Priller
Well-known member
I've been whinging about a lack of competitiveness for three years. I haven't watched a minute live this season, though I did watch the highlights from Le Mans.Is it just me or has the Interest in Motogp decreased a lot this season. Typically there would be a lot of discussions post races.
As much as I like MotoGP , even I am finding this season so predictable.
I really wish we could go back to "Alien" era. Where at any given race there would be 5-6 riders that could win. Even watching the mid pack fighting for points was exciting.
This is turning into Formula 1 for me . Hardly any passing or fighting for positions. Same rider winning everything by huge margins. Same 2,3 positions.
When a rider tells the fans I hope I gave you a good race at the end. It seems even they know it has become too predictable.
Add up the following:
- bad aero regs that allow for far too much dirty air behind a bike, mess with tires, make passing difficult and totally change handling whether leading or following
- poor tire development rules that are out of sync with the badly written aero regs
- ridiculous loophole devices like ride height adjustment that can't be banned due to requiring unanimous agreement from the manufacturers (including the one manufacturer that has specialized in developing said loophole devices and benefits massively from them)
- one utterly dominant manufacturer which also has the most bikes on the grid, allowing a huge amount of data aggregating
- the greatest racer of all time on said dominant bike
- total changes to the rule set coming in 2027 and a development pause in 2026 that means everyone not called Ducati isn't wasting time trying to fix their flawed bikes for the current gen, but are focused on the next gen
- all the competition either being tiny (Aprilia), verging on bankruptcy (KTM) or questioning the value of the spend required to be competitive due to changing sales dynamics that involve selling a lot fewer big bikes (Honda, Yamaha)
- an out-of-touch organiser in Dorna that has totally lost their grip on the series and manages races poorly
All of it totals one of the least interesting seasons since the days of Agostini's factory MV dominating a bunch of privateers. Full credit to the Marquez's and Ducati for maximizing their advantage, but it's on Dorna for letting it get this out of hand. It's not like this is a blip, it's been the Ducati Cup for a few years now.
Based on the above, I'd expect next year will be more of the same, and then I'm praying that 2027 brings a shuffling of the deck. If it's more Ducati dominance, I fear for the health of the series. I'm sure Liberty Media will do a better job than Dorna of getting ahead of the issues, or so I hope. There's a long history of car folks walking into the motorcycle world thinking they know better, only to find out things aren't 1:1.
I think the biggest risk is that the Japanese factories simply aren't willing to invest what Ducati is, and it continues down the same path of single-make dominance.
On a similar tip, I wonder about the long-term viability of WSBK considering the whole reason for the series is long gone and hardly anyone is buying the associated street bikes anymore...