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Recapping the Sunday MotoGP, Moto2 and Moto3 contests from Argentina

2025 MotoGP World Championship - Round Two - Gran Premio YPF Energía de Argentina - Sunday

Motorcycle News by Motorcycle News
March 17, 2025
in MotoGP

MotoGP 2025

Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Sunday

Marc Marquez (Ducati Lenovo Team) lit up his comeback run again in Termas de Rio Hondo as he once again battled his way past younger brother Alex Marquez (BK8 Gresini Racing MotoGP) in the closing stages of the Gran Premio YPF Energía de Argentina to remain undefeated so far in season 2025.

Third place went the way of Franco Morbidelli (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team), the Italian returning to a Sunday parc ferme for the first time since 2021, as Francesco Bagnaia (Ducati Lenovo Team) is forced to settle for P4 in Termas de Rio Hondo.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

MotoGP Race Report

Marc Marquez fended off Alex Marquez to collect the holeshot into Turn 1 as drama unfolded for Marco Bezzecchi (Aprilia Racing). The Italian, who made contact with Fabio Quartararo (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) after struggling to get his RS-GP stopped into Turn 1, crashed at the opening corner.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

At the front, Johann Zarco (LCR Honda CASTROL) was hounding third place Bagnaia, with Turn 8 a popular passing place for the Frenchman. This squabbling between Pecco and Zarco saw the Marquez brothers skip to a 0.7s lead, with Alex shadowing Marc in the opening three laps.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

On Lap 4, there was a change for the lead. Alex Marquez capitalised on a small mistake made by Marc Marquez at Turn 1, as blue led red for the first time in Argentina.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

Meanwhile, Morbidelli had picked his way past Zarco and Bagnaia to climb into P3.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

After a busy opening handful of laps, the Grand Prix settled down a tad as the riders settled into their early race rhythms. The blue corner Marquez was leading the red corner Marquez by 0.3s, Morbidelli was 0.7s behind Marc, with Bagnaia a further 0.8s off the back of his fellow Italian. Zarco, meanwhile, was 0.3s behind Pecco.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

On Lap 11, it was as you were at the front. Bagnaia was losing ground though on the top three and Zarco was still swarming all over the rear end of his GP25. A couple of laps later, Morbidelli began to lose touch with Alex Marquez and Marc Marquez, but crucially, Morbidelli was still over a second clear of Bagnaia and Zarco.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

With 10 to go, Marc Marquez had a bit of a moment coming through the fast Turn 11. It was a warning that cost the six-time MotoGP World Champion a couple of tenths, but a lap later, that deficit had been clawed back. And now, Marc was properly swarming all over the rear Michelin tyre of his brother.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

Lap 18 of 25 – an attempted pass. Marc Marquez lunged at Turn 5 but couldn’t get his bike hooked up and stopped in time, so Alex Marquez kept the lead with seven laps to go. And having run wide, the margin between the leader and chaser was up to 0.4s.

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MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

What a showdown it was. On Lap 19, the brothers exchanged fastest laps of the race, with Marc going slightly quicker to latch himself on the back of Alex. Then, another move. Again it was Turn 5 and this time, it was a pass that stuck. Now it was all about whether Alex Marquez had anything in response.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

The early signs were no, there wasn’t a response. With four laps to go, Marc Marquez stretched his advantage to 0.7s. At the beginning of Lap 22 of 25, the gap was then just over a second, as Marc Marquez’s team-mate Bagnaia was trying to put a late attack together to steal P3 from Morbidelli.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

LAST LAP! Marc Marquez held a 1.5s lead over Alex Marquez, with Bagnaia 0.5s behind Morbidelli. Could the 2022 and 2023 MotoGP World Champion find a way to earn a late podium? No he couldn’t. And Alex Marquez couldn’t do anything about Marc Marquez from clinching another victory in 2025 as the #93 made it four wins from four – two Sprints, two Grands Prix – to begin his factory Ducati career in perfect fashion.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

