MotoGP 2024: Latest News, Results and Championship Updates
Stay current with MotoGP racing developments, including championship standings, rider moves, and technical updates shaping the premier class paddock.

MotoGP Remains the Pinnacle of Motorcycle Racing
MotoGP continues to attract global attention as the premier class of Grand Prix motorcycle racing. Sanctioned by the FIM and promoted by Dorna Sports, the series brings together the world's fastest production-derived prototype machines and the riders skilled enough to push them to their limits every race weekend.
The championship runs across multiple continents, with rounds held at iconic circuits in Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Each event draws large on-site crowds and a television audience that spans more than 200 countries, making MotoGP one of the most-watched motorsport properties on the planet.
How the Championship Works
Points are awarded across three classes that share the Grand Prix weekend: MotoGP, Moto2, and Moto3. In the premier MotoGP class, the race winner collects 25 points, with a sliding scale down to 15th place. A Sprint race, introduced in recent seasons, runs on Saturdays and awards half points, adding an extra layer of strategic complexity for riders and teams alike.
Manufacturers including Honda, Yamaha, Ducati, Aprilia, and KTM each develop their own prototype machinery, and the gap between them at any given round can be razor-thin. Setup decisions made during Friday practice sessions often determine who ends up fighting for the podium on Sunday.
Riders and Team Dynamics Drive the Story
Beyond lap times and race results, MotoGP is shaped by the decisions made in the paddock. Rider contracts, factory team selections, and satellite team agreements are negotiated throughout the season, sometimes spilling into public view and reshaping the competitive order for years ahead.
Rookie riders stepping up from Moto2 face a steep learning curve. The power and aerodynamic downforce of a modern MotoGP bike bear little resemblance to what they raced in the feeder series, and adapting quickly can define a career.
Veteran riders, by contrast, bring experience of reading tyre degradation and managing race pace, skills that often matter more than raw one-lap speed when the championship reaches its final rounds.
Following MotoGP Through the Season
Fans can track every session through the official MotoGP app and the series website, which publish live timing data, classification updates, and post-race analysis. Broadcast partners carry full race coverage in most major markets, and highlights packages circulate widely on social platforms shortly after each flag falls.
The championship calendar typically spans from March through November, giving teams and riders little downtime before testing for the following season begins.
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.






