MotoGP 2024: Latest News, Results and Championship Standings
Stay up to date with the latest MotoGP news, race results, rider updates and championship standings from the 2024 premier class season.

MotoGP Remains the Pinnacle of Motorcycle Racing
MotoGP is the top tier of Grand Prix motorcycle road racing, sanctioned by the FIM. Teams and riders compete across multiple continents each season, chasing points at circuits that range from tight street-style layouts to sweeping permanent tracks. The premier class runs prototype machines capped at 1000cc, and the technical battle between manufacturers is as intense as the racing itself.
The series attracts factory entries from Ducati, Honda, Yamaha, Aprilia, and KTM, each developing their own chassis and engine packages. Satellite teams run closely related machinery, giving a wider grid of riders a chance to compete at the highest level.
How the Season and Points System Work
A standard MotoGP race weekend runs across three days. Practice sessions on Friday give riders data. Qualifying on Saturday sets the grid. Then comes the Sprint race on Saturday afternoon, a shorter format introduced in 2023 that awards half points, followed by the full Grand Prix on Sunday.
Points are awarded to the top fifteen finishers in the Grand Prix and the top nine in the Sprint. The winner of a full Grand Prix collects 25 points. Second place earns 20, third earns 16, and the scale drops from there. Over a season spanning more than 20 rounds, small margins in points accumulate into championship battles that can go down to the final race.
Rider injuries play an outsized role in how standings shift. A single crash can cost a title contender dozens of points and hand rivals the momentum they need.
The Manufacturer Battle
Ducati has built a period of dominance in recent seasons, with its Desmosedici machine proving fast and consistent in the hands of multiple riders across factory and satellite programs. That strength in numbers creates a strategic dimension: when several Ducati-mounted riders are competitive, points can be spread across the grid in ways that complicate rivals' title runs.
Honda and Yamaha, traditional powers in the sport, have faced a more difficult stretch as they work to close the technical gap. Both manufacturers have retained experienced rosters and continue development programs aimed at returning to the front. Aprilia and KTM have emerged as genuine midfield threats capable of podiums and, on the right weekend, victories.
The technical regulations that govern MotoGP, including concession rules that give struggling manufacturers extra testing time and softer restrictions, are designed to keep the competition from becoming entirely one-sided over the long term.
What to Watch in MotoGP
For casual viewers and committed fans alike, MotoGP offers several storylines worth tracking through any season.
Championship leader changes create the clearest narrative thread. Who holds the red plate going into the second half of a season, and who is closing the gap, frames almost every race weekend broadcast.
Debut riders transitioning from Moto2 bring fresh energy and occasional upsets. Veterans managing older machinery or recovering from injury add a layer of human drama that statistics alone do not capture.
The tire strategies teams choose, the weather conditions that flip form at circuits where grip levels shift dramatically between sessions, and the team radio exchanges that occasionally surface in post-race coverage all give MotoGP texture beyond lap times.
Streaming and broadcast deals have expanded access to the sport globally. The official MotoGP VideoPass service provides live and on-demand coverage, and regional broadcasters carry the races in most major markets.
For anyone following motorcycle racing, MotoGP remains the definitive benchmark. The combination of rider skill, engineering investment, and circuit variety produces a competition that rewards close attention across a full calendar year.
MotoGP Correspondent
Luca Moretti is 21.news's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.






