India revs up for maiden MotoGP at circuit where F1 stalled

Motorists ride past billboard of India's maiden MotoGP displayed along busy road on the outskirts of New Delhi. India hosts its maiden MotoGP. (AFP)
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Updated 20 September 2023
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India revs up for maiden MotoGP at circuit where F1 stalled

  • India is a critical market for the growth of MotoGP, Dorna’s chief sporting officer Carlos Ezpeleta said
  • India hosted F1 for three years in 2011-2013 but lost the rights with two years still left on the contract over financial and bureaucratic setbacks

GREATER NOIDA, India: India hosts its maiden MotoGP on Sunday as the premier motorcycling championship looks to tap a potentially lucrative new fan base and succeed on a track where Formula One stalled.

Two-wheelers are India’s most popular means of petrol-powered transport with more than half of all households owning at least one motorbike or scooter, compared to just eight percent with cars.

Sales figures show an increasing appetite for high-end, high-octane motorbikes, and organizers are banking on the trend to fuel interest in the sport in the world’s most populous country.

“We have more than a million bikes in the 250cc-plus category selling every year in India, which means more than a million people are buying bikes for more than just transportation,” Vaibhav Sinha, chief executive of Indian MotoGP promoters Fairstreet Sports, told AFP.

“They are using it for thrills, adventure, sports and leisure riding,” he added.

“We intend to tap this potential to make biking a very big sport in our country.”

But the lead-up to the race has seen concerns raised about the safety of the Buddh International Circuit, with particular fears about walls that are too close to the asphalt.

“In India all the riders together are going to walk the track before we get on the bike to understand the situation,” Spanish rider Aleix Espargaro was reported as saying.

Some MotoGP personnel and riders also had problems getting visas for India, but organizers on Tuesday blamed a technical glitch and said it was on the way to being resolved.

Fairstreet Sports signed a seven-year deal with MotoGP’s commercial rights holder Dorna Sports to hold a race in India, which has the world’s fifth-biggest economy.

India is a critical market for the growth of MotoGP, Dorna’s chief sporting officer Carlos Ezpeleta said.

“For us breaking into India, which is a whole continent in itself, is very important,” he told Sportstar magazine.

“It’s the biggest two-wheeler market in the world and very important for us, our stakeholders and the manufacturers.”

The Buddh circuit on the outskirts of New Delhi was previously home to the Indian leg of Formula One.

India hosted F1 for three years in 2011-2013 but lost the rights with two years still left on the contract over financial and bureaucratic setbacks.

Back then the government refused to recognize Formula One as a sport, meaning the organizers needed to pay tax and duties on everything connected with the race.

Declining attendances also hurt the event.

MotoGP’s local backers are hopeful that they will be able to steer clear of the pitfalls that doomed India’s last international motorsport fixture.

“F1 was a great learning experience for us as well,” said Sinha.

“We spent a couple of years doing compliance studies and ensuring we don’t run into similar problems because to uphold the law of the land is of utmost importance.”

Organizers expect tens of thousands of people to flock to the circuit for the sound of roaring engines and burning rubber.

The action starts on Friday with practice, followed by practice, qualifying and a sprint race on Saturday, with the race on Sunday.

India is the 13th stop of 20 on this year’s MotoGP calendar.

In the previous race, in San Marino, Spaniard Jorge Martin cruised to victory for Ducati satellite team Pramac to close the gap on reigning world champion Francesco Bagnaia of Italy.

Bagnaia, on a factory Ducati, leads the championship from Martin by 36 points. There are 25 points for a victory.


Formula One enters new era with excitement and uncertainty

Updated 02 March 2026
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Formula One enters new era with excitement and uncertainty

LONDON: New cars, new power and new teams for a new era — Formula One starts afresh in Australia this week with a heady mix of excitement, uncertainty and apprehension. Never shy of underselling itself, the high-octane sport appears on the money in billing the 2026 season as the biggest shakeup it has ever seen.

For the first time in decades the chassis and power unit regulations have changed at the same time, a massive challenge even for the biggest teams, with near parity between the electrical and combustion engine elements. There is also 100 percent advanced sustainable fuel, Madrid’s debut on the 24-race calendar, a new champion in McLaren’s Lando Norris and one of the youngest drivers ever to start a grand prix in Racing Bulls’ British 18-year-old rookie Arvid ‌Lindblad.

The last time ‌there was such a significant engine reset, in 2014, Mercedes went on ‌a record run of dominance but this time the campaign could be much more open.

How will the fans respond?

The list of questions is long.

Will the fans like what is on offer? How has the pecking order changed? Can Ferrari finally end their wait of nearly two decades for a drivers’ title? And if they are contenders, could Lewis Hamilton win a record eighth championship? Will Mercedes’ George Russell live up to his pre-season billing as title favorite? Maybe Charles Leclerc’s time has come at Ferrari, or will Red Bull’s Max Verstappen bounce back with a fifth championship after his run of four in a row ‌ended? Can Norris become only the second Briton to successfully defend ‌a title after Hamilton, or will Australian teammate Oscar Piastri gain the upper hand? How will French youngster ‌Isack Hadjar fare as Verstappen’s new teammate in the hottest of hot seats?

The jury is out ‌on all of the above, with pre-season testing in Bahrain — whose race in April now faces uncertainty following US and Israeli attacks on Iran — hinting at a familiar top four amid tantalising suspicions of “sandbagging” — hiding true performance. Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has suggested Red Bull, racing with their own powertrain for the first time, had set a ‌benchmark.

Red Bull have dismissed that idea and said they were possibly only fourth. Champions McLaren, meanwhile, pointed the finger at Mercedes and Ferrari as ⁠a step ahead of the ⁠rest and said they would be on the defensive, initially at least. Further back, Renault-owned Alpine will be starting over and hoping for a big leap from last overall after replacing their French-made engines with Mercedes units. Swiss-based Sauber are now racing as the Audi factory outfit while the grid has expanded to 11 teams following the arrival of Cadillac, already pushing the promotional bar higher with a livery launch via an expensive commercial aired during the Super Bowl. They will also be bringing back two highly experienced winning names from the recent past in Mexican Sergio Perez, Verstappen’s former teammate, and Finland’s Valtteri Bottas, who once raced alongside Hamilton at Mercedes. Cadillac might be expected to finish last but the Ferrari engine looks strong while Aston Martin, starting a new partnership with Honda and with Adrian Newey as designer and team principal, have struggled to get laps in testing due to reliability issues.

Melbourne will provide early pointers but a true pattern will take longer to emerge in what also promises to be a ferocious development race.