2014 MotoGP World Championship

The 2014 FIM MotoGP World Championship was the premier class of the 66th F.I.M. Road Racing World Championship season. Marc Márquez started the season as the defending riders' champion in the MotoGP category, with Honda the defending manufacturers' champions.

2014 F.I.M. Grand Prix motorcycle racing season
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Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme
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Teams (Champions)

Seasons · Grands Prix · Circuits · Points scoring systems · Fatal accidents

Season summary

Winning a premier class record 13 races during the season,[1] Márquez won a second successive title, finishing 67 points clear of his nearest rival Valentino Rossi. Márquez won each of the first 10 races to be held in 2014,[2] before Repsol Honda teammate Dani Pedrosa was able to inflict his first defeat, at Brno. Rossi had taken eight podiums in the season, before he was able to win a race, when he won at Misano. He also won at Phillip Island, as he finished as the championship runner-up in a Grand Prix class for the first time since 2006, when he finished second to Nicky Hayden. Despite bookending his season with retirements, Rossi's Movistar Yamaha MotoGP teammate Jorge Lorenzo finished third in the championship. Finishing 32 points behind Rossi, Lorenzo took back-to-back victories in Aragon,[3] and Japan, as part of a nine-race podium streak that was ended by his retirement in Valencia. The only other race winner was Pedrosa, with his Brno triumph being his sole victory in the 2014 campaign.

The Espargaró brothers were each able to take one of the sub-classifications available to them. Pol Espargaró finished as the best place rookie in the final championship standings,[4] finishing sixth overall; the next best rookie was Scott Redding in twelfth place. Aleix Espargaró was the best placed rider that was competing with an Open-specification motorcycle.[5] He finished seventh overall in the championship, taking a pole position at Assen and a second-place finish in Aragon. Just like the rookie of the year standings, Redding was the next best rider. Márquez was a comfortable winner of the BMW M Award for the best qualifying rider,[6] with 13 pole positions during the season. Repsol Honda were the winners of the teams' championship,[7] as the results for Márquez and Pedrosa allowed them to finish 50 points clear of Movistar Yamaha MotoGP, while Honda won the constructors' championship for the 21st time – and their 63rd title in total[8] – 55 points clear of Yamaha.

Calendar

The Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme released a 19-race provisional calendar on 2 October 2013.[9] The calendar was updated on 13 December 2013[10] and again on 24 February 2014, resulting in a calendar of 18 races.[11]

The following Grands Prix took place in 2014:[12][13]

Round Date Grand Prix Circuit
1 23 March ‡ Commercial Bank Grand Prix of Qatar Losail International Circuit
2 13 April Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas Circuit of the Americas
3 27 April Gran Premio Red Bull de la República Argentina Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo
4 4 May Gran Premio bwin de España Circuito de Jerez
5 18 May Monster Energy Grand Prix de France Bugatti Circuit
6 1 June Gran Premio d'Italia TIM Mugello Circuit
7 15 June Gran Premi Monster Energy de Catalunya Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya
8 28 June †† Iveco Daily TT Assen TT Circuit Assen
9 13 July eni Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland Sachsenring
10 10 August Red Bull Indianapolis Grand Prix Indianapolis Motor Speedway
11 17 August bwin Grand Prix České republiky Brno Circuit
12 31 August Hertz British Grand Prix Silverstone Circuit
13 14 September Gran Premio TIM di San Marino e Della Riviera di Rimini Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli
14 28 September Gran Premio Movistar de Aragón Motorland Aragón
15 12 October Motul Grand Prix of Japan Twin Ring Motegi
16 19 October Tissot Australian Grand Prix Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit
17 26 October Shell Advance Malaysian Motorcycle Grand Prix Sepang International Circuit
18 9 November Gran Premio Generali de la Comunitat Valenciana Circuit Ricardo Tormo
‡ = Night race
†† = Saturday race

