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  • Buddy Kofoid Re-signs with Roth to Chase 2026 Title

    Buddy Kofoid Re-signs with Roth to Chase 2026 Title

    Michael “Buddy” Kofoid, 24, has re-signed with Roth Motorsports for his third consecutive World of Outlaws NOS Energy Drink Sprint Car Series season, with a firm focus on winning the 2026 series championship. Kofoid, who joined Dennis and Teresa Roth’s operation in mid-2023, said the continuity with the team is a key part of the title push and conveyed confidence that the car and his form are in a great place heading into the year.

    Kofoid built momentum with a Kevin Gobrecht Rookie of the Year campaign in 2024 that produced seven wins and a fourth-place points finish. He followed it up with a career-best 2025 season featuring 12 victories, including two six-figure payouts at Huset’s Speedway to finish as the series runner-up. His 12 wins in 2025 raised his World of Outlaws career total to 20, making him Roth Motorsports’ second-winningest driver behind team legend Danny Lasoski, who has 41 victories.

    With the reigning champion David Gravel identified as the driver to beat, Kofoid has explicitly set his sights on delivering Roth Motorsports its first series title. The team will open the 2026 campaign Feb. 4–7 at Volusia Speedway Park during the Federated Auto Parts DIRTcar Nationals in Barberville, Florida, beginning the season-long chase that Kofoid and Roth Motorsports hope will culminate in a championship.

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  • Drive to Survive S8 Chronicles Norris' 2025 Title Win

    Drive to Survive S8 Chronicles Norris’ 2025 Title Win

    Netflix announced today that Season 8 of Drive to Survive will be released on February 27, arriving on Netflix alongside the previous seven seasons.

    Netflix and the producers say Season 8 will offer behind-the-scenes access to the major storylines that shaped the 2025 F1 season. The latest installment will cover Lando Norris’s maiden drivers’ championship and McLaren’s constructors’ title, after Norris edged Max Verstappen by two points in a title fight that went down to the final race. The series will also address Lewis Hamilton’s first year at Ferrari, the dismissal of Christian Horner from Red Bull after two decades, Nico Hülkenberg’s first F1 podium, and Oscar Piastri’s role in the title battle.

    Netflix timed the release for about a week before the 2026 F1 season opens at the Australian Grand Prix, positioning the series as both a retrospective on 2025 and a promotional lead-in to the new campaign. Observers point to Drive to Survive’s role in growing F1’s global audience, citing attendance surges at races such as Austin, Miami, and Las Vegas, and related projects like the companion series F1: The Academy and the 2025 F1 film. Season 8 is expected to run about ten episodes of roughly 30 minutes to an hour each, continuing to blend on-track outcomes with off-track narratives that broaden mainstream interest in the sport.

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  • Mekies Warns Red Bull will be Underdog as 2026 Opens

    Mekies Warns Red Bull will be Underdog as 2026 Opens

    Red Bull enters the 2026 F1 season with its first in‑house power unit, built by Red Bull Powertrains with technical input from Ford. The new engine is scheduled to debut at the Australian GP in March, and the team has scheduled a closed‑door shakedown in Barcelona for January 26 as part of early preparations.

    A regulatory dispute has arisen over Article C.5.4.3 of the 2026 Technical Regulations, which sets a maximum geometric compression ratio of 16.0 measured at ambient temperature. Reports suggest Red Bull Powertrains and Mercedes may be exploiting wording in the article to run effectively higher compression ratios on track. The reports have prompted the FIA to convene technical experts to resolve differing interpretations. Red Bull technical chief Ben Hodgkinson defended the design, saying the team had pushed the package “right to the very limit,” expected measured targets around 15.999, and argued the nominal 16.0 limit is conservative given advances in combustion.

    Teams and the FIA agreed component limits for 2026 include four internal combustion engines/turbochargers and three MGU‑Ks per driver before penalties apply. The regulator granted an exception, giving Red Bull and Audi one extra power‑unit component across the board in 2027. Audi entered 2026 after purchasing Sauber and is the other new engine manufacturer alongside Red Bull Powertrains; the FIA’s concession to both newcomers could create a late‑season competitive swing in 2027 if either manufacturer contests the title.

    Red Bull also arranged to supply its sister team, Racing Bulls, through a technical partnership with Ford, extending its in‑house architecture beyond the works cars.

    Team principal Laurent Mekies described 2026 as a transition year in which in‑season development will be decisive. He warned Red Bull would not immediately match Mercedes and Ferrari in outright power and said a slow start could reignite speculation about Max Verstappen’s future. Verstappen is reported to have reaffirmed his commitment to Red Bull for 2026, despite holding exploratory talks with Mercedes and carrying a contract with performance-related exit clauses. Mekies said the team hoped to show “enough progress” during the season to secure Verstappen’s continuation.

    The technical switch, ongoing rule clarifications, and the FIA’s component concession leave Red Bull as an underdog entering 2026, with a recovery path defined by rapid development and regulatory outcomes.