Another brilliant effort from Alex Marquez saw the Gresini rider finish second again, as Morbidelli clung on to pocket his first MotoGP podium since the 2021 Spanish GP. Bagnaia was breathing down his neck but the latter walks away from Argentina with an underwhelming fourth place. Bagnaia already 31-points behind his team-mate after only two rounds.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

On the final lap, Fabio Di Giannantonio (Pertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team) pinched P5 away from the incredibly impressive Zarco, as Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) collected a P7 after yesterday’s Lap 1 crash in the Tissot Sprint.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

Reigning Moto2 World Champion Ai Ogura (Trackhouse MotoGP Team) produced a stellar ride to cross the line in P8 from 15th on the grid, but was then disqualified after the race for using a version of software not homologated by the Championship. That moves Pedro Acosta (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) up into P8 and means three Hondas are classified in the top 10 as each rider behind gains a place – putting Joan Mir in ninth and Honda HRC Castrol teammate Luca Marini in tenth.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

That’s Marini’s best Sunday result in Honda colours, as Alex Rins (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP), Maverick Viñales (Red Bull KTM Tech3), Jack Miller (Prima Pramac Yamaha MotoGP), Quartararo and Raul Fernandez (Trackhouse MotoGP Team) rounded out the points scorers in Termas.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

Two Sprints, two Grands Prix, four wins for Marc Marquez. It’s been a magical start to 2025 for the six-time MotoGP King and next up is a trip to the Circuit of The Americas – a track he adores. Can anyone halt Marc Marquez’s momentum in Austin? Alex Marquez and Bagnaia will be two riders who’ll be desperate to do just that.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo

MotoGP Race Results

Pos
Rider
Bike
Time/Gap
1
M. Marquez
Duc
41m11.100
2
A. Marquez
Duc
+1.362
3
F. Morbidelli
Duc
+4.695
4
F. Bagnaia
Duc
+5.536
5
F. Di Giannantonio
Duc
+7.138
6
J. Zarco
Hon
+7.487
7
B. Binder
KTM
+14.294
8
A. Ogura (DSQ)
Apr
+14.447
9
P. Acosta
KTM
+15.646
10
J. Mir
Hon
+15.787
11
L. Marini
Hon
+16.025
12
A. Rins
Yam
+21.663
13
M. Viñales
KTM
+22.319
14
J. Miller
Yam
+23.486
15
F. Quartararo
Yam
+25.148
16
R. Fernandez
Apr
+26.914
17
F. Aldeguer
Duc
+27.661
18
E. Bastianini
KTM
+40.179
19
S. Chantra
Hon
+41.693
Not Classified
DNF
M. Bezzecchi
Apr
DNF

MotoGP Top Speeds

Average is from best five speeds
Pos
Rider
Bike
Average
Top
1
Brad Binder
KTM
345.5
349.4
2
Franco Morbidelli
Duc
343.7
346.5
3
Pedro Acosta
KTM
345.5
346.5
4
Fabio Di Giannantonio
Duc
345.2
346.5
5
Francesco Bagnaia
Duc
345.1
346.5
6
Raul Fernandez
Apr
342.3
345.5
7
Ai Ogura
Apr
343.3
345.5
8
Joan Mir
Hon
343.6
344.6
9
Johann Zarco
Hon
340.7
343.6
10
Marc Marquez
Duc
342.6
343.6
11
Luca Marini
Hon
341.3
342.7
12
Maverick Viñales
KTM
342.3
342.7
13
Somkiat Chantra
Hon
340.6
342.7
14
Jack Miller
Yam
338.9
341.8
15
Fabio Quartararo
Yam
339.4
340.8
16
Fermin Aldeguer
Duc
339.4
340.8
17
Alex Rins
Yam
335.2
339.9
18
Enea Bastianini
KTM
336.7
339.0
19
Alex Marquez
Duc
337.6
339.0

MotoGP Championship Standings

Amended

Pos
Rider
Points
1
M. Marquez
74
2
A. Marquez
58
3
F. Bagnaia
43
4
F. Morbidelli
37
5
J. Zarco
25
6
F. Di Giannantonio
22
7
B. Binder
19
8
A. Ogura
17
9
M. Bezzecchi
14
10
P. Acosta
13
11
J. Mir
10
12
L. Marini
10
13
J. Miller
8
14
E. Bastianini
7
15
F. Quartararo
6
16
A. Rins
5
17
M. Viñales
4
18
F. Aldeguer
3
19
M. Oliveira
2
20
R. Fernandez
1
21
S. Chantra
0
22
L. Savadori
0