Calendar changes

Teams and riders

Starting in 2014, the rules governing the eligibility of entries changed. MSMA prototypes were reclassified as the new "Factory" class, whilst the Claiming Rule Teams sub-category was restructured as the "Open" class. All bikes used the approved MotoGP Electronic Control Unit, with bikes in the "Open" class using both the MotoGP ECU and identical software, and those competing as "Factory" entries permitted to use their own custom software.[15] The Factory option bike had their allocation of engines reduced from twelve to five, and those five had their design frozen.[15] The amount of fuel allowed was reduced from twenty-four litres to twenty litres.[15]

A subsequent modification, only officialized in March, stated that a manufacturer who had not achieved a win in dry conditions in the previous year, or a new manufacturer entering the championship, could enter under the Factory option with all the concessions available to the Open class; these benefits were reduced in case of a determined number of podiums or wins.[16]

Ducati Team and Pramac Racing were due to enter their bikes in the Open class[17] but revised regulations meant that they were finally entered under the Factory option with Open concessions.[18]

2014 MotoGP specifications
Factory Open
Fuel tank (litres) 20 24
Engines allocated (per rider) 5 12
Engine development frozen free
ECU hardware various spec Magneti Marelli
ECU software free standardized
Tires' compound medium, hard soft, medium

A provisional entry list was released by the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme on 20 November 2013.[19] An updated entry list was released on 14 January 2014.[20] Teams had time until 28 February to decide if a rider would be assigned to the "Factory" or "Open" class.[15] The final entry list was released on the same day.[21]

Factory entries
Team Constructor Motorcycle No. Rider Rounds
Ducati Team Ducati Ducati Desmosedici GP14 04 Andrea Dovizioso[22] All
35 Cal Crutchlow[23] 1–2, 4–18
51 Michele Pirro[24] 3
51 Michele Pirro[25] 4, 6–7, 11, 18
Pramac Racing
Energy T.I. Pramac Racing
29 Andrea Iannone[26] All
Ducati Desmosedici GP13[27] 68 Yonny Hernández[26] All
Repsol Honda Team Honda Honda RC213V 26 Dani Pedrosa[28] All
93 Marc Márquez[28] All
LCR Honda MotoGP 6 Stefan Bradl[29] All
GO&FUN Honda Gresini 19 Álvaro Bautista[30] All
Team Suzuki MotoGP Suzuki Suzuki GSX-RR 14 Randy de Puniet[31] 18
Movistar Yamaha MotoGP Yamaha Yamaha YZR-M1 46 Valentino Rossi[32] All
99 Jorge Lorenzo[33] All
YAMALUBE Racing Team with YSP 21 Katsuyuki Nakasuga[34] 15
Monster Yamaha Tech 3 38 Bradley Smith[35] All
44 Pol Espargaró[36] All
Open entries
Team Constructor Motorcycle No. Rider Rounds
IodaRacing Project
Octo IodaRacing Team
ART[20] ART 9 Danilo Petrucci[19] 1–4, 8–18
84 Michel Fabrizio[37] 6–7
Avintia Racing Avintia[21] Avintia GP14[38] 63 Mike Di Meglio[19] All
8 Héctor Barberá[39] 1–13
Ducati[40] Ducati Desmosedici GP14 14–18
NGM Forward Racing Forward Yamaha[21] Forward-Yamaha 5 Colin Edwards[41] 1–10
15 Alex de Angelis[42] 11–18
41 Aleix Espargaró[41] All
Drive M7 Aspar Honda Honda RC213V-RS[43] 7 Hiroshi Aoyama[44] 18
Honda RCV1000R 1–17
69 Nicky Hayden[45] 1–9, 14–18
2 Leon Camier[46] 10–13
Cardion AB Motoracing 17 Karel Abraham[47] All
GO&FUN Honda Gresini 45 Scott Redding[48] All
Paul Bird Motorsport PBM[20] PBM 23 Broc Parkes[49] All
70 Michael Laverty[19] All
Key
Regular rider
Wildcard rider
Replacement rider

