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  • Trackhouse Keeps Raúl Fernández and Ai Ogura for 2026

    Trackhouse Keeps Raúl Fernández and Ai Ogura for 2026

    Trackhouse Aprilia revealed its 2026 MotoGP livery today in Milan, unveiling a revised blue-and-black color scheme with yellow accents and American flags on both sides of the satellite Aprilia RS-GP26. Riders Raúl Fernández and Ai Ogura attended the 3 pm CET (2 pm UK) launch. The team also confirmed a special Gulf livery that will be used at several Grands Prix, including Thailand, Brazil, Italy, Indonesia, and Malaysia. Trackhouse, which took over from CryptoDATA/RNF at the end of 2023, is based in North Carolina and had already run Gulf colors in 2025 without an official title sponsor.

    The team retained Fernández and Ogura for 2026. Fernández was the team’s breakthrough rider in 2025, delivering Trackhouse’s first premier-class victory at Phillip Island, a Sprint podium at Mandalika, and a near-miss second in Valencia, and he finished the year 10th in the championship. Ogura debuted with a fifth place at Buriram, saw a rookie campaign curtailed by injuries, and ended 2025 16th. The team finished seventh in the teams’ championship, ahead of factory Honda and Tech3 KTM.

    Trackhouse confirmed the RS-GP26 is set to make its first on-track appearance at the Sepang test, Feb 3–5, and that it will continue to receive factory-spec RS-GP machinery. The launch followed Aprilia’s disclosure of targeted 2026 updates to chassis, aerodynamics, and electronics, plus power-unit improvements carried out within engine-freeze limits. Coverage highlighted clear RS-GP development through 2025 and positioned established rivals — including Marc Marquez and factory Aprilia riders Marco Bezzecchi and Jorge Martin as key comparators for Trackhouse’s prospects. The Sepang test will give the team its first real chance to assess those updates as it heads into the final 1000cc/Michelin season with continuity in riders and equipment and a visible new livery.

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  • Dunlop Named Official Tire Partner for 2026 Bagger World Cup

    Dunlop Named Official Tire Partner for 2026 Bagger World Cup

    Dunlop has been named the official tire supplier and technical partner for the inaugural 2026 Harley‑Davidson Bagger World Cup, a new MotoGP support series. The appointment marks Dunlop’s return to the MotoGP paddock after supplying Moto2 and Moto3 until 2024, and builds on the company’s bagger‑racing work with the Harley‑Davidson x Dynojet program in MotoAmerica, which secured the 2025 riders’ and teams’ titles. Dunlop will supply dedicated racing tires and provide full technical and trackside support across the series.

    The World Cup will run six double‑header rounds (12 races) on selected MotoGP weekends: Circuit of the Americas (Mar 27–29), Mugello (May 29–31), Assen (Jun 26–28), Silverstone (Aug 7–9), MotorLand Aragón (Aug 28–30) and the Red Bull Ring (Sep 18–20). Dorna confirmed the championship in mid‑2025 following a strategic partnership between MotoGP and Harley‑Davidson in late 2024. The new series takes the calendar slot of the MotoE World Championship, which is shelved for 2026. No teams or riders have been named yet.

    Competitors will race identical Harley‑Davidson Road Glide machines prepared by the Harley‑Davidson x Dynojet Factory Race Team, powered by Screamin’ Eagle Milwaukee‑Eight 131 crate engines. The bikes are specified at roughly 280 kg, produce more than 200 hp, and can exceed 300 km/h. Dunlop will supply specific tire sizes (front 120/75 R17 and rear 200/65 R17), provide full on‑track tire service at each round, and administer a US$250,000 contingency prize fund with progressive payouts to the top ten finishers of each race plus a US$25,000 end‑of‑season champion bonus. Together, the factory‑prepared spec machines, integrated tire support, and substantial contingency program position the Bagger World Cup as a factory‑backed, high‑performance spec‑bike championship designed to showcase bagger racing on major international race weekends.

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  • Yamaha Unveils V4 M1 in Jakarta, Starts Technical Reset

    Yamaha Unveils V4 M1 in Jakarta, Starts Technical Reset

    Monster Energy Yamaha officially unveiled its 2026 M1 and team livery at a factory presentation in Jakarta on Jan. 21, 2026, streaming the launch live. The new livery keeps Yamaha’s blue-and-black identity but shifts to a predominantly black design with Yamaha blue and added white accents, including more blue around the front fairing. Most notably, the factory revealed a modern-era V4-powered M1, ending Yamaha’s inline-four era that began with MotoGP’s four-stroke regulations in 2002; the V4 project began roughly two years ago, and the motor and chassis took more than a year of development. A V4 prototype ran late in 2025 in wildcard outings for test rider Augusto Fernández, who scored a point at Misano and appeared at Sepang and Valencia.