 


Moto2

Pure dominance. Jake Dixon (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team) was in a league of his own at the Gran Premio YPF Energía de Argentina as the British rider won the Moto2 Grand Prix by 3.5s, with Manuel Gonzalez (Liqui Moly Dynavolt Intact GP) picking up a valuable 20 points in P2. Meanwhile, Celestino Vietti (Team HDR Heidrun) pocketed his first top three of the season in P3.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2

Getting the best launch from the front row was Dixon as the British stole the holeshot from polesitter Gonzalez. Filip Salač (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team) was a keen starter, the Czech rider was an early P3 and then passed Gonzalez for P2 to make it a Marc VDS 1-2 at the front in the early laps.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2

Gonzalez got his revenge a couple of laps later though as Dixon began to get the hammer down. On Lap 5 the #96’s lead was 0.488s, 0.526s a lap later, as the top two started to set a superior pace. On Lap 8 of 21, Dixon’s lead rose above the one second barrier for the first time, and on Lap 12 the gap had climbed to a smidgen over 1.5s.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2

In the podium fight, Salač’s race ended on Lap 11 at Turn 5 after attempting to pass Marcos Ramirez (OnlyFans American Racing), with the incident costing the latter time in his attempts to chase third place Vietti and fourth place Aron Canet (Fantic Racing).

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2 – Jake Dixon

As the scrap for the final spot on the rostrum played out, there was nothing anyone could do about stopping Dixon from clinching a phenomenal victory in Argentina. Dixon was in cruise control to take a debut win on board a Boscoscuro, with Gonzalez picking up an important P2, 3.5s behind the race win. Vietti covered off Canet for P3 to bounce back well from his Thailand disappointment, a great ride from ninth on the grid from the Italian.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2 Podium

Canet settled for P4 in the end, important points for the #44, with Ramirez completing the top five. Darryn Binder (ITALJET Gresini Moto2) was sixth ahead of the impressive Alex Escrig (KLINT Forward Factory Team) in seventh, with Alonso Lopez (Team HDR Heidrun), star rookie Daniel Holgado (CFMOTO Inde Aspar Team) and Albert Arenas (ITALJET Gresini Moto2) completing the top 10 in Termas.

For Senna Agius, an instructive race weekend on a track that was new to him ended with a pleasing result. Despite constantly changing weather and track conditions, the Australian was able to steadily improve his pace. The 19-year-old then gradually worked his way up to thirteenth place in the race, which earned him another three championship points. He can now travel to Austin in fifth place of the championship, where he will be able to show his potential again in a fortnight’ time at the Circuit of the Americas.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2 – Senna Agius
Senna Agius – P13

“This result and this feeling are not what we are working towards this year. I struggled a lot in the race, even though I did my best, but we were really missing something very important. I tried to change my riding style, but I couldn’t build up any feeling from the start and couldn’t get into my rhythm. So, I got stuck behind some riders and couldn’t overtake. That’s a bit disappointing. We’ll take home a few points. But we have to reset and prepare well for Austin. Nevertheless, I would like to thank the team, because they worked tirelessly this weekend. We showed good speed, but something was missing today, we have to analyze that and think about it for America.”

