new 120.601 mph average on a Paton. There were four other Patons in the race but almost all the rest of the 45 were Kawasakis.
A year later Michael Dunlop won, on a Paton, upping the winning average speed to 121.646 mph.

 

Supertwins

Then came the great catastrophe – the 2020 and 2021 Covid lock-downs—with no racing at all at the TT. When racing returned in 2022, the regulations had been changed, and the class was now called “Supertwins” with a 700cc capacity limit allowing the new Yamaha YZF-R7 and the Aprilia RS660 in the field.

 

TT 2022 Supertwin Race Winner Peter Hickman leads Michael Rutter Both on Kawasaki – powered Patons. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

No matter, Kawasaki power still prevailed, with Peter Hickman doing the business on a Paton with a 120.006-mph average. The Italian brand won again in 2023, with Michael Dunlop winning from fellow Paton rider Mike Browne in the first of two races.

In the second, Peter Hickman gave the YZF-R7 Yamaha its début Supertwins TT win, but his 119.318 mph average was slower than Dunlop’s 2019 benchmark.

 

TT 2024 Supertwin Race 1 Peter Hickman Swan Racing Yamaha 2nd. Photo credit Barry Clay

 

It was left to Dunlop to up his winning speed with a 122.451 mph effort in the second of the two races in 2024. He won both on a 650 Kawasaki-powered Paton. He repeated the effort (two wins on a Paton) in 2025.

 

Moto3 Potential

When privateers overwhelming chose one particular make and model of production bike for racing, it is a good bet that is because it is easily available and relatively cheap to race.
On that basis alone, could the Kawaski 650 Twin also make good sense for the mooted twin-cylinder class in Moto3?

Paton is already making a chassis and providing a race-ready 108-horsepower engine capable of propelling the machine to a 162 mph (260 km/h) top speed. It sells this ready-to-race package for 48,500 Euro ($56,800 U.S.), just under the mooted new 50,000 Euro price cap for the revamped Moto3 class.

There is also another possibly. In 2019 Kawasaki took a 49.5% stake in the Italian chassis maker Bimota and in 2025 the official Kawasaki entry in the Superbike World Championship runs a ZX10RR engine in a Bimota chassis, the team known as the Bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team.

Whether Kawasaki has the marketing acumen to pitch a proposal to Dorna for a Bimota 650 Kawasaki Moto3 machine, time will tell. As we can see, the engine is race proven across almost two decades of racing. It comes standard with a slipper clutch and a side-loading (cassette) transmission.

Then there is the 690 Yamaha, which was released in the USA in 2015. Immediately Keith McCarthy, then Yamaha Motor Corp. USA’s Motorsports Racing Division Manager (now retired) saw its potential for flat-track racing, as did Yamaha’s motorcycle product line manager Derek Brooks.

The result was the DT-07 Flat Track Concept bike displayed at the October 2015 AIMExpo in Orlando, Florida.

Unlike the bottom-up Werner-Kawasaki 650 development, this was a top-down approach, with Yamaha having a concept flat-track chassis built for its engine. Over time, it has collaborated with G&G Racing and Estenson Racing to race in the AFT Production Twins class (which it has won twice) and has now won the AFT SuperTwins Championship.
And as noted above, the 690 Yamaha has also provided a platform for Supertwins road-racing at the Isle of Man.

Given Yamaha’s long-term commitment to Grand Prix racing, a Yamaha 690 engine in a Suter or Kalex chassis is probably not beyond the bounds of reality.

Either way, the motorcycle that will become the Moto3 platform in 2028 will almost certainly have its roots in AFT racing!

WSBK: Fong Makes His Debut in Portugal

Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha’s Bobby Fong makes steady improvements in WorldSBK debut at Circuito Estoril. 

Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha’s Bobby Fong made forward strides throughout the weekend as he made his FIM Superbike World Championship debut in Estoril, Portugal. Led by Attack Performance, with support from fellow official Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. team Strack Racing, the American wild card effort gathered valuable data and experience with some additional seat time during the penultimate round of the 2025 WorldSBK season.

In his first race weekend on the world stage, Fong focused on familiarizing himself with the Estoril circuit and finding his flow, as the team continued to work on the development of their Superbike platform for the upcoming 2026 MotoAmerica Superbike season. After qualifying 21st, the Californian made steady improvements, finishing 17th in Saturday’s Race 1, and 18th in Sunday’s Superpole Race and Race 2. 

The Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha wild card effort looks to continue its work next weekend at the season finale in Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, on October 17-19. 

 

Richard Stanboli  at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.
Richard Stanboli at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.

 

Richard Stanboli – Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha Team Manager:

“We really enjoyed our time in Portugal. The people are great, and the WSBK paddock is happy to have us join them. Yamaha Racing Europe has been very welcoming, and their hospitality is extraordinary. They have gone out of their way to make us feel like part of the Yamaha family. We’ve been working closely with the WorldSBK team on chassis and electronics, comparing notes and data in preparation for our 2026 MotoAmerica effort. We made steady improvements over the course of the weekend, but to improve more, we need some bigger steps. We look forward to Jerez and continuing our European working vacation.”

 

Bobby Fong at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.
Bobby Fong at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.

 

Bobby Fong – Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha #50: 

“We knew it was going to be a big task coming here. From the first session to the final race today, we’ve made progress each session and improved our pace. We’re learning a lot. Richard (Stanboli) keeps reminding me that we’re learning for the future, but as a racer, you always want to be a little closer to the front. We’ll keep learning and trying new things with the bike to see what works and what doesn’t, and keep chipping away at it. There are a few key areas where I’m losing time in general, so that’s what we are trying to work on. We’ll do our homework during the week and hopefully improve at the next track. We’re not happy with the position, but we’re happy to be out here enjoying this experience and to keep moving forward.”

 

2025 Estoril WorldSBK Results

 

About Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A.

Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. (YMUS), is a recognized leader in the outdoor recreation industry. The company’s ever-expanding product offerings include Motorcycles and Scooters, ATV and Side-by-Side vehicles, Snowmobiles, Personal Watercraft, Boats, Outboard Motors, Outdoor Power Equipment, Power Assist Bicycles, Golf Cars [sold, serviced, and distributed by Yamaha Golf-Car Company], Power Assist Wheelchair Systems, Surface Mount Technology and Robotic Machines, Unmanned Helicopters, Accessories, Apparel, Yamalube products, and much more. YMUS products are sold through a nationwide network of distributors and dealers in the United States.

YMUS has a corporate office in California, three corporate offices in Georgia, as well as facilities in Wisconsin, Alabama, and Florida. YMUS subsidiaries Yamaha Motor Manufacturing Corporation of America (YMMC), based in Georgia, and Yamaha Jet Boat Manufacturing U.S.A. (YJBM) based in Tennessee, each assemble and manufacture selected Yamaha brand products. YMUS owns Skeeter Boats [Texas] with its division G3 Boats [Missouri]. Additional U.S.-based subsidiaries include Yamaha Marine Systems Company, Inc. (YMSC) with subsidiary Siren Marine [Rhode Island] and divisions Bennett Marine [Florida], Yamaha Marine Rotational Molders [Wisconsin] and Yamaha Precision Propeller Inc. [Indiana].

Yamaha Motor Finance Corporation, USA, dba Yamaha Financial Services, is an affiliate of Yamaha Motor Corporation, USA offering financing solutions to support Yamaha Dealers and loyal Yamaha Customers nationwide.

Stefano Manzi Clinches 2025 WorldSSP Title

Supersport crown caps Manzi’s journey before WorldSBK move in 2026. 

Stefano Manzi (Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing) has been crowned the 2025 FIM Supersport World Champion, securing the title with 2 races to go after a commanding campaign aboard the new Yamaha R9.

For Manzi, the title represents a career milestone after two runner-up finishes in 2023 and 2024. The Italian has been a dominant force in 2025, scoring 10 victories and 18 podiums on his way to Championship glory.