    Yamaha and team officials presented the V4 as a technical reset intended to restore competitiveness, saying the new package should bring a return of “full” engine power and significant changes to handling and performance. They tempered immediate expectations, indicating the V4 represents a longer-term development direction whose full payoff may arrive over the coming seasons rather than instantly in 2026. Under the 2026 regulations, Yamaha sits in the most generous concession rank (D), giving it greater testing and development opportunities during the season. The factory plans to use the advantage with scheduled on-track checks at Sepang involving Fabio Quartararo and Alex Rins alongside Pramac riders Jack Miller and Toprak Razgatlıoğlu.

    The launch was framed around both technical ambition and urgent sporting needs. Yamaha has not won a premier-class race since mid-2022 and slipped toward the bottom of the manufacturers’ standings, prompting the change. Fabio Quartararo, retained for 2026, ended 2025 ninth with 201 points, including five poles, and Yamaha’s first podium in two years at Jerez. The Frenchman has stressed the need for a faster, more consistent package able to deliver regular top-3 and top-5 results after a string of setbacks, including a ride-height failure at Silverstone. Alex Rins, also kept by the factory, arrives after a difficult run through 2024–25. He finished 19th last year with a season-best seventh at Phillip Island, a far cry from his career best, which includes six MotoGP wins. Among them were the final inline-four premier-class victory (Valencia 2022) as well as a V4 win for Honda at COTA in 2023. With Quartararo’s contract situation and other rider options being discussed publicly, Yamaha positions 2026 as a development year for the V4 M1 aimed at rebuilding pace and reliability before a full return to consistent front-running results.

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  • Marc Márquez Nears Two-Year Renewal With Ducati After 2025 Title

    Marc Márquez Nears Two-Year Renewal With Ducati After 2025 Title

    Marc Márquez’s stay at Ducati has shifted from likely to near-certain after his dominant 2025 season and subsequent reporting. He finished 2025 with 11 Grand Prix wins, 15 Sprint wins, eight poles, and 15 podiums, securing the world title with rounds to spare. Multiple outlets and Ducati’s presentation in Madonna di Campiglio have pushed the odds of a two-year extension to roughly 90 percent, with team and paddock comments saying Ducati aims to formalize the deal before the 2026 season, preferably after the Sepang tests in Kuala Lumpur. However, a small chance remains that he could stay with Honda.

    Márquez himself has described a “9 out of 10” chance of renewal, and said he would not veto a teammate, before stating that staying with Ducati is his first option for 2027. He signalled he may delay a final decision while weighing professional and personal considerations, and confirmed that any move would be for two years. The “Ant of Cervera” noted that manufacturers are increasingly shaping rider placements, and said he is targeting a return to full fitness after the right-shoulder injury that ended his 2025 campaign.

    Ducati’s push to lock Márquez in is already affecting its current lineup. Francesco Bagnaia, who struggled in 2025 and finished fifth in the standings, is under pressure, with reports suggesting a likely salary cut. It is also rumored that he’s considering offers from Honda or Yamaha if Ducati changes its pairing. The factory is publicly evaluating candidates for the other 2027 seat, with Pedro Acosta frequently named as the frontrunner. Acosta has been described as “very keen” to join Ducati, and the factory is said to reciprocate. Claims that Acosta has already been signed for 2027 circulated after comments from Massimo Rivola, and outlets have also mentioned Nicolò Bulega as a conditional option should he succeed in World Superbike. An Acosta arrival would reshape Ducati’s long-term pairing and could create the manufacturer’s first all-Spanish lineup, as the team balances sporting needs and commercial pressures while defending the title.

    Those Ducati decisions are reverberating across the MotoGP market. Pundits and teams view Márquez’s signature as a pivotal trigger for a domino effect that could reconfigure seats involving riders such as Fabio Quartararo, Joan Mir, and Maverick Viñales. Marco Bezzecchi is widely expected to remain at Aprilia. Honda, having lost the prospect of Márquez’s return, is reported to be preparing an aggressive recruitment response described in the paddock as a “big, fat chequebook.” The Japanese outfit is said to be targeting names such as Pedro Acosta and David Alonso and, if necessary, promoting talent like Diogo Moreira from within. Journalists are also discussing retention or reshuffle possibilities for riders, including Luca Marini and Johann Zarco. With most top contracts expiring at the end of 2026 and new technical regulations due in 2027, teams and manufacturers are moving quickly; several commentators expect the two or three most sought-after 2027 deals to be settled well before the season opener in Buriram, setting the stage for an active silly season ahead of the 2026 season.