Team changes

  • Aspar Team and Cardion AB Motoracing switched to Honda in 2014, entering the RCV1000R, Honda's Open class machine.
  • Forward Racing intended to use Yamaha-leased YZR-M1 engines with FTR frames, however the team started the season with a complete Yamaha YZR-M1 engine-frame-swingarm package[50] with other parts supplied by FTR, while developing new Forward-designed frames to be introduced mid-season. At the Mugello round Colin Edwards debuted the new frame built by Harris Performance.[51] Following Edwards' retirement from racing, the new frame was passed to de Angelis, while Espargaró remained with the Yamaha-derived chassis.[52]
  • Gresini Racing competed with a full Honda package in the Open class, having contested the 2013 season with an FTR chassis and Honda engine.
  • IodaRacing Project intended to enter a second bike ridden by Leon Camier, but he was not included on the final entry list due to an apparent lack of funding.

Rider changes

Results and standings

Grands Prix

Round Date Grand Prix Circuit Pole position Fastest lap Winning rider Winning constructor Report
1 23 March ‡ Qatar motorcycle Grand Prix[53] Losail Marc Márquez Álvaro Bautista Marc Márquez Honda Report
2 13 April Motorcycle Grand Prix of the Americas[54] Circuit of the Americas Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
3 27 April Argentine motorcycle Grand Prix[55] Termas de Río Hondo Marc Márquez Dani Pedrosa Marc Márquez Honda Report
4 4 May Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix[56] Jerez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
5 18 May French motorcycle Grand Prix[57] Le Mans Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
6 1 June Italian motorcycle Grand Prix[58] Mugello Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
7 15 June Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix[59] Catalunya Dani Pedrosa Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
8 28 June †† Dutch TT[60] Assen Aleix Espargaró Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
9 13 July German motorcycle Grand Prix[61] Sachsenring Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
10 10 August Indianapolis motorcycle Grand Prix[62] Indianapolis Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
11 17 August Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix[9] Brno Circuit Marc Márquez Dani Pedrosa Dani Pedrosa Honda Report
12 31 August British motorcycle Grand Prix[63] Silverstone Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
13 14 September San Marino and Rimini's Coast motorcycle Grand Prix[64] Misano Jorge Lorenzo Marc Márquez Valentino Rossi Yamaha Report
14 28 September[11] Aragon motorcycle Grand Prix[65] Motorland Aragón Marc Márquez Jorge Lorenzo Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha Report
15 12 October Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix[66] Motegi Andrea Dovizioso Jorge Lorenzo Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha Report
16 19 October Australian motorcycle Grand Prix[67] Philip Island Circuit Marc Márquez Valentino Rossi Valentino Rossi Yamaha Report
17 26 October Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix[9][68] Sepang Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
18 9 November Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix[69] Valencia Valentino Rossi Marc Márquez Marc Márquez Honda Report
‡ = Night race
†† = Saturday race

