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This is a list of circuits which have hosted a World Championship race from 1949 to 2024.. In total, 74 different circuits have hosted World Championship races. The first to do so was the Snaefell Mountain Course, home of the Isle of Man TT, which also has the distinction, at 60.718 km (37.728 mi) long, of being the longest track which hosted a World Championship race.
The following is a complete list of Grands Prix which have been a part of the Grand Prix motorcycle racing championship season since its inception in 1949. As of the 2024 Solidarity Grand Prix , 1,034 World Championship Grands Prix have been held over 76 seasons in 30 countries and under 55 race titles at 74 racing circuits.
Grand Prix motorcycle racing is the highest class of motorcycle road racing events held on road circuits sanctioned by the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM). Independent motorcycle racing events have been held since the start of the twentieth century [ 1 ] and large national events were often given the title Grand Prix. [ 2 ]
French Grand Prix (Intermittently 1971–1990, 2018–2019, 2021–2022) FIA Motorsport Games (2022) WTCC Race of France (2014–2016) Grand Prix motorcycle racing French motorcycle Grand Prix (Intermittently, 1973–1999) FIA GT (2006, 2009) Website: https://www.circuitpaulricard.com: Current layout with Mistral chicane (1C-V2) (2005–present ...
Pages in category "Grand Prix motorcycle circuits" The following 76 pages are in this category, out of 76 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
The track is named after Spanish, two-time world champion Grand Prix motorcycle racer Ricardo Tormo (1952–1998), who died in 1998 of leukemia. It has a capacity of 165,000 and a main straight of 0.876 km (0.544 mi).
1977 Czechoslovak motorcycle Grand Prix: Sidecar (B2A) 3:50.960: Werner Schwärzel: Aro sidecar: 1977 Czechoslovak motorcycle Grand Prix: 125cc: 4:00.010 [43] Guy Bertin: Motobécane 125: 1979 Czechoslovak motorcycle Grand Prix: 50cc: 4:48.650: Ricardo Tormo: Bultaco TSS 50: 1978 Czechoslovak motorcycle Grand Prix: 3rd Road Circuit: 13.941 km ...
From 1969 to 1977, the venue hosted the Yugoslavian Grand Prix as part of the Grand Prix motorcycle racing world championship. [3] When Godfrey Nash rode a Norton Manx to victory at the 1969 Yugoslavian Grand Prix at Opatija, it marked the last victory for a single-cylinder machine in a 500cc Grand Prix.