 

Stefano Manzi. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Stefano Manzi. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Stefano Manzi (Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing): 

“It feels amazing to be World Champion. It’s difficult to find the words to describe it. After finishing second two years in a row, to finally win is incredible. It’s a lifetime of work, when you start riding young, you dream about this, and to achieve it is amazing.

The key moment for me was the difficult period when I crashed at Most and Misano. That was a wake-up call, reminding me that you are not unbeatable and must stay focused to win the title. From that moment, I worked hard, avoided repeating mistakes, and finally I can say I achieved it, it’s an incredible feeling.”

 

 

Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Kervin Bos – Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team Manager:

“This has been a three-year project, and to win the championship now in the third year is unbelievable. It was even more special the way Stefano did it, because we all know how pressure affects riders, but he left all the pressure in the hotel and won the race to become Champion.

From the start of the season, we could see he had stepped up his game massively. His growth year after year has been amazing. Not just as a rider – in his first year he was already at a very high level – but he lacked consistency and workflow. There was also work to do on the mental side, and this year he made huge strides mentally, personally, and in performance. He’s now complete and ready for Superbike.”

 

  • RACING JOURNEY

Manzi began his career in the Italian Championship and JuniorGP before moving to the Moto3 World Championship in 2015 and then to Moto2 in 2017, where his highlights included a pole position and a fourth-place finish. He switched to WorldSSP in 2022 with Dynavolt Triumph, taking his first win at Portimao, before joining Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing and immediately establishing himself as a title contender. In 2025, he finally clinched the WorldSSP Championship title, solidifying his position as a top rider in the category.

Official Rider Stats

 

  • A NEW CHALLENGE AWAITS

With the 2025 crown, Manzi adds his name to the list of Supersport Champions and confirms his place among the most competitive riders in the paddock. Next season, he will step up to WorldSBK with the GYTR GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team.

 

  • RIDER PROFIL

 

Place of birth: Rimini, Italy

Age: 26

Team: Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing

Bike: Yamaha R9

WSBK: Race Two Results From Estoril

Nicolo Bulega won World Superbike Race Two Sunday at Circuito Estoril, in Portugal. Riding his Aruba.it Racing Ducati Panigale V4R, the championship point leader won the 21-lap race by just 4.868 seconds.

Toprak Razgatlioglu was the runner-up on his ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team M1000RR, and Bulega’s teammate, Alvaro Bautista was third. 

Alex Lowes finished the race fourth on his Kawasaki Bimota KB998 Rimini.

Andrea Locatelli got fifth on his Pata Maxus Yamaha YZF-R1.

Americans Garrett Gerloff finished 11th on his Kawasaki ZX-10RR and wildcard Bobby Fong got 18th on his Performance Attack Yamaha YZF-R1.

Toprak Razgatlioglu leads the championship with 580 points, 39 ahead of Nicolo Bulega who has 541 points. Danilo Petrucci is third with 292 points.

 

Results wsbk race 2

 

ChampionshipStandings wsbk race 2

 

More from a press release issued by Dorna: 

TITLE FIGHT ROLLS ON: Bulega beats Razgatlioglu in Race 2 at Estoril as Championship battles goes to Jerez. The #11 got a good start when lights went out and converted that into his sole win of the weekend, ensuring the title fight will be decided at the season finale. 

Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) claimed victory in Race 2 at the Circuito Estoril as the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship concluded at the historic Portuguese venue. The #11 ensured the title battle will roll on to the season finale at Jerez next week with his 17th WorldSBK victory, as Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) came home in second for the EICMA Estoril Round.

BULEGA BATTLES TO P1: Victory for the #11, Razgatlioglu second

As in the previous two races, Razgatlioglu lost ground at the start of the race, dropping to fifth behind Bulega, Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha), Andrea Iannone (Team Pata GoEleven) and Bautista, moving ahead of the #19 to take P4 at Turn 1 on Lap 2. At Turn 6, ‘El Turco’ tried to pass Iannone but ‘The Maniac’ fought back; however, the #29 was given a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start. At Turn 9, Razgatlioglu was up to second after getting ahead of Locatelli and soon set his sights on Bulega, who was 1.4 seconds clear at the start of Lap 3. The pair traded similar lap times throughout the first quarter of the race, with the gap hovering at just over a second. On Lap 7, ‘Bulegas’ lapped four tenths quicker to open the gap to 1.5 seconds, appearing to put some breathing room between himself and the BMW rider. By the halfway mark, Bulega had extended the gap to over two seconds. While the gap did fluctuate a bit, Bulega went on to claim victory in Race 2, ensuring the title fight would go to the final round at Jerez.

BAUTISTA TAKES THREE P3S: A triple visit to the rostrum

The fight for third was another barnstorming battle, with Bautista slower in the first stages of the race and having to fend off his rivals. He had ‘Loka’ behind him at the start of Lap 5, who in turn was under pressure from Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team), who forced his way ahead of the Yamaha rider at Turn 1. That order remained stable throughout the race with Bautista taking his third P3 finish of the weekend, which moved him into third in the Championship standings. Bulega’s victory and Bautista’s rostrum ensured Aruba.it Racing – Ducati wrapped up the Teams’ Championship for 2025. The #22 finished in fourth after losing time in the final stages to Bautista, with Locatelli claiming P5.

A BIG FIGHT INSIDE THE TOP TEN: Vierge claims sixth ahead of Gardner

Xavi Vierge (Honda HRC) took the chequered flag in P6 as he finished as the only Honda rider in the top ten, finishing 1.4 seconds clear of Remy Gardner (GYTR GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) in seventh. Axel Bassani (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) ensured both Bimotas were inside the top ten as he finished in eighth, directly ahead of Jonathan Rea (Pata Maxus Yamaha) in ninth.

VAN DER MARK RESISTS GERLOFF: Scrapping for the top ten

Michael van der Mark (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) had to fend off a hard-charging Garrett Gerloff (Kawasaki WorldSBK Team) to secure a finish in the top ten, eventually finishing just 0.128s clear of the Texan. Iannone battled back to 12th after his penalty, with ‘The Maniac’ initially dropping out of the points after his penalty. Ryan Vickers (Motocorsa Racing) was 13th ahead of Bahattin Sofuoglu (Yamaha Motoxracing WorldSBK Team) and Yari Montella (Barni Spark Racing Team), who rounded out the points-paying positions.

FINISHING THE RACE: Narrowly missing out on P15

Tito Rabat (PETRONAS MIE Honda Racing Team) narrowly missed out on P15 as he finished half-a-second down on Montella, while he had a 12-second margin to wildcard Tetsuta Nagashima (Honda HRC) in 17th. Bobby Fong (Attack Performance Yamaha Racing) was the last classified rider in 18th place.

RETIRING FROM RACE 2: Four riders don’t finish

Michael Rinaldi (Yamaha Motoxracing WorldSBK Team) was the first rider to drop out of the race when he crashed at Turn 7, retiring from the race. Iker Lecuona (Honda HRC) crashed out of the race at Turn 7 on Lap 13. Meanwhile, home hero Ivo Lopes (PETRONAS MIE Honda Racing Team) retired in the early stages of Race 2. Tarran Mackenzie (MGM BONOVO Action) was a faller in the final few laps when he came down at Turn 1.

 

The top six from WorldSBK Race 2, full results here:

1. Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati)

2. Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) +4.868s

3. Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +15.331s

4. Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) +17.333s

5. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha) +20.567s

6. Xavi Vierge (Honda HRC) +22.205s

Fastest lap: Nicolo Bulega (Ducati), 1’35.406s

 

Championship standings:

1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) 580 points

2. Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) 541

3. Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) 292

4. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha) 284

5. Danilo Petrucci (Barni Spark Racing Team) 284

6. Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) 193

Next up, a season finale title decider at Jerez! Watch all the action from Spain using the WorldSBK VideoPass – now only €9.99!

