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The Grand Prix Road-Racing World Championship was established in 1949 by the sport's governing body, the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM), and is the oldest motorsport World Championship. [1] There were five classes when the championship started in 1949; 500cc, 350cc, 250cc, 125cc and sidecar (600cc).
Points were awarded to the top 9 finishers on a 12–9–7–6–5–4–3–2–1 basis, similar to the system used in Superbike World Championship Superpole races. The grids for both the Sprint race and the Grand Prix race were set from qualifying, which retained its Q1–Q2 format.
MotoE gained World Championship status in 2023. The Riders' World Championship is awarded to the most successful rider over a season, as determined by a points system based on Grand Prix results. The constructors listed in this table are the bike that the world champions rode during that winning season and are not necessarily the winner of the ...
The Grand Prix Road-Racing World Championship was established in 1949 by the sport's governing body, the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM), and is the oldest motorsport World Championship. [1] The Teams' World Championship is awarded to the most successful team over a season, as determined by a points system based on Grand Prix ...
This is a list of points scoring systems used to determine the outcome of the annual FIM Motorcycle Grand Prix World Championship and Constructors' Championship since 1949. The championship titles are awarded to the competitor and constructor who accumulate the most championship points over the course of the championship season.
Marc Márquez is the youngest to win the championship; he was 20 years and 266 days old when he became champion in 2013. [6] Italian riders have won the most championships; seven riders have won a total of twenty-one championships. Riders from Great Britain have won the second most; six riders have won a total of seventeen championships.
1: 72 Marco Melandri Italy: 2002 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Marco Simoncelli Italy: 2008 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Hiroshi Aoyama Japan: 2009 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Toni Elías Spain: 2010 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Stefan Bradl Germany: 2011 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Pol Espargaró Spain: 2013 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Tito Rabat Spain: 2014 0 0 1 0 0 0 1: 72 Franco Morbidelli Italy: 2017 ...
In 1995 the team entered a three rider lineup with Mick Doohan, Àlex Crivillé and Shinichi Ito riding the Honda NSR500.Doohan won the World Championship for the second time in a row in Argentina, with one race left for the end of the season with seven race wins, Crivillé finished the season fourth with one race win while Ito finished fifth overall.