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto2 – Senna Agius

Moto2 Results

Pos
Rider
Bike
Time/Gap
1
J. Dixon
Bos
35m48.793
2
M. Gonzalez
Kal
+3.525
3
C. Vietti
Bos
+10.098
4
A. Canet
Kal
+10.508
5
M. Ramirez
Kal
+11.009
6
D. Binder
Kal
+14.409
7
A. Escrig
For
+16.673
8
A. Lopez
Bos
+17.373
9
D. Holgado
Kal
+19.035
10
A. Arenas
Kal
+19.366
11
T. Arbolino
Bos
+20.584
12
B. Baltus
Kal
+21.435
13
S. Agius
Kal
+22.446
14
D. Öncü
Kal
+23.216
15
I. Guevara
Bos
+23.302
16
J. Roberts
Kal
+25.784
17
Z. Vd Goorbergh
Kal
+25.982
18
A. Sasaki
Kal
+29.225
19
I. Ortola
Bos
+29.320
20
D. Alonso
Kal
+29.518
21
J. Navarro
For
+34.770
22
O. Gutierrez
Bos
+43.909
23
Y. Kunii
Kal
+44.157
24
C. Veijer
Kal
+50.421
Not Classified
DNF
M. Aji
Kal
DNF
DNF
F. Salac
Bos
DNF
DNF
D. Moreira
Kal
DNF
DNF
A. Huertas
Kal
DNF

Moto2 Top Speeds

Pos
Rider
Bike
Average
Top
1
Tony Arbolino
Bos
288.7
289.5
2
Izan Guevara
Bos
287.3
289.5
3
Deniz Öncü
Kal
287.9
289.5
4
Albert Arenas
Kal
287.0
289.5
5
Ivan Ortola
Bos
286.6
288.9
6
Daniel Holgado
Kal
287.5
288.9
7
Celestino Vietti
Bos
286.2
287.5
8
Darryn Binder
Kal
284.1
287.5
9
David Alonso
Kal
285.4
287.5
10
Alex Escrig
For
285.6
286.9
11
Alonso Lopez
Bos
284.7
286.9
12
Senna Agius
Kal
285.8
286.9
13
Barry Baltus
Kal
283.8
286.2
14
Filip Salac
Bos
282.9
286.2
15
Ayumu Sasaki
Kal
283.9
286.2
16
Marcos Ramirez
Kal
283.1
285.6
17
Oscar Gutierrez
Bos
282.6
285.6
18
Zonta Vd Goorbergh
Kal
284.7
285.6
19
Collin Veijer
Kal
283.6
285.6
20
Joe Roberts
Kal
283.2
284.9
21
Yuki Kunii
Kal
283.6
284.9
22
Jorge Navarro
For
282.6
284.3
23
Aron Canet
Kal
282.6
284.3
24
Mario Aji
Kal
284.0
284.3
25
Diogo Moreira
Kal
281.1
283.6
26
Manuel Gonzalez
Kal
278.6
281.7
27
Jake Dixon
Bos
279.9
280.4

Moto2 Championship Standings

Pos
Rider
Points
1
M. Gonzalez
45
2
J. Dixon
34
3
A. Canet
33
4
M. Ramirez
22
5
S. Agius
19
6
C. Vietti
16
7
D. Holgado
15
8
B. Baltus
14
9
A. Lopez
14
10
D. Moreira
13
11
A. Arenas
11
12
D. Binder
10
13
A. Escrig
9
14
T. Arbolino
8
15
F. Salac
7
16
D. Öncü
6
17
A. Huertas
2
18
I. Guevara
1
19
M. Aji
1
20
J. Roberts
0
21
Z. Vd Goorbergh
0
22
A. Sasaki
0
23
I. Ortola
0
24
Y. Kunii
0
25
D. Alonso
0
26
C. Veijer
0
27
J. Navarro
0
28
O. Gutierrez
0

 


Moto3

Angel Piqueras (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI) is a race winner in 2025 after coming out on top in a titanic last lap battle at the Gran Premio YPF Energía de Argentina. The 2024 Rookie of the Year forced his way through on third place finisher Jose Antonio Rueda (Red Bull KTM Ajo) at the penultimate corner, with Adrian Fernandez (Leopard Racing) profiting from the late squabbling to earn P2 in Termas.

Ryusei Yamanaka (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI) grabbed the holeshot from the front row, but it was Alvaro Carpe (Red Bull KTM Ajo) who led at the end of the opening lap. David Almansa (Leopard Racing) took a turn leading in the early exchanges too, as a lead group of 11 formed at the front, with the chasing pack just shy of a second further down the road.