MotoGP: Diogo Moreira To Join Honda LCR in 2026

From left to right, Lucio Cecchinello (Honda LCR Team Principal), Yuzuru Ishikawa (HRC Executive Director), Diogo Moreira and Taichi Honda (HRC General Manager). Photo courtesy LCR Honda.

Brazilian rider Diogo Moreira signs a multi-year deal with Honda Racing Corporation, set to join Honda LCR MotoGP Team for the 2026 season.

Hailing from São Paulo, Moreira made his World Championship debut in Moto3 in 2022, where he achieved one win, three podiums, and two pole positions across 39 races. Upon his move to Moto2, he was named Rookie of the Year in 2024, and since then, he has consistently been a front-runner. In 2025, he continues to battle for the World Championship, having secured impressive victories in Assen, Austria, and Indonesia, alongside five other podium finishes.

Honda LCR, in strong collaboration with HRC, remains deeply committed to several core objectives, including the development of young talent. Moreira’s signing further strengthens both Honda and LCR’s focus on shaping the future of MotoGP, complementing the team’s ongoing dedication to excellence at all levels of the sport.

The entire Honda LCR Team is excited to welcome Diogo to the family and looks forward to the next chapter of his promising career.

 

Lucio Cecchinello | Honda LCR Team Principal: 
 

“We are very pleased to announce the arrival of Diogo Moreira to our team. Without a doubt, Diogo possesses all the qualities to become one of the greats in MotoGP. He has undeniable talent, a deep passion for racing, and has proven his speed across all types of motorcycles and disciplines. On behalf of the entire LCR Team, I extend a warm welcome to Diogo and thank Honda HRC for entrusting us with this exciting project for 2026.”

Diogo Moreira in parc fermé after taking pole position at Balaton Park. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Diogo Moreira in parc fermé after taking pole position at Balaton Park. Photo courtesy Dorna.
 
 
 
Diogo Moreira:
 

“Joining the MotoGP World Championship with Honda LCR is a dream come true. I want to thank Honda and the team for believing in me and giving me this incredible opportunity. I’m excited to learn, to grow, and to fight for strong results at the top level of motorcycle racing.”

 

 

More from a press release issued by Dorna: 

Get to know LCR Honda’s latest recruit, who is looking to make his mark on the sport. 

That’s it then! After months of speculation, the grid for the 2026 MotoGP season is finally complete. The last piece of the puzzle finally fell into place ahead of the Australian GP, when it was announced that Diogo Moreira had signed a multi-year MotoGP deal with LCR Honda.

The young Brazilian was one of the most sought-after prospects in the paddock, with multiple factories reportedly chasing his signature. Ultimately, Honda won the battle, securing a rider who’s been tipped as one of the sport’s brightest young stars.

Moreira will be one of two rookies on the 2026 grid — alongside Toprak Razgatlioglu, who comes from WorldSBK — and notably, he’ll become the first Brazilian MotoGP rider since Alex Barros, an icon of the sport across the 1990s and the early 2000s. But who exactly is Diogo Moreira?

 

From Motocross in São Paulo to the European racing scene

Hailing from Guarulhos, São Paulo, Diogo Moreira began his racing journey in Brazilian motocross before moving to Spain in 2017 to pursue a career on asphalt. Determined to make his mark, he worked his way up through the European junior ranks, scoring impressive results in the junior categories.

It was in the Red Bull Rookies Cup that Moreira truly caught attention, finishing 6th overall in 2021 with four podiums to his name. His speed and consistency earned him a coveted seat in the Moto3 World Championship with MT Helmets – MSI in 2022.

 

Moto3: A breakout star emerges

The Brazilian immediately caught the eye with a string of top 10 finishes on his way to the Rookie of the Year crown. On the opening day of his sophomore season, he delivered his first podium in Portugal, which was quickly followed by another in Argentina.

 

Diogo Moreira during 2023 Indonesian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Diogo Moreira during 2023 Indonesian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

His first-ever World Championship win came in Round 15 in Indonesia as he finished P8 in the Championship, but Moto2’s Italtrans Racing had seen enough as they offered him an intermediate class ride in 2024.

 

Moto2: Proving his mettle

His debut year in the intermediate class started inconsistently, but his pace steadily improved as he adapted to the more demanding machinery. By the end of the season, he took his first Moto2 podium at the Barcelona finale — and with it, another Rookie of the Year crown.

 

Diogo Moreira during 2025 Austrian GP. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

That was just a taste of what was to come in 2025, with the Brazilian evolving into one of the class’s standout stars. With a string of top-five finishes, back-to-back podiums at Silverstone and Aragon, and a maiden win at Assen, the Brazilian firmly announced himself as a title contender. That was the first of three wins, the other two coming in Austria and Indonesia, which leaves him within nine points of title rival Manu Gonzalez at the time of writing, heading into the Australian GP.

 

Chasing History: Brazil’s next great hope

With a move to the premier class now signed and sealed, he’ll be looking to deliver a first World Championship crown. Brazil have never had a Grand Prix World Champion, and Moreira could become its first if he can outscore Gonzalez in the remaining four rounds.

His MotoGP debut will also coincide with the long-awaited return of the Brazilian Grand Prix to the calendar in March 2026. If all goes to plan, Moreira will race in front of his home fans in just his second MotoGP outing, making it a truly emotional milestone for both him and Brazil’s passionate motorsport community.

 

Number 10 and the dream realised

Throughout his career, Moreira has proudly raced with the number 10, but he’ll have to find a new one for MotoGP as that number is already taken by factory Honda rider Luca Marini. Still, it’s a small price to pay for achieving his lifelong dream: a place in the premier class of world motorcycle racing.

He’s expected to make his MotoGP testing debut at Valencia later this year, but before that, his focus remains firmly on the 2025 Moto2 title fight. So tune in for the Phillip Island Grand Prix, and see for yourself why Honda has placed its faith in Diogo Moreira — Brazil’s next MotoGP superstar.

NHRA: Gadson Wins Texas FallNationals

Richard Gadson powered his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki Gen 3 Hayabusa to his fourth win of the season at the Texas NHRA FallNationals, extending his Countdown to the Championship lead. Photo credit Matt Polito / courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.

Richard Gadson raced his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki Gen 3 Hayabusa to his fourth win of the season and extended his lead in the Pro Stock Motorcycle Countdown to the Championship playoffs at the Texas NHRA FallNationals at Texas Motorplex in Ennis, TX, on Sunday.

Race Highlights:

  • Richard Gadson qualified first and increased his lead in the Countdown by winning his fourth race of the season
  • Gaige Herrera qualified second and held onto second place in the Countdown by advancing to the semi-final round

 

Richard Gadson Wins Texas NHRA FallNationals and Extends Championship Lead. Photo courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.
Richard Gadson Wins Texas NHRA FallNationals and Extends Championship Lead. Photo credit Matt Polito / courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.

 

Richard Gadson qualified number one for the second time this year with a 6.747-second/201.59 mph pass in the second of Friday’s qualifying sessions, which also earned him a $5,000 bonus in the ‘JEGS Friday Nite Live’ Battle for the Saddle, part of the 10-day Stampede of Speed festival that marks the Dallas race as a highlight for NHRA fans.

In the first round of eliminations on Sunday, Gadson defeated Lance Bonham (7.306 seconds/177.15 mph) with a 6.750-second/202.00 mph pass, then ran 6.817 seconds at 199.00 mph in round two against Clayton Howey (6.947 seconds/197.26 mph) to advance to the semi-final round. Gadson laid down a 6.813-second/198.62 mph run in the semis against Matt Smith (6.873 seconds/198.03 mph) to advance to his ninth career final round appearance and sixth of the season.

In the finals, Gadson ran 6.796 seconds at 200.37 mph to defeat Vance & Hines rental rider Brayden Davis (6.817 seconds/200.34 mph), claim his fourth win of the season and career and extend his lead in the Countdown to the Championship playoffs. 

