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Mazzali Racing Team MV Agusta: MV Agusta 74 Andrea Mazzali: 10 Inoterm Racing Team Yamaha: Yamaha YZF-R1: 77 Berto Camlek: 3, 11 Szkopek Agip RT Suzuki: Suzuki GSX-R1000: 94 PaweÅ‚ Szkopek: 10–11 Yamaha Castrol Poland Yamaha: Yamaha YZF-R1: 95 Andrzej Pawelec: 11 Jentin Racing Yamaha: Yamaha YZF-R1: 100 James Ellison: 6, 8 Guandalini Ducati ...
In late 2002 AMA Pro Racing, the promoter in charge of the AMA Superbike Championship at the time decided to open up the series to 1000cc production bikes. Their plan called for allowing near-stock 1000cc machines to compete against the then-current state of the art 750cc Superbikes that were the incumbent series competition machines.
In 2009, Yamaha dominated MotoGP with Rossi winning the title and Lorenzo finishing second. The pair won 12 out of the 17 races, and Yamaha won the Constructors' Championship. After seven years with Yamaha, Rossi left the team to compete with Ducati for the 2011 and 2012 seasons.
The 2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season was the 56th F.I.M. Road racing World Championship season. The season consisted of 16 races, beginning with the South African motorcycle Grand Prix on 18 April 2004 and ending with the Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix on 31 October.
James Desmond Ellison (born 19 September 1980) is an English motorcycle racer.After two seasons (2017 with McCams and 2018 with Tag) on a Yamaha R1, [1] Ellison expected to retire at the end of 2018, but in 2019 again competed in the British Superbike Championship series aboard a BMW S1000RR, [2] before parting company with his team half-way through the season in August. [3]
World Championship Motorsports (WCM) was a Grand Prix motorcycle racing team formed in 1992 by American Bob MacLean and British Peter Clifford (MotoGP). The team ran Yamaha motorcycles from 1997 to 2002 and was called Red Bull Yamaha WCM.
Kawasaki Racing Team: Kawasaki: 30 +1:15.795 11 1: 16 99 Jeremy McWilliams: MS Aprilia Racing Aprilia: 30 +1:26.485 18 17 10 Kenny Roberts Jr. Team Suzuki MotoGP Suzuki: 29 +1 lap 12 18 9 Nobuatsu Aoki: Proton Team KR Proton KR: 29 +1 lap 21 19 66 Alex Hofmann: Kawasaki Racing Team Kawasaki: 29 +1 lap 20 20 84 Michel Fabrizio: WCM Harris WCM ...
The 2004 German motorcycle Grand Prix was the eighth round of the 2004 MotoGP Championship. It took place on the weekend of 16–18 July 2004 at the Sachsenring . This would prove to be Max Biaggi's final victory in the premier class.