With two to go, Matteo Bertelle (LEVELUP MTA Team) was 0.4s clear at the front and on the last lap, he had edged it up to 0.5s. Could Piqueras and Rueda do anything about it? The advantage had disappeared halfway around the last lap as Piqueras made his move at Turn 7. Rueda followed his compatriot through at Turn 9 and then on the exit of Turn 11, Piqueras was wide and on the green.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto3

That cost the #36 the place to Rueda, but a lunge at Turn 12 followed. Piqueras carved past Rueda, and Fernandez managed to pick off the Thai GP race winner too to shadow Piqueras over the line as the latter clinched his first win of the season. Taiyo Furusato (Honda Team Asia) pocketed P4 ahead of Bertelle, but that result was flipped after Furusato exceeded track limits on the final lap.

MotoGP 2025 – Round Two – Argentina – Termas de Rio Hondo – Moto3 Podium

Almansa was a career-best P6, Luca Lunetta (SIC58 Squadra Corse) claimed P7 ahead of the recovering Joel Kelso (LEVELUP – MTA Team) as the Australian managed to bag P8 despite venturing through the Long Lap penalty lane twice.

Joel Kelso – P8

“Overall it was a positive race. With the two long laps we lost about six-seconds, but we were able to catch up to the leading group. In the last laps, I pushed to the maximum and set one of my fastest laps of the race, despite heavily worn tyres. The weekend was very encouraging, and we have shown that we can consistently fight at the front.”

Kiwi Cormac Buchanan displayed his maturing race craft and ultimately reaped the rewards of tyre conservation to pick off his opponents in the later stages of the showdown at Circuit Termas De Rio Hondo – a track he first experienced on Friday.

Cormac Buchanan
Cormac Buchanan – P14

“What a rollercoaster of a race. I’m stoked to finish 14th and bank another couple of points and, most importantly, the gap to first was only about 6 seconds so a massive improvement.  I got a solid start before getting t-boned by another rider late in the opening lap which sent me to the back of the field. It took a few laps to get a feeling with the bike and tires but once I got into my race pace I could start my charge back through the field. After working on my alone pace all weekend, I was able to use it to my advantage in the race, getting to the front of the group I was in, then bridging the gap in front to the next group and so on. I’m very happy as in the process I could match the pace of the lead riders while trying to get back into the race riding alone, something really positive. We managed to get onto the back of the front group but in the last three laps got distanced againwhich was a shame as we had really good late race pace which we didn’t get to use.

Cormac Buchanan

“I’m leaving Argentina happy with the consistent pace I showed but definitely wanting more. It’s all valuable experience gained and, along with my crew, we remain firmly focused on the plan we have to keep the trajectory rising. There’s no denying this championship is a huge step up from the junior ranks and facing circuits I’ve never seen, in countries I’ve never been to, for the opening four rounds certainly adds to the challenge but I’m absolutely loving it and so proud to fly the New Zealand flag back in MotoGP. It feels like I got these more through merit than Thailand which I’m very pleased about. Now it’s time to head back to Spain to reset, train and focus on America in two weeks’ time.”

Cormac Buchanan

Yamanaka and Stefano Nepa (SIC58 Squadra Corse) closed out the top 10, as home hero Valentin Perrone (Red Bull KTM Tech3) unfortunately crashed out of contention on the final lap after a solid weekend.

Moto3 Results

Pos
Rider
Bike
Time/Gap
1
A. Piqueras
KTM
32m31.938
2
A. Fernandez
Hon
+0.036
3
J. Rueda
KTM
+0.125
4
M. Bertelle
KTM
+0.373
5
T. Furusato
Hon
+0.236
6
D. Almansa
Hon
+1.354
7
L. Lunetta
Hon
+1.760
8
J. Kelso
KTM
+1.950
9
R. Yamanaka
KTM
+4.543
10
S. Nepa
Hon
+4.702
11
D. Foggia
KTM
+4.990
12
S. Ogden
KTM
+5.391
13
A. Cruces
KTM
+6.121
14
C. Buchanan
KTM
+6.739
15
R. Moodley
KTM
+6.875
16
J. Esteban
KTM
+7.822
17
E. O’Shea
Hon
+15.691
18
R. Rossi
Hon
+16.604
19
N. Carraro
Hon
+17.065
20
J. Rosenthaler
KTM
+21.940
21
T. Buasri
Hon
+22.276
Not Classified
DNF
A. Carpe
KTM
DNF
DNF
V. Perrone
KTM
DNF
DNF
D. Muñoz
KTM
DNF
DNF
M. Uriarte
Hon
DNF
DNF
G. Pini
KTM
DNF