By winning his second race since the six-race Countdown began, Gadson extended his lead to 72 points over Herrera in second and 105 points over third-place Matt Smith. Those gaps virtually guarantee Gadson will head into the season finale at Pomona in mid-November as points leader no matter what happens at the penultimate race of the season in Las Vegas in two weeks’ time. 

“We’ve been trying some new things with the clutch setup over the past few races. I really trust my crew chief Eddie Krawiec to find the right setup, and from the first run down the race track this weekend, I knew I had the fastest motorcycle that I’ve had all year. I could feel it. I could almost hear the tire biting into the track. This is the best motorcycle I’ve had and it’s coming at the perfect time of the season,” Gadson said. 

“Going into the last two races of the Countdown with the performance package I have right now really boosts my confidence. I know I have a great horse; I’ve just got to ride it. It’s go-time and I want to win this championship bad, but it’s not done yet by a long shot. Gaige and Matt are right behind me, and I’m not counting any chickens before they’re hatched,” he continued. “I’ve got to keep my hand on the throttle, so I’m just going to try to have fun these last two races, enjoy the ride and let the chips fall where they may in Vegas and Pomona.” 

 

Defending champion Gaige Herrera raced his RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki Gen 3 Hayabusa to the semi-final round, maintaining second in the Countdown standings. Photo credit Matt Polito / courtesy Suzuki Motor USA.

 

Defending world champion Gaige Herrera qualified second a tick behind his teammate with a 6.752-second/200.71 mph run in the Friday evening qualifying session.

Herrera opened Sunday eliminations with a 6.749-second/202.52 mph victory in round one over Charles Poskey (foul), then ran a solo 6.780-second/200.95 mph run in round two after his opponent Steve Johnson, who made an unplanned trip into the sand traps in round one, was a no-show. 

In the semi-final round, Herrera ran 6.837 seconds at 199.72 mph against NHRA rookie of the year contender Davis on the Vance & Hines team’s third Hayabusa, but a rare red-light foul scuttled Herrera’s bid against Davis’s quicker 6.831-second/199.72 mph run on the starting line.

With rival Matt Smith also falling in the semi-final round, Herrera held station in second place in the Countdown. He now has a 33-point gap to Smith but lost ground to Gadson, who sits 72 points ahead with two races remaining.

“We qualified well and had a fast motorcycle all weekend, but unfortunately, I beat myself today. Every time I’ve run against Brayden I’ve had the slower bike, so I knew I had to push on the tree, but unfortunately, I cut it too close and went double-oh-five red. All three of our Hayabusas are fast, which is awesome and makes us riders push that much harder when we run against each other,” Herrera said. “I’m still second in points but it’s going to be hard to catch Richard at this point. I’ll need a miracle to happen on my side to change things, but all-in-all, I’ll be glad if it’s either me or him at the end of the season.”

RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki crew chief Andrew Hines said the dominant performance in Dallas of the team’s three Hayabusas, which swept the top three qualifying spots and all advanced to the semi-final round, is the culmination of a series of tuning trials undertaken during race weekends beginning at the two west coast NHRA rounds in July.

“Racing against each other in the late rounds and having three out of the four bikes in the semi-finals is never a bad thing. We’ve been playing around with different tuning variables for each bike from the Western Swing until this weekend. Ed and I started comparing notes, looking at data and asking ourselves what we’ve been doing differently across our three motorcycles. It came down to comparing those notes, figuring out where our shortcomings were and deciding the right direction to go for each one. And it worked on all three motorcycles this weekend,” he said. “We’re trying to give our all as tuners to each motorcycle and may the best rider win. It comes down to desire and execution. Our guys are riding top notch. It’s just a matter of putting the whole run together. A difference of a couple hundredths in elapsed time comes down to the 60-foot time, did they go straight, did they hit their shift points.”

“We feel good about the next two races, especially Vegas. These hot weather races have been challenging but we’ve been able to manage the power and the traction to get our Hayabusas to go,” he said. “Vegas typically has a sticky starting line, which is what we need to get them moving.”

With two races remaining in the Countdown to the Championship, Gadson and Herrera sit first and second in the standings, with 2,507 and 2,435 points, respectively. 

The RevZilla/Motul/Vance & Hines Suzuki team returns to action Oct. 30-Nov. 3 at the Dodge NHRA Nevada Nationals powered by Direct Connection at The Strip at Las Vegas Motor Speedway in Las Vegas, NV.

 

For the latest Suzuki team news, race reports, and information visit SuzukiCycles.com/Racing/Drag-Racing

 

About Vance & Hines Motorsports: 

Vance & Hines Motorsports is a powerhouse in the world of motorcycle racing, boasting a rich legacy of success. With a focus on innovation, performance, and a commitment to pushing boundaries, the team continues to redefine excellence in the NHRA and MotoAmerica. For more information, visit www.vanceandhinesmotorsports.com

About Suzuki: 

Suzuki Motor USA, LLC (SMO) distributes Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Accessories, and ECSTAR Oils & Chemicals via an extensive dealer network throughout 49 states. Suzuki Motor Corporation (SMC), based in Hamamatsu, Japan, is a diversified worldwide manufacturer of Motorcycles, ATVs, Scooters, Automobiles, Outboard Motors, and related products. Founded in 1909 and incorporated in 1920, SMC has business relations with 201 countries/regions. For more information, visit www.suzuki.com.

Polaris Spins Off Indian Motorcycle, Kennedy Named CEO

Loris Baz (76) on the S&S Indian Challenger King of The Baggers racebike at the MotoAmerica round at New Jersey Motorsports Park. Photo by Michael Gougis.

MINNEAPOLIS (October 13, 2025)— Polaris Inc. (NYSE: PII) (“Polaris” or “the Company”) todayannounced its decision to separate Indian Motorcycle (“the Business”) from its portfolio and into a standalone business. The Company has entered into a definitive agreement to sell a majority stake in Indian Motorcycle to Carolwood LP, an independent private equity firm founded in 2014 and headquartered in Los Angeles, California. Indian Motorcycle contributed approximately $478 million, or 7.0%, of Polaris’ revenues for the trailing twelve-month period ended June 30, 2025.

Upon close, the transaction is expected to be accretive to Polaris’ annualized adjusted EBITDA by approximately $50 million and to adjusted earnings per share (“EPS”) by approximately $1.00. The close of the transaction is expected to occur in the first quarter of 2026, subject to the satisfaction or waiver of customary closing conditions. Polaris is confident in Indian Motorcycle’s future success under Carolwood ownership and will maintain a small equity position in the Business after the transaction closes. Additional terms of the deal were not disclosed.

“Polaris and Indian Motorcycle both stand to benefit from this deal, which will enable each business to move faster, deliver industry-leading innovation, and lean further into our respective market strengths,” said Polaris Chief Executive Officer Mike Speetzen. “For Polaris, the sale will further strengthen our focus on the areas of our portfolio that offer the strongest growth potential and allow us to accelerate investments in key initiatives and create wins with customers and dealers. It also will unlock greater long-term value for Polaris and our shareholders, with immediate value creation that we expect will
become increasingly meaningful over time.”

Speetzen continued, “Under Polaris’ ownership and investment, Indian Motorcycle has been reestablished as a celebrated brand and major player in the global motorcycle market. With its current product portfolio, global dealer network, category expertise and manufacturing resources, the Business is well positioned to succeed as a standalone company with a dedicated focus on its industry. We were highly intentional and selective in our search and planning efforts for Indian Motorcycle’s next chapter of growth. In Carolwood, Indian Motorcycle has a partner that believes in building on the Business’ current momentum and supporting its next stage of success. We are confident and committed to making this a seamless transition for Indian Motorcycle dealers, customers and employees.”

“Indian Motorcycle is an iconic brand built on American heritage, craftsmanship, and most importantly, a community of riders,” said Andrew Shanfeld, Principal at Carolwood. “We’re honored to help usher in its next chapter as an independent company and to support its continued growth as a symbol of performance and pride. At Carolwood, we target iconic brands that we can passionately impact. Indian Motorcycle allows us to do just that.”

