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MotoGP 2025: Latest News, Results and Championship Updates

Stay up to date with MotoGP in 2025. From race results to championship standings, here is what is happening across the premier class paddock.

MotoGP Correspondent · · 3 min read
MotoGP prototype motorcycles racing closely together on a circuit with grandstands in the background
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MotoGP Remains the Pinnacle of Motorcycle Racing

MotoGP continues to draw global audiences as the premier class of Grand Prix motorcycle racing. The series pits the world's fastest production-prototype machines against each other on circuits spanning Europe, Asia, the Americas and beyond. Factory squads from Ducati, Honda, Yamaha, Aprilia, KTM and others compete across a packed calendar, making the championship one of the most competitive in motorsport.

The 2025 season has kept fans engaged with close battles at the front of the grid. Lap records, technical developments and rider transfers have all shaped the conversation heading into each new race weekend. With sprint races now a fixture on every Grand Prix weekend, the points available have multiplied and the margin for error has narrowed significantly.

Race Weekends and the Sprint Format

Every Grand Prix weekend under the current format includes a sprint race on Saturday and a full-distance Grand Prix on Sunday. The sprint covers roughly half the race distance and awards points down to ninth place. The main race awards points down to fifteenth.

This structure means riders now face two separate competitive sessions that count toward the championship. A strong Saturday can cushion a difficult Sunday, and vice versa. Teams have adjusted their setup strategies to find machines that perform consistently across both race lengths rather than optimizing purely for one.

Tyre management, braking consistency and electronics mapping all play a role across the extended race weekend. Engineers and riders work through practice sessions and qualifying to find a balance that holds up when the lights go out on both Saturday and Sunday.

The Constructors and Teams Fighting for Points

Ducati has in recent seasons established itself as the dominant constructor in MotoGP, with its Desmosedici GP machines filling multiple positions on the grid through the factory team and satellite squads. However, rival manufacturers have continued development programs aimed at closing the gap.

Aprilia has demonstrated genuine race-winning pace and poses a serious threat on circuits that suit its RS-GP. KTM, despite organizational challenges at the corporate level, has retained competitive riders and continues to develop the RC16. Honda and Yamaha, both historically strong brands in Grand Prix racing, have been working through technical rebuilds to return their inline-four configurations to the front.

Satellite teams also play a meaningful role. Riders on customer machinery have claimed podiums and, in some cases, race wins, underlining how competitive the current generation of MotoGP bikes has become.

What to Watch as the Season Continues

Several storylines are worth following across the remainder of the 2025 campaign. Championship momentum can shift quickly given the dual-race weekend format. A rider who builds a lead through consistent sprint and race points can see that buffer eroded in a single difficult round.

Rider health is always a factor. MotoGP racing involves high physical demands and the risk of injury is present at every circuit. When a frontrunner misses even a single round, the points table can shift dramatically in favor of competitors who stay fit and on the bike.

Technical regulations and concession rules also influence how teams approach development. Manufacturers with fewer wins in recent seasons gain additional testing and engine allocation allowances, which can help them close the performance gap over a full season.

Finally, the rider market never fully closes. Announcements about 2026 contracts and team lineups tend to surface well before the season ends, and those conversations can affect how aggressively certain riders race knowing their futures are or are not secured.

MotoGP's calendar takes in iconic venues including Mugello, the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Phillip Island and the Autodromo Termas de Rio Hondo. Each circuit has its own character, rewarding different strengths in both rider and machine. The variety across the calendar is part of what makes the championship so unpredictable from one round to the next.

Luca Moretti

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.

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