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  • Suppliers Meet on Jan 22 to Craft Real-Time Compression Test

    Suppliers Meet on Jan 22 to Craft Real-Time Compression Test

    Audi has urged the FIA to clarify how Formula 1 (F1) will police the new 16:1 compression‑ratio cap after claims rivals can exploit thermal expansion in conrods and other components. Reports suggest that some vehicles on‑track operating‑temperature compression could exceed the static ambient checks used for enforcement. Teams estimate that an undetected increase could be worth roughly 10–15 bhp (about 0.3–0.4s per lap).

    The rules set a 16:1 limit measured in ambient conditions after a reduction from 18:1, and critics say the ban on measuring compression during an engine’s working cycle creates an enforceability gap that teams could exploit.

    Audi COO Mattia Binotto raised the issue publicly at the team’s livery launch, and Audi, Ferrari, and Honda have written to the FIA. Audi technical director James Key has urged robust enforcement and likened the dispute to the 2009 double‑diffuser row.

    Red Bull Powertrains director Ben Hodgkinson dismissed the concern as “a lot of noise about nothing,” saying his team has pushed to the limit of the rules. Mercedes also downplayed any impropriety, while executives at Ferrari and Honda have voiced reservations.

    The FIA says it currently has no evidence of wrongdoing, points to the 2026 engine rules and the ADUO performance‑balancing framework, and says the matter is being addressed through technical forums. Binotto said he did not expect an immediate rule change and noted that race protests require demonstrable evidence of a specific breach.

    A meeting of the five 2026 power‑unit suppliers and manufacturers is scheduled for Thursday, January 22, to discuss developing a real‑time methodology for measuring compression ratio and how on‑track compression should be assessed. Teams stress that meaningful enforcement is essential because power‑unit homologation freezes designs for the season, and any unchecked advantage could become effectively unassailable.

    The dispute, therefore, centers on the interpretation and enforceability of the compression rules; the outcomes of the supplier and manufacturer talks, and the FIA’s ongoing technical work. These factors will determine whether measurement protocols or regulatory language must change.

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  • Ferrari Slump to Fourth After SF-25 Work Halt

    Ferrari Slump to Fourth After SF-25 Work Halt

    Former driver Ralf Schumacher warned that Ferrari’s reported plan to pursue separate development concepts for Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc would be “a disaster” and risk undermining the team. Schumacher and team principal Fred Vasseur have both pointed to a split over setup demand: Hamilton favors rear stability versus Leclerc preferring a snappier, more responsive front end.

    Ferrari halted work on last season’s SF‑25 to concentrate resources on the 2026 project. After that decision, the team fell from second to fourth in the Constructors’ standings during the final eight races, scoring less than half the points of championship winners McLaren in that run-in — a drop that increases pressure to get the SF‑26’s concept right before it reaches the track.

    Ferrari plans a January 23 launch in Maranello, with a Fiorano shakedown and final assembly the day before the reveal. The launch week has drawn extra scrutiny because Mercedes will reveal its car on January 22 and Red Bull has already shown its livery; there were reports Ferrari considered delaying its unveiling.

    Vasseur says the team will run a basic “Spec A” configuration in the closed Barcelona test — a fundamental setup focused on mileage and reliability — and postpone performance-focused upgrades to later tests, an approach he expects some rivals to adopt. Early public on-track comparisons will come at the Bahrain tests in February, where pace and reliability will be assessed under race-like conditions.

    Concerns about an alleged horsepower shortfall have intensified, with reports that the deficit could leave Ferrari in danger of missing Q3 at the Australian GP. The preseason narrative now blends technical (the driver-setup split), strategic (prioritising reliability and development focus), and regulatory elements (reports of a possible protest over an alleged Mercedes engine “loophole”). The opening tests and first races will be pivotal in determining whether Ferrari can reconcile driver demands and close the gap to its rivals.

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  • World of Outlaws Late Models Open at Volusia with $20K Final

    World of Outlaws Late Models Open at Volusia with $20K Final

    The World of Outlaws Late Model Series will open its 2026 season at Volusia Speedway Park as part of the DIRTcar Sunshine Nationals, continuing the series’ tradition of kicking off the year at Volusia since 2021. A practice night is scheduled for Jan. 21, followed by two 35-lap features on Jan. 22–23 that each pay $12,000 to the winner and a 50-lap, $20,000-to-win finale on Jan. 24. The card is presented under a combined “Late Model Palooza” banner that also includes Crate Racin’ USA DIRTcar Pro (604) Late Models and 602 Late Models, creating a multi-night program aimed at drawing a deep field and fans for high-stakes opening events.