Future Indian Motorcycle Leadership

Carolwood has selected Mike Kennedy to serve as CEO of the new independent Indian Motorcycle organization once the deal closes. A more than 30-year motorcycle industry veteran, Kennedy has a proven track record as a leader in and around the motorcycle industry. He previously served as CEO of RumbleOn, the nation’s largest powersports dealership group; CEO and President of Vance & Hines, a leading manufacturer of high-performance aftermarket motorcycle exhaust systems and accessories; and spent 26 years at Harley-Davidson in various leadership roles. Adam Rubin, Principal at Carolwood, said, “Indian Motorcycle has defined American motorcycling for over a century, and Carolwood’s role is to ensure that legacy thrives for the next hundred years. Mike Kennedy brings over 30 years of experience leading iconic motorcycle and performance brands and will play a critical role in stewarding Indian Motorcycle’s growth. At Carolwood, we’re deeply committed to preserving what makes Indian Motorcycle special, supporting its growth, and empowering the team to write its next great chapter.”

Continuity for Indian Motorcycle

As a part of the deal, approximately 900 employees will transition as a part of the new Indian Motorcycle Company. Indian Motorcycle will retain the majority of its team, including engineers, designers and staff, along with manufacturing resources. Manufacturing facilities in Spirit Lake, Iowa, and Monticello, Minn., as well as the industrial design and technology center in Burgdorf, Switzerland, will transition to the new standalone motorcycle company as a part of the deal. Indian Motorcycle will continue to provide sales, service, and support for dealers and customers throughout this transition. After the sale is finalized, Indian Motorcycle will operate independently of Polaris and continue selling motorcycles and parts, garments and accessories (PG&A) and providing service through its global Indian Motorcycle dealer network.

Polaris Leadership Update

Until the transaction closes, Polaris President of On Road and International Mike Dougherty will continue to lead the On Road and International businesses, including Indian Motorcycle, at Polaris. Over the next several months, he will help shepherd Indian Motorcycle in its transition to becoming a standalone company. Dougherty, with a distinguished nearly 28-year career with Polaris, has announced his intent to retire upon the closing of the transaction.

“During his tenure with Polaris, Mike’s passionate leadership is responsible for countless contributions. As a result of his tenacity and guidance, Mike shaped our international business into what it is today, scaling it over the last 25 years and establishing a direct presence in more than fifteen countries. He has expanded our business outside of North America, growing revenue from under $100 million in 2000 to more than $1 billion today, as well as strengthened our On Road businesses within their respective markets, including Indian Motorcycle achieving the No. 1 market share position in the United States for mid-size cruisers last year,” said Speetzen. “More than that, Mike is known for the teams he builds, the talent he cultivates and the culture he fosters, and I want to thank Mike for his dedication to Polaris all these years. We wish him the very best in his future retirement.”

Commenting on preliminary Third Quarter results, Speetzen said: “As we prepare to report our third quarter results, we’re encouraged by improving retail trends with ORV ex-Youth up low double digits and continued strong share gains in ORV. Based on preliminary data, we expect third quarter sales to be at the high end of our previously issued guidance range of $1.6 billion to $1.8 billion. We anticipate third quarter adjusted EPS to be in the range of $0.31 to $0.41, which is meaningfully higher than our original expectations, driven by higher-than-expected shipments, strong cost management and ongoing progress
within our operational efficiency initiatives.”

MotoGP: Márquez Undergoes Successful Surgery On Right Shoulder

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

After a checkup for his right shoulder blade injury, Marc Márquez has undergone a successful operation at the Ruber Internacional Hospital in Madrid, Spain. The same medical team who had examined him seven days earlier found that the coracoid fracture and ligament damage were not showing sufficient signs of stabilization after a week of being immobilized. Therefore, given the risk of residual instability, it was decided to go ahead with surgical stabilization and repair the acromioclavicular ligaments.

Surgery was one of the options considered by doctors from the outset in the event that the planned conservative treatment failed. In any case, Marc Márquez, who is already at home, will continue his recovery process, and his progress will determine the timing of his return to racing competition.

R3 BluCru World Cup: American Clark Finished Fifth Overall

Chris Clark (5) at Estoril. Photo courtesy Chris Clark Racing
Chris Clark (5) at Estoril. Photo courtesy Chris Clark Racing

Chris Clark has finished fifth overall in the 2025 R3 BLU CRU World Cup. 
 

Clark, the first American rider to win a race in the series was one of the standouts of the year – claiming a sensational win in the opening round at Portimão in Portugal followed by a two more podiums during his front running campaign. 
 

The final round of the championship took place in Estoril, Portugal, yesterday and whilst he may have crashed out in the closing stages he was once again fighting for the podium. 
 

In addition to his on track success, Clark was invited to the Yamaha Mastercamp in Spain where he got to ride some of the biggest names in the sport – impressing as he turned his hand to off road disciplines such as flat track for the first time and even jet skiing.  

 

Overall, it was a positive debut season in the Yamaha R3 BLU CRU World Cup – a season that Chris can be proud of. 

 

An announcement regarding the #5’s future will be made in the coming weeks. 

 
Chris Clark: “Race one didn’t go to plan. I was given two long lap penalties after an incident in qualifying which left me with a lot to do. I did my best to manage it, but I ended up losing the group and it was too hard to catch them. My full focus was on trying to win the final race of the year and after starting eighteenth I fought hard and put myself in the position to win. I was in the front group, and I had a real chance for the podium. Unfortunately, I made contact with another rider and we both went down. Nobody can say that I didn’t go down without a fight and that is important – I gave it my all. I want to thank my Smrz Racing BGR guys for all their hard work this year, all my sponsors, my family, my manager, and everyone involved with the Yamaha BLU CRU series. I can’t wait to announce my 2026 plans!”

Oxley Bom MotoGP Podcast: Q&A About All Things Racing!

Marc Marquez (93) and Brad Binder (33) at Circuit of The Americas, 2025. Photo by Michael Gougis.

It started with us asking our listeners for some questions. Then you responded. Now we’re here, with the longest episode in the show’s history. Funny how those things go, eh?

Yes, it’s Q&A-time! Our wonderful Patrons brought the questions, and now Mat and Peter will have to find the answers. We’ve got tires, brakes, bikes, riders, conspiracies, mountain bikes and even clowns and badgers! Trust me: you are not ready.

https://oxleybom.buzzsprout.com/2181509/episodes/17999070-questions-and-answers-clowns-and-badgers

Opinion: Can A 690cc Flat-Tracker Replace 250cc Moto3 Singles?

TT 2025 Supertwin Practice Michael Rutter (3) on his 700cc Yamaha leads Paul Jordan on his 660 Aprilia. Photo credit Barry Clay.
TT 2025 Supertwin Practice Michael Rutter (3) on his 700cc Yamaha leads Paul Jordan on his 660 Aprilia. Photo credit Barry Clay.

FIRST PERSON/OPINION & SPECULATION:

COULD A FLAT-TRACKER SOLVE DORNA’s MOTO3 PROBLEM?

By Michael Esdaile

Could the machine that not too long ago revitalized AMA-sanctioned American Flat Track (AFT) and also provided the preferred platform for the Lightweight class at the Isle of Man Tourist Trophy do the same for Moto3 Grand Prix racing?

We’re talking about the 650cc Kawasaki Parallel Twin that has been in production since 2006 and has been winning races for 18 years. And still is. The words “tried and true” spring to mind.

Another contender that has followed the same route is Yamaha’s 690cc Parallel Twin, with more recent success than the Kawasaki. The 690 Yamaha won the AFT Production Twins Championship in 2019 and 2021 with Corey Texter and in 2025 clinched the AFT SuperTwins Championship during the season finale at Eldon Missouri’s Lake Ozark Speedway, ridden by Dallas Daniels.