Riders' standings

Scoring system

Points are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th 
Points 25 20 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Legend
Colour Result Colour Result Colour Result Colour Result Colour Result
GoldWinner GreenPoints finish PurpleDid not finish (Ret) WhiteDid not start (DNS) BlankDid not participate
Silver2nd place BlueNon-points finish RedDid not qualify (DNQ) Withdrew (WD) Excluded (EX)
Bronze3rd place Non-classified finish (NC) Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ) Race cancelled (C) BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
  • A light blue background behind a rider's name indicates that rider was competing in his rookie season.
  • A light blue background behind the round indicates that the race was contested under wet conditions.
  • Bold indicates that the rider began the race from the pole position.
  • Italics indicates that the rider had the fastest lap during the race.
Pos Rider Bike Team QAT
AME
ARG
ESP
FRA
ITA
CAT
NED
GER
INP
CZE
GBR
RSM
ARA
JPN
AUS
MAL
VAL
Pts
1 Marc Márquez Honda Repsol Honda Team 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 1 15 13 2 Ret 1 1 362
2 Valentino Rossi Yamaha Movistar Yamaha MotoGP 2 8 4 2 2 3 2 5 4 3 3 3 1 Ret 3 1 2 2 295
3 Jorge Lorenzo Yamaha Movistar Yamaha MotoGP Ret 10 3 4 6 2 4 13 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 2 3 Ret 263
4 Dani Pedrosa Honda Repsol Honda Team 3 2 2 3 5 4 3 3 2 4 1 4 3 14 4 Ret Ret 3 246
5 Andrea Dovizioso Ducati Ducati Team 5 3 9 5 8 6 8 2 8 7 6 5 4 Ret 5 4 8 4 187
6 Pol Espargaró Yamaha Monster Tech 3 Ret 6 8 9 4 5 7 Ret 7 5 Ret 6 6 6 8 Ret 6 6 136
7 Aleix Espargaró Forward Yamaha NGM Forward Racing (Open Entry) 4 9 15 7 9 9 6 4 6 Ret 8 9 Ret 2 11 Ret Ret 7 126
8 Bradley Smith Yamaha Monster Tech 3 Ret 5 7 8 10 Ret 10 8 19 6 9 22 7 5 9 3 5 14 121
9 Stefan Bradl Honda LCR Ret 4 5 10 7 Ret 5 10 16 Ret 7 7 Ret 4 7 Ret 4 8 117
10 Andrea Iannone Ducati Pramac Racing 10 7 6 Ret Ret 7 9 6 5 Ret 5 8 5 Ret 6 Ret DNS 22 102
11 Álvaro Bautista Honda GO&FUN Gresini Ret Ret Ret 6 3 8 Ret 7 9 Ret 10 Ret 8 7 10 6 Ret 16 89
12 Scott Redding Honda GO&FUN Gresini (Open Entry) 7 Ret 14 13 12 13 13 12 11 9 11 10 13 10 16 7 10 10 81
13 Cal Crutchlow Ducati Ducati Team 6 Ret Ret 11 Ret Ret 9 10 8 Ret 12 9 3 Ret Ret Ret 5 74
14 Hiroshi Aoyama Honda Drive M7 Aspar (Open Entry) 11 12 10 12 14 14 15 16 12 10 13 14 12 8 13 8 11 15 68
15 Yonny Hernández Ducati Pramac Racing 12 13 12 14 13 10 11 19 17 Ret Ret 11 10 15 Ret 11 7 Ret 53
16 Nicky Hayden Honda Drive M7 Aspar (Open Entry) 8 11 11 11 Ret DNS 12 17 14 9 14 10 Ret 13 47
17 Karel Abraham Honda Cardion AB Motoracing (Open Entry) 13 14 13 Ret 15 12 Ret 14 13 11 14 13 11 Ret Ret Ret Ret 17 33
18 Héctor Barberá Avintia Avintia Racing (Open Entry) Ret 15 16 15 Ret Ret 19 18 18 Ret 17 19 19 26
Ducati Avintia Racing (Open Entry) 19 15 5 9 11
19 Michele Pirro Ducati Ducati Team 17 Ret 11 14 12 9 18
20 Danilo Petrucci ART IodaRacing Project (Open Entry) 14 17 Ret DNS 15 15 Ret Ret 18 Ret 11 Ret 12 Ret 12 17
21 Alex de Angelis Forward Yamaha NGM Forward Racing (Open Entry) 16 15 14 12 17 9 Ret 18 14
22 Colin Edwards Forward Yamaha NGM Forward Racing (Open Entry) 9 Ret 20 Ret 17 15 18 22 20 13 11
23 Broc Parkes PBM Paul Bird Motorsport (Open Entry) 15 Ret 21 17 18