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  • Red Bull finalises 2026 line-up, reshuffles junior pathway

    Red Bull finalises 2026 line-up, reshuffles junior pathway

    Red Bull finalised its 2026 driver line-up and plans to announce it on Tuesday ahead of the Abu Dhabi finale. The decision was made with input from Laurent Mekies, Helmut Marko and CEO Oliver Mintzlaff; management said the timing was chosen to avoid distracting Max Verstappen during the title run‑in and to allow any driver who misses out a proper send‑off in Abu Dhabi. Mekies emphasised that anyone racing in Abu Dhabi must be able to support Verstappen and praised Yuki Tsunoda’s recent pace as the team weighed its options.

    The core decision promotes Isack Hadjar into the senior Red Bull seat alongside Max Verstappen, creating a vacancy at sister team Racing Bulls that is set to be filled by 18‑year‑old FIA Formula 2 (F2) race winner Arvid Lindblad. The other Racing Bulls seat is contested between Liam Lawson and Yuki Tsunoda; reports said a high‑level meeting favoured retaining Lawson to partner Lindblad, while Tsunoda faces alternatives including a move to Racing Bulls, a reserve role, or release.

    The Qatar Grand Prix served as a final audition: Hadjar signalled he knew his future, Lawson finished ahead of Tsunoda and impressed team figures, and Tsunoda showed flashes of speed in the sprint despite an otherwise difficult season (15th in the standings with 33 points). The announced structure settles a key piece of Red Bull’s driver programme, reshuffles its junior pathway and has immediate implications for driver careers and partner‑team line‑ups in 2026. The Tuesday announcement is reported to finalise those placements and bring clarity after one of the off‑season’s most closely watched decisions.

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  • Ferrari Reassigns Riccardo Adami to Driver Academy

    Ferrari Reassigns Riccardo Adami to Driver Academy

    Ferrari announced it is moving Riccardo Adami off Lewis Hamilton’s car and appointing him manager of Ferrari’s Driver Academy and of its test and previous cars. Ferrari said it will use Adami’s trackside experience to help develop drivers and to manage the team’s test and previous cars, framing the change as an internal reallocation rather than a technical shake-up. Adami had been Hamilton’s race engineer throughout last season and previously worked with Carlos Sainz Jr. and Sebastian Vettel; Ferrari publicly thanked him for his commitment.

    The reassignment follows a season in which Hamilton underperformed relative to expectations and drew scrutiny after several awkward radio exchanges, though he publicly defended his working relationship with Adami. Ferrari acknowledged communications between the pair had sometimes been strained, citing their final radio exchange at the Yas Marina finale — where Hamilton, who finished P8, said, “Been a long season, guys. Grazie a tutti.” — and said there was room for improvement. Ferrari confirmed Hamilton will have a new race engineer for the upcoming season, but has not yet named a successor. The announcement came just over a week before the pre-season test in Barcelona and a week before Ferrari’s new-car launch, creating a tight timeline to appoint a replacement; the team said a decision is needed before on-track activity begins. Ferrari emphasised organisational continuity and positioned the move as a way to strengthen its performance culture and talent pipeline without signalling immediate changes to the car’s technical programme.

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  • Alpine Runs A526 Shakedown in Wet Silverstone, Gasly drives

    Alpine Runs A526 Shakedown in Wet Silverstone, Gasly drives

    Alpine completed the A526’s first on‑track shakedown at a wet Silverstone. Pierre Gasly drove laps in heavy rain as the team ran system checks and packaging validation rather than performance runs. The filming day was limited to 200 km, giving Alpine early mileage ahead of formal testing. The outing, attended by figures including Flavio Briatore and Franco Colapinto, made Alpine the fourth team to put a 2026 car on track after Audi, Cadillac, and Racing Bulls.

    Video and close-up photos showed the car in a livery similar to 2025 and revealed several visual and aerodynamic changes versus the A525. Noticeably, the reconfigured rear fin behind the airbox, removed wheel brows, revised front‑wing endplates, and covered cooling vents above the sidepods. Alpine did not officially confirm the car’s identity.

    Separately, Alpine ran a TPC session in Barcelona using its 2025 car as a final shake‑down. Gasly, Franco Colapinto, and reserve driver Paul Aron shared running in a short “wake‑up” outing. The team said the session was preparatory for the closed‑door five‑day pre‑season test in Barcelona, scheduled for Jan 26–30. With teams limited to three testing days each, Alpine portrayed the TPC run and the Silverstone filming as complementary steps to validate systems and power‑unit packaging ahead of the full test programme.

    Alpine is scheduled to unveil the A526 livery on Jan 23, the same day Ferrari plans its reveal.

    The shakedown was Alpine’s first running with Mercedes power units after parent company Renault ended its in‑house works programme, formally making Alpine a Mercedes customer for 2026. The team is targeting a rebound from a difficult 2025 campaign: it finished last in the constructors’ standings with 22 points after halting A525 development in early June to focus on the 2026 regulations. Alpine ended the year 58 points behind ninth‑placed Sauber (now competing as Audi). Gasly said he is focused on pure pace and has been working over the winter to find any advantage.

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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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