 

Dallas Daniels (32) at the American Flat Track season finale at the Lake Ozark Short Track. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor USA.
Dallas Daniels (32) at the American Flat Track season finale at the Lake Ozark Short Track. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor USA.

 

Either one of these Japanese Twins could provide the platform for the planned major revision in the Moto3 class of Grand Prix racing where there is concern that many of the current crop of riders are simply too big for the little 250cc single-cylinder racebikes built by Honda and KTM.

When the Moto3 class was launched, the minimum age for riders was 15. In recent years that has been slowly raised and is now 18 years. There are now several riders who struggle to fit onto the small, lithe 250cc Singles and this is a concern for Dorna executives.
There is another concern — the step up from Moto3 to the Moto2 class is now difficult for some riders. There is a big difference between a 185-pound (84 kg) 250cc 55-horsepower Moto3 Single and a 330-pound (150 kg) 765cc Moto2 Triple. When the Moto2 class was initiated as a replacement for the 250cc GP class, the Honda CBR600 engine was used in bikes weighing 308 lbs. (140 kg).

Riders stepping up from Moto3 today have to deal with heavier machines than before, but more importantly, they need to adjust to the vastly different torque output of the Triumph 765cc engines used in Moto2.

This has been a topic of conversation within Dorna Sports S.L., the Spanish company that has held the commercial and audiovisual rights for MotoGP since 1991.

What has been discussed is a completely new set of technical rules. In the near future, likely 2028, the 250cc Singles will be replaced.

But with what? Grand Prix officials are not saying openly but clearly there has been back-channel dialogue, with production-based 500cc twin-cylinder machines mentioned in 2024, while early this year there has been speculation about twin-cylinder engines up to 780cc.

 

Price Cap

The key to the new regulations is price. In 2024, a $88,000 U.S. (75,000 Euro) price cap for the new Moto3 machines was under consideration. Now a price cap of $59,000 U.S. (50,000 Euro) is being discussed, with bikes weighing as little as 120 kg and producing about 90 horsepower. The price cap for the current Moto3 machines is $205,000 U.S. (175,000 Euro).

 

Cost Considerations

Escalating costs for racing machines is not confined to the GP classes. It has been a concern in U.S. racing, too.

Concerned at the escalating costs of maintaining the legendary Harley-Davidson XR750s in American Flat Track racing, in 2009 the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) asked former long-time Harley engineer and tuner Bill Werner to find a cheap but competitive (and reliable) XR alternative.

Werner opted for the Kawasaki EX650 Parallel Twin. He had some experience with that model, having prepared a road-racing version for a 300-mile MotoST endurance race at Daytona in March 2007. With 49-year-old Jay Springsteen and 45-year-old Jim Filice riding the Kawasaki entered by the Pair of Nines team and managed by Gary Nixon, the 650 Twin won its class in the MotoST endurance race — by a lap.

So for the flat track racing “proof of concept” Werner bought an EX650 off eBay for $1,500, removed all the fittings needed for road use and with this stripped-down machine, Bryan Smith scored Kawasaki’s first AMA Grand National win at the August 28, 2010 Indianapolis Mile, run the same weekend as the MotoGP at Indianapolis.

Werner says that in addition to the $1,500 for eBay purchase “my total investment to build the bike was $6,000, for suspension, wheels, motor modifications, etc., as opposed to $25,000 plus for the XR750 Harley.”

Werner had backing from Monster Energy and Kawasaki Motors Corp. USA but adds, “It was my way to give back to the sport that did so much for me. I loved the challenge!”

Of the 19 finishers at the 2010 Indy Mile, only two other riders were not racing Harley-Davidson XR750s: 12th-placed Larry Pegram (Ducati) and 16th-place Shawn Baer (Triumph).

Proving that the win at Indy was not a fluke, Smith again beat Harley-Davidson’s Chris Carr the following weekend at the Springfield Mile. This time there was one other Kawasaki 650 Twin in the results, ridden by Johnny Lewis, who finished 10th.

The seed had been planted. A year later there were six Kawasaki Twins among the 54 entries at the September Springfield Mile, with four making it to the 26-lap main event. Of those, Lewis was the best finisher, less than three-10ths of a second behind the winning XR750 Harley-Davidson, with Australian Luke Gough finishing 15th on his EX650.

Another year saw eight of the Kawasaki Twins at the Springfield Mile in September, with Bryan Smith winning on an EX650, this time mounted in a dirt-track frame built by Howerton Motorsports that had been campaigned by the Australian Gough in 2011.

By the 2015 September Springfield Mile, an astounding 27 Kawasaki EX650s made up the GNC2 class’s 35-bike entry, with another 23 in the GNC1 class. That’s 50 Kawasaki 650 Twins…

Once again, Bryan Smith won the GCN1 class, on a Kawasaki, this time prepared by Howerton Motorsports in Indianapolis.

Werner’s effort in the 2010 season had paid off for the AMA and brought a lot more young racers into the sport they had previously been shut out of by the prohibitively-expensive-to-run XR750 Harley-Davidson.

 

Lightweight TT

But it was not only in AMA flat track racing that the Kawasaki 650 Twin was proving popular. On the other side of the Atlantic, the British Auto Cycle Union decided to re-establish the Lightweight class at the 2012 Isle of Man TT. Rather than using 250cc GP machines, the race was now for series production 650cc Twins. Right away the Kawasaki 650 proved the popular choice, with all but 11 of the 43 starters in the inaugural race on EX650-based machines, Ryan Farquhar winning at a race average speed of 114.15 mph.
This class allowed almost unlimited engine modifications but mandated use of the standard road bike chassis. Private British tuners soon boosted the power output of the 650 Kawasaki Twin and in 2013 James Hillier on the winning Kawasaki averaged 117.69 mph.
Again, Kawasaki 650s dominated the class, 32 of them making up the majority of the 43-bike field. By 2014 all but five of the 49 Lightweight TT entries were 650 Kawasakis.

One of them was an Italian Paton, a 650 Kawasaki engine in a chrome moly frame raced by Ollie Linsdell to sixth.

 

TT 2013 - Lightweight TT - Michael Rutter (Kawasaki 650) at Braddan Bridge. H crashed on lap2. Photo courtesy Barry Clay.
TT 2013 – Lightweight TT – Michael Rutter (Kawasaki 650 powered) at Braddan Bridge. He crashed on lap2. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

The 2015 edition of the race saw the winning average speed upped to 118.936 mph by Ivan Lintin and this time Michael Rutter brought a Paton home in third place, at 117.657 mph.

For the 2016 Lightweight TT, a staggering 53 riders faced the starter, all but 12 of them using 650 Kawasaki power.

Michael Rutter finally gave the Kawasaki-powered Paton a win, when he topped the 39-rider field in 2017, by now almost all on Kawasakis. Despite the custom Italian chassis, his race average of 118.645 mph was a whisker under Lintin’s 2015 record.

 

TT 2019 – Lightweight Race Winner Michael Dunlop on a Paton powered by a Kawasaki 650 engine. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

Rutter made amends in 2018, establishing a new 120.601 mph average on a Paton. There were four other Patons in the race but almost all the rest of the 45 were Kawasakis.
A year later Michael Dunlop won, on a Paton, upping the winning average speed to 121.646 mph.

 

Supertwins

Then came the great catastrophe – the 2020 and 2021 Covid lock-downs—with no racing at all at the TT. When racing returned in 2022, the regulations had been changed, and the class was now called “Supertwins” with a 700cc capacity limit allowing the new Yamaha YZF-R7 and the Aprilia RS660 in the field.

 

TT 2022 Supertwin Race Winner Peter Hickman leads Michael Rutter Both on Kawasaki – powered Patons. Photo credit Barry Clay.

 

No matter, Kawasaki power still prevailed, with Peter Hickman doing the business on a Paton with a 120.006-mph average. The Italian brand won again in 2023, with Michael Dunlop winning from fellow Paton rider Mike Browne in the first of two races.