    Bobby Pierce arrives 11 weeks after clinching his second World of Outlaws championship and coming off a recent Wild West Shootout victory, beginning a run at a third series title and his first Sunshine Nationals straw hat; he is widely regarded as the man to beat. Top challengers entered include Nick Hoffman, who finished 56 points behind Pierce in 2025, Tim McCreadie returning full-time with Briggs Transport in the same package he used to close 2025, and Ryan Gustin, the defending Sunshine Nationals winner who posted five WoO wins in 2025. The entry list also highlights notable returns and rookie storylines: Tyler Erb is back full-time for the first time since 2018, MD3 Rookie of the Year candidates Trey Mills, Eli Johnson, and Logan Zarin are expected to run, and rookie Daulton Wilson will compete with Big Frog/Viper Motorsports.

    Offseason personnel moves reshaped several teams heading into Volusia, including Ricky Thornton Jr. pairing with crew chief Anthony Burroughs at Koehler, Chris Madden joining Wells Motorsports, and Cory Hedgecock signing on with Billy Hicks Racing. Track changes are another variable: Volusia has been resurfaced with new gumbo clay and was evaluated in recent test sessions, a technical shift that could influence tire choices and car setups across the weekend. Taken together, the schedule, purses, revamped surface, and concentrated lineup of returnees and newcomers establish the DIRTcar Sunshine Nationals as a high-stakes, multi-night season opener for the 2026 World of Outlaws Late Model Series.

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  • Hendry County Adds World of Outlaws Swamp Cabbage 100

    Hendry County Adds World of Outlaws Swamp Cabbage 100

    Hendry County Tourism Development Council has partnered with the World of Outlaws Late Model Series presented by DIRTVision to add the World of Outlaws Swamp Cabbage 100 to Swamp Cabbage Weekend at Hendry County Motorsports Park in Clewiston, Florida. The series will make its first headlining stop in Hendry County with a two-night event Friday–Saturday, Feb. 20–21; the Friday winner will earn $12,000 and Saturday’s winner $20,000. Hendry County’s long-running Swamp Cabbage Festival will mark its 60th anniversary with programming Saturday–Sunday, Feb. 21–22.

    World of Outlaws drivers will appear in the Swamp Cabbage Festival parade in LaBelle at 10 a.m. on Feb. 21; the parade theme is “Denim and Diamonds.” Parade participation gives fans direct access to drivers and teams and brings the racing community into local traditions.

    Organizers scheduled the races across two nights to complement — not overlap — the festival’s main days, offering visitors multiple reasons to attend and positioning high-profile dirt racing alongside a longstanding local celebration.

    Hendry County commissioner and Tourism Development Council chair Ramon Iglesias said the collaboration is intended to showcase Hendry County “on a national stage.” The Tourism Development Council and race organizers are promoting the combined package of races and festival activities with regional attractions, including Lake Okeechobee boat tours, area parks, and the Clewiston Museum, to encourage longer stays and broaden the event’s appeal.

    By aligning a milestone anniversary festival with a nationally recognized racing brand and increasing purse sizes, the partnership aims to draw visitors beyond the immediate racing audience and boost on-site entertainment for residents and visitors.

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  • Red Bull Powertrains-Ford Engine Debuts on VCARB03 at Imola

    Red Bull Powertrains-Ford Engine Debuts on VCARB03 at Imola

    Racing Bulls ran their new VCARB03 on track at Imola on a limited demonstration/filming day. The team completed a short, wet-weather shakedown of roughly 15 km (three laps under Demonstration Event rules), running full-wet demonstration tyres; Liam Lawson was reported to have driven while rookie Arvid Lindblad observed. Morning teething issues were reported, and photographers quickly published the first images and spy shots of the actual race chassis following last week’s Detroit livery reveal that used showcars. The chassis name VCARB03 reflects the team’s Visa and Cash App sponsorship, and the outing also marked the first real-world appearance of the new Red Bull Powertrains–Ford engine.

    Engineers used the Imola session for system checks, installation procedures, and initial data collection rather than any performance evaluation, and the team released few technical or lap-time details. Published images highlighted several styling and packaging features — a trapezoidal airbox, a nose that dives close to the front wing, narrow sidepod inlets, and pushrod front and rear suspension — which Racing Bulls said would carry forward to the Barcelona tests.

    Limited filming rules constrained mileage and compound choices, so the focus was on reliability, installation checks, and producing promotional material rather than setup work. The team planned to return to Imola the following day for a longer promotional/filming session that could total about 200 km, with Lawson and Lindblad expected to share driving duties to build early mileage. The Imola outings were presented as a prelude to the official Barcelona pre-season test window, Jan. 26–30, and further preparation ahead of the competitive season.

    Team boss Alan Permane has warned of frenetic development early in the new rules cycle; Racing Bulls is balancing an aggressive update plan with parts-production timelines as it moves from these demonstration runs into full testing and race preparation after finishing sixth in last season’s Constructors’ Championship.

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