MotoGP 2024: Latest News, Results and Championship Standings
Stay up to date with the latest MotoGP news, race results, and rider standings as the premier class motorcycle world championship continues.

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 from across the globe compete aboard prototype machines capable of exceeding 350 km/h, making it one of the most technically demanding and physically grueling motorsports on the planet.
The championship spans multiple continents, with rounds held at iconic circuits in Europe, Asia, the Americas, and beyond. Each event draws enormous television audiences and tens of thousands of trackside fans.
Manufacturers and Teams Battling for Supremacy
The MotoGP grid features machinery from manufacturers including Ducati, Honda, Yamaha, Aprilia, and KTM. Factory squads compete alongside satellite teams that often run identical or near-identical machinery, creating a dense and competitive field.
Ducati has been a dominant force in recent seasons, with its Desmosedici GP machines proving fast in a wide range of conditions. Rival manufacturers continue to develop their own bikes in pursuit of closing the gap, investing heavily in aerodynamics, electronics, and engine performance.
Rider transfers and team changes regularly reshape the competitive landscape ahead of each new season. Contracts, test results, and pre-season rumors drive much of the off-track conversation among fans and analysts.
Race Format and Scoring
MotoGP weekends now include a Sprint race on Saturday in addition to the traditional Grand Prix on Sunday. The Sprint covers half the race distance and awards points on a separate scale, adding extra championship weight to every round.
Points from both the Sprint and the main race accumulate across the season toward the Riders Championship and Constructors Championship. The format change, introduced in 2023, has increased on-track action and tightened championship battles by giving riders more opportunities to score or to lose ground.
Pole position is decided by a two-part qualifying session. Q1 filters slower riders, with the fastest two advancing to join the top ten from practice directly in Q2, where the front-row grid positions are determined.
What to Watch in MotoGP
Beyond raw lap times, MotoGP rewards strategy. Tire selection, fuel management, and the decision of when to push and when to conserve are all critical factors that can change race outcomes.
Crashes and technical retirements are part of the sport. Riders accept significant physical risk each weekend, and the category has invested heavily in safety improvements including upgraded barriers, airbag-equipped leathers, and improved helmet standards.
The human element is equally compelling. Rivalries between teammates and across manufacturers, the pressure of championship points, and the contrast in riding styles between different riders give each race its own storyline.
Fans can follow MotoGP through the official series broadcaster in their region or through the MotoGP VideoPass streaming service, which provides live and on-demand coverage of every session across the full season.
With each round delivering close racing and unexpected results, the championship consistently produces some of the most exciting motorsport action of any two-wheeled or four-wheeled series running today.
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.