In the second, Peter Hickman gave the YZF-R7 Yamaha its début Supertwins TT win, but his 119.318 mph average was slower than Dunlop’s 2019 benchmark.

 

TT 2024 Supertwin Race 1 Peter Hickman Swan Racing Yamaha 2nd. Photo credit Barry Clay

 

It was left to Dunlop to up his winning speed with a 122.451 mph effort in the second of the two races in 2024. He won both on a 650 Kawasaki-powered Paton. He repeated the effort (two wins on a Paton) in 2025.

 

Moto3 Potential

When privateers overwhelming chose one particular make and model of production bike for racing, it is a good bet that is because it is easily available and relatively cheap to race.
On that basis alone, could the Kawaski 650 Twin also make good sense for the mooted twin-cylinder class in Moto3?

Paton is already making a chassis and providing a race-ready 108-horsepower engine capable of propelling the machine to a 162 mph (260 km/h) top speed. It sells this ready-to-race package for 48,500 Euro ($56,800 U.S.), just under the mooted new 50,000 Euro price cap for the revamped Moto3 class.

There is also another possibly. In 2019 Kawasaki took a 49.5% stake in the Italian chassis maker Bimota and in 2025 the official Kawasaki entry in the Superbike World Championship runs a ZX10RR engine in a Bimota chassis, the team known as the Bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team.

Whether Kawasaki has the marketing acumen to pitch a proposal to Dorna for a Bimota 650 Kawasaki Moto3 machine, time will tell. As we can see, the engine is race proven across almost two decades of racing. It comes standard with a slipper clutch and a side-loading (cassette) transmission.

Then there is the 690 Yamaha, which was released in the USA in 2015. Immediately Keith McCarthy, then Yamaha Motor Corp. USA’s Motorsports Racing Division Manager (now retired) saw its potential for flat-track racing, as did Yamaha’s motorcycle product line manager Derek Brooks.

The result was the DT-07 Flat Track Concept bike displayed at the October 2015 AIMExpo in Orlando, Florida.

Unlike the bottom-up Werner-Kawasaki 650 development, this was a top-down approach, with Yamaha having a concept flat-track chassis built for its engine. Over time, it has collaborated with G&G Racing and Estenson Racing to race in the AFT Production Twins class (which it has won twice) and has now won the AFT SuperTwins Championship.
And as noted above, the 690 Yamaha has also provided a platform for Supertwins road-racing at the Isle of Man.

Given Yamaha’s long-term commitment to Grand Prix racing, a Yamaha 690 engine in a Suter or Kalex chassis is probably not beyond the bounds of reality.

Either way, the motorcycle that will become the Moto3 platform in 2028 will almost certainly have its roots in AFT racing!

WSBK: Fong Makes His Debut in Portugal

Bobby Fong (50) at Estoril, in Portugal. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.
Bobby Fong (50) at Estoril, in Portugal. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.

Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha’s Bobby Fong makes steady improvements in WorldSBK debut at Circuito Estoril. 

Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha’s Bobby Fong made forward strides throughout the weekend as he made his FIM Superbike World Championship debut in Estoril, Portugal. Led by Attack Performance, with support from fellow official Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. team Strack Racing, the American wild card effort gathered valuable data and experience with some additional seat time during the penultimate round of the 2025 WorldSBK season.

In his first race weekend on the world stage, Fong focused on familiarizing himself with the Estoril circuit and finding his flow, as the team continued to work on the development of their Superbike platform for the upcoming 2026 MotoAmerica Superbike season. After qualifying 21st, the Californian made steady improvements, finishing 17th in Saturday’s Race 1, and 18th in Sunday’s Superpole Race and Race 2. 

The Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha wild card effort looks to continue its work next weekend at the season finale in Jerez de la Frontera, Spain, on October 17-19. 

 

Richard Stanboli  at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.
Richard Stanboli at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.

 

Richard Stanboli – Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha Team Manager:

“We really enjoyed our time in Portugal. The people are great, and the WSBK paddock is happy to have us join them. Yamaha Racing Europe has been very welcoming, and their hospitality is extraordinary. They have gone out of their way to make us feel like part of the Yamaha family. We’ve been working closely with the WorldSBK team on chassis and electronics, comparing notes and data in preparation for our 2026 MotoAmerica effort. We made steady improvements over the course of the weekend, but to improve more, we need some bigger steps. We look forward to Jerez and continuing our European working vacation.”

 

Bobby Fong at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.
Bobby Fong at Estoril. Photo courtesy Yamaha Motor Corp., USA.

 

Bobby Fong – Attack Performance Strack Racing Yamaha #50: 

“We knew it was going to be a big task coming here. From the first session to the final race today, we’ve made progress each session and improved our pace. We’re learning a lot. Richard (Stanboli) keeps reminding me that we’re learning for the future, but as a racer, you always want to be a little closer to the front. We’ll keep learning and trying new things with the bike to see what works and what doesn’t, and keep chipping away at it. There are a few key areas where I’m losing time in general, so that’s what we are trying to work on. We’ll do our homework during the week and hopefully improve at the next track. We’re not happy with the position, but we’re happy to be out here enjoying this experience and to keep moving forward.”

 

2025 Estoril WorldSBK Results

 

About Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A.

Yamaha Motor Corporation, U.S.A. (YMUS), is a recognized leader in the outdoor recreation industry. The company’s ever-expanding product offerings include Motorcycles and Scooters, ATV and Side-by-Side vehicles, Snowmobiles, Personal Watercraft, Boats, Outboard Motors, Outdoor Power Equipment, Power Assist Bicycles, Golf Cars [sold, serviced, and distributed by Yamaha Golf-Car Company], Power Assist Wheelchair Systems, Surface Mount Technology and Robotic Machines, Unmanned Helicopters, Accessories, Apparel, Yamalube products, and much more. YMUS products are sold through a nationwide network of distributors and dealers in the United States.

YMUS has a corporate office in California, three corporate offices in Georgia, as well as facilities in Wisconsin, Alabama, and Florida. YMUS subsidiaries Yamaha Motor Manufacturing Corporation of America (YMMC), based in Georgia, and Yamaha Jet Boat Manufacturing U.S.A. (YJBM) based in Tennessee, each assemble and manufacture selected Yamaha brand products. YMUS owns Skeeter Boats [Texas] with its division G3 Boats [Missouri]. Additional U.S.-based subsidiaries include Yamaha Marine Systems Company, Inc. (YMSC) with subsidiary Siren Marine [Rhode Island] and divisions Bennett Marine [Florida], Yamaha Marine Rotational Molders [Wisconsin] and Yamaha Precision Propeller Inc. [Indiana].

Yamaha Motor Finance Corporation, USA, dba Yamaha Financial Services, is an affiliate of Yamaha Motor Corporation, USA offering financing solutions to support Yamaha Dealers and loyal Yamaha Customers nationwide.

Stefano Manzi Clinches 2025 WorldSSP Title

Stefano Manzi (62) at Estoril. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Stefano Manzi (62) at Estoril. Photo courtesy Dorna.

Supersport crown caps Manzi’s journey before WorldSBK move in 2026. 

Stefano Manzi (Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing) has been crowned the 2025 FIM Supersport World Champion, securing the title with 2 races to go after a commanding campaign aboard the new Yamaha R9.

For Manzi, the title represents a career milestone after two runner-up finishes in 2023 and 2024. The Italian has been a dominant force in 2025, scoring 10 victories and 18 podiums on his way to Championship glory.

 

Stefano Manzi. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Stefano Manzi. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Stefano Manzi (Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing): 

“It feels amazing to be World Champion. It’s difficult to find the words to describe it. After finishing second two years in a row, to finally win is incredible. It’s a lifetime of work, when you start riding young, you dream about this, and to achieve it is amazing.

