MotoGP 2024: Latest News, Results and Championship Standings
Stay up to date with the latest MotoGP news, race results, rider updates and championship standings as the 2024 season unfolds across the globe.

MotoGP Remains One of Motorsport's Most Competitive Championships
MotoGP continues to draw massive global audiences as the premier class of motorcycle road racing. The championship spans multiple continents, with rounds held at iconic circuits from Spain and Italy to Indonesia, Japan and the Americas. Each race weekend combines sprint races with full Grand Prix events, keeping championship battles tight and unpredictable deep into the season.
The grid features machinery from Ducati, Honda, Yamaha, Aprilia and KTM, with each manufacturer fielding factory and satellite teams. The competition between these brands shapes not just race results but the technical direction of the sport as a whole.
Riders and Teams Battling for Points at Every Round
The nature of the current MotoGP points system means no rider can afford a bad run of results. Sprint races on Saturdays award half points compared to Sunday's Grand Prix, but those points accumulate quickly. A podium finish on Saturday followed by a retirement on Sunday can shift the championship standings significantly.
Factory Ducati has been a dominant force in recent seasons, with its Desmosedici GP consistently praised for outright speed and aerodynamic development. Rival manufacturers have responded with their own upgrades, making the midfield closer than it has been for years.
Rider movement between teams is a constant thread running through the MotoGP news cycle. Contract negotiations, injury replacements and concession rules for struggling manufacturers all feed into a paddock that rarely sits still between race weekends.
What to Watch for in Upcoming MotoGP Rounds
With the calendar stretching into the final quarter of the year, championship contenders face a demanding run of back-to-back flyaway rounds. These events test not just rider fitness but team logistics, as freight schedules and time zone changes put pressure on every member of a Grand Prix operation.
Tyre management at different circuits remains one of the key differentiators between title contenders and the rest of the field. Michelin supplies control tyres to the entire grid, but how each rider and team extracts performance from the same rubber varies considerably. Setup choices made in Friday practice often determine whether a bike is genuinely competitive or simply fast in short bursts.
Safety has also been a continuing focus for MotoGP organisers and the FIM. Improvements to circuit runoff areas, airbag suit technology and track surface standards have all advanced in recent years, though racing at these speeds carries inherent risk that the sport continues to manage carefully.
Following MotoGP: How Fans Can Stay Updated
MotoGP's broadcast and digital footprint has grown considerably. The official MotoGP app and website carry live timing, video highlights and technical analysis. Broadcast rights vary by country, with dedicated MotoGP subscription services available in markets where traditional broadcasters do not carry full coverage.
Social media plays a growing role in how the sport communicates with younger audiences. Teams and riders maintain active profiles, offering behind-the-scenes content that supplements the on-track action. This direct channel between the paddock and fans has changed the texture of MotoGP coverage, making it more immediate and personal than it was a decade ago.
For fans attending rounds in person, the atmosphere at circuits such as Mugello, Assen and Phillip Island remains difficult to match in any other motorsport category. The sound, speed and proximity to the machines create an experience that television and streaming cannot fully replicate.
As the season moves toward its conclusion, every qualifying session, every sprint result and every mechanical retirement carries extra weight. The championship is decided by the riders and teams who maintain consistency under pressure when the margin for error is smallest.
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.