Moto3 Top Speeds

Pos
Rider
Bike
Average
Top
1
Riccardo Rossi
Hon
242.0
245.2
2
Alvaro Carpe
KTM
241.4
244.8
3
Luca Lunetta
Hon
242.5
243.8
4
Ryusei Yamanaka
KTM
242.8
243.3
5
Joel Kelso
KTM
242.0
243.3
6
Nicola Carraro
Hon
241.6
242.4
7
Scott Ogden
KTM
241.0
242.4
8
Angel Piqueras
KTM
241.6
242.4
9
Valentin Perrone
KTM
241.3
242.4
10
Adrian Fernandez
Hon
241.5
241.9
11
Stefano Nepa
Hon
240.6
241.9
12
Jose Antonio Rueda
KTM
237.9
241.9
13
Eddie O’Shea
Hon
239.7
241.5
14
Matteo Bertelle
KTM
239.0
241.5
15
Taiyo Furusato
Hon
239.8
241.5
16
David Almansa
Hon
239.3
241.0
17
Tatchakorn Buasri
Hon
239.6
240.5
18
Jakob Rosenthaler
KTM
237.7
240.5
19
Guido Pini
KTM
239.6
240.5
20
Cormac Buchanan
KTM
238.8
240.1
21
Dennis Foggia
KTM
239.1
240.1
22
Joel Esteban
KTM
239.2
240.1
23
Adrián Cruces
KTM
239.1
239.6
24
Marcos Uriarte
Hon
238.6
239.6
25
Ruche Moodley
KTM
238.8
239.1
26
David Muñoz
KTM
230.7
231.2

Moto3 Championship Standings

Pos
Rider
Points
1
Jose Antonio Rueda
41
2
Adrian Fernandez
36
3
Angel Piqueras
29
4
Matteo Bertelle
24
5
Alvaro Carpe
20
6
Stefano Nepa
19
7
David Almansa
19
8
Dennis Foggia
15
9
Luca Lunetta
15
10
Taiyo Furusato
11
11
Riccardo Rossi
8
12
Joel Kelso
8
13
Joel Esteban
7
14
Ryusei Yamanaka
7
15
Ruche Moodley
6
16
Adrián Cruces
5
17
Scott Ogden
4
18
Marcos Uriarte
3
19
Cormac Buchanan
3
20
Eddie O’Shea
0
21
Nicola Carraro
0
22
Jakob Rosenthaler
0
23
Tatchakorn Buasri
0

 


2025 MotoGP Calendar

GP Date Location
1 Mar-02 Thai GP, Chang
2 Mar-16 Argentina GP, Termas De Rio Hondo
3 Mar-30 Americas GP, COTA
4 Apr-13 Qatar GP, Lusail
5 Apr-27 Spanish GP, Jerez
6 May-11 French GP, Le Mans
7 May-25 British GP, Silverstone
8 Jun-08 Aragon GP, Aragon
9 Jun-22 Italian GP, Mugello
10 Jun-29 Dutch GP, Assen
11 Jul-13 German GP, Sachsenring
12 Jul-20 Czech GP, Brno
13 Aug-17 Austrian GP, Spielberg
14 Aug-24 Hungarian GP, Balaton Park
15 Sep-07 Catalan GP, Catalunya
16 Sep-14 San Marino GP, Misano
17 Sep-28 Japanese GP, Motegi
18 Oct-05 Indonesian GP, Mandalika
19 Oct-19 Austraian GP, Phillip Island
20 Oct-26 Malayasian GP, Sepang
21 Nov-09 Portuguese GP, Portimao
22 Nov-16 Valencia GP, Valencia

Tags: MotoGP
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