The key moment for me was the difficult period when I crashed at Most and Misano. That was a wake-up call, reminding me that you are not unbeatable and must stay focused to win the title. From that moment, I worked hard, avoided repeating mistakes, and finally I can say I achieved it, it’s an incredible feeling.”

 

 

Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team. Photo courtesy Dorna.
Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team. Photo courtesy Dorna.

 

Kervin Bos – Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing Team Manager:

“This has been a three-year project, and to win the championship now in the third year is unbelievable. It was even more special the way Stefano did it, because we all know how pressure affects riders, but he left all the pressure in the hotel and won the race to become Champion.

From the start of the season, we could see he had stepped up his game massively. His growth year after year has been amazing. Not just as a rider – in his first year he was already at a very high level – but he lacked consistency and workflow. There was also work to do on the mental side, and this year he made huge strides mentally, personally, and in performance. He’s now complete and ready for Superbike.”

 

  • RACING JOURNEY

Manzi began his career in the Italian Championship and JuniorGP before moving to the Moto3 World Championship in 2015 and then to Moto2 in 2017, where his highlights included a pole position and a fourth-place finish. He switched to WorldSSP in 2022 with Dynavolt Triumph, taking his first win at Portimao, before joining Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing and immediately establishing himself as a title contender. In 2025, he finally clinched the WorldSSP Championship title, solidifying his position as a top rider in the category.

Official Rider Stats

 

  • A NEW CHALLENGE AWAITS

With the 2025 crown, Manzi adds his name to the list of Supersport Champions and confirms his place among the most competitive riders in the paddock. Next season, he will step up to WorldSBK with the GYTR GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team.

 

  • RIDER PROFIL

 

Place of birth: Rimini, Italy

Age: 26

Team: Pata Yamaha Ten Kate Racing

Bike: Yamaha R9

WSBK: Race Two Results From Estoril

Circuito Estoril. Photo courtesy Circuito Estoril.
Circuito Estoril. Photo courtesy Circuito Estoril.

Nicolo Bulega won World Superbike Race Two Sunday at Circuito Estoril, in Portugal. Riding his Aruba.it Racing Ducati Panigale V4R, the championship point leader won the 21-lap race by just 4.868 seconds.

Toprak Razgatlioglu was the runner-up on his ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team M1000RR, and Bulega’s teammate, Alvaro Bautista was third. 

Alex Lowes finished the race fourth on his Kawasaki Bimota KB998 Rimini.

Andrea Locatelli got fifth on his Pata Maxus Yamaha YZF-R1.

Americans Garrett Gerloff finished 11th on his Kawasaki ZX-10RR and wildcard Bobby Fong got 18th on his Performance Attack Yamaha YZF-R1.

Toprak Razgatlioglu leads the championship with 580 points, 39 ahead of Nicolo Bulega who has 541 points. Danilo Petrucci is third with 292 points.

 

Results wsbk race 2

 

ChampionshipStandings wsbk race 2

 

More from a press release issued by Dorna: 

TITLE FIGHT ROLLS ON: Bulega beats Razgatlioglu in Race 2 at Estoril as Championship battles goes to Jerez. The #11 got a good start when lights went out and converted that into his sole win of the weekend, ensuring the title fight will be decided at the season finale. 

Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) claimed victory in Race 2 at the Circuito Estoril as the MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship concluded at the historic Portuguese venue. The #11 ensured the title battle will roll on to the season finale at Jerez next week with his 17th WorldSBK victory, as Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) came home in second for the EICMA Estoril Round.

BULEGA BATTLES TO P1: Victory for the #11, Razgatlioglu second

As in the previous two races, Razgatlioglu lost ground at the start of the race, dropping to fifth behind Bulega, Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha), Andrea Iannone (Team Pata GoEleven) and Bautista, moving ahead of the #19 to take P4 at Turn 1 on Lap 2. At Turn 6, ‘El Turco’ tried to pass Iannone but ‘The Maniac’ fought back; however, the #29 was given a double Long Lap Penalty for a jump start. At Turn 9, Razgatlioglu was up to second after getting ahead of Locatelli and soon set his sights on Bulega, who was 1.4 seconds clear at the start of Lap 3. The pair traded similar lap times throughout the first quarter of the race, with the gap hovering at just over a second. On Lap 7, ‘Bulegas’ lapped four tenths quicker to open the gap to 1.5 seconds, appearing to put some breathing room between himself and the BMW rider. By the halfway mark, Bulega had extended the gap to over two seconds. While the gap did fluctuate a bit, Bulega went on to claim victory in Race 2, ensuring the title fight would go to the final round at Jerez.

BAUTISTA TAKES THREE P3S: A triple visit to the rostrum

The fight for third was another barnstorming battle, with Bautista slower in the first stages of the race and having to fend off his rivals. He had ‘Loka’ behind him at the start of Lap 5, who in turn was under pressure from Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team), who forced his way ahead of the Yamaha rider at Turn 1. That order remained stable throughout the race with Bautista taking his third P3 finish of the weekend, which moved him into third in the Championship standings. Bulega’s victory and Bautista’s rostrum ensured Aruba.it Racing – Ducati wrapped up the Teams’ Championship for 2025. The #22 finished in fourth after losing time in the final stages to Bautista, with Locatelli claiming P5.

A BIG FIGHT INSIDE THE TOP TEN: Vierge claims sixth ahead of Gardner

Xavi Vierge (Honda HRC) took the chequered flag in P6 as he finished as the only Honda rider in the top ten, finishing 1.4 seconds clear of Remy Gardner (GYTR GRT Yamaha WorldSBK Team) in seventh. Axel Bassani (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) ensured both Bimotas were inside the top ten as he finished in eighth, directly ahead of Jonathan Rea (Pata Maxus Yamaha) in ninth.

VAN DER MARK RESISTS GERLOFF: Scrapping for the top ten

Michael van der Mark (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) had to fend off a hard-charging Garrett Gerloff (Kawasaki WorldSBK Team) to secure a finish in the top ten, eventually finishing just 0.128s clear of the Texan. Iannone battled back to 12th after his penalty, with ‘The Maniac’ initially dropping out of the points after his penalty. Ryan Vickers (Motocorsa Racing) was 13th ahead of Bahattin Sofuoglu (Yamaha Motoxracing WorldSBK Team) and Yari Montella (Barni Spark Racing Team), who rounded out the points-paying positions.

FINISHING THE RACE: Narrowly missing out on P15

Tito Rabat (PETRONAS MIE Honda Racing Team) narrowly missed out on P15 as he finished half-a-second down on Montella, while he had a 12-second margin to wildcard Tetsuta Nagashima (Honda HRC) in 17th. Bobby Fong (Attack Performance Yamaha Racing) was the last classified rider in 18th place.

RETIRING FROM RACE 2: Four riders don’t finish

Michael Rinaldi (Yamaha Motoxracing WorldSBK Team) was the first rider to drop out of the race when he crashed at Turn 7, retiring from the race. Iker Lecuona (Honda HRC) crashed out of the race at Turn 7 on Lap 13. Meanwhile, home hero Ivo Lopes (PETRONAS MIE Honda Racing Team) retired in the early stages of Race 2. Tarran Mackenzie (MGM BONOVO Action) was a faller in the final few laps when he came down at Turn 1.

 

The top six from WorldSBK Race 2, full results here:

1. Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati)

2. Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) +4.868s

3. Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +15.331s

4. Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) +17.333s

5. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha) +20.567s

6. Xavi Vierge (Honda HRC) +22.205s

Fastest lap: Nicolo Bulega (Ducati), 1’35.406s

 

Championship standings:

1. Toprak Razgatlioglu (ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team) 580 points

2. Nicolo Bulega (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) 541

3. Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) 292

4. Andrea Locatelli (Pata Maxus Yamaha) 284

5. Danilo Petrucci (Barni Spark Racing Team) 284

6. Alex Lowes (bimota by Kawasaki Racing Team) 193

Next up, a season finale title decider at Jerez! Watch all the action from Spain using the WorldSBK VideoPass – now only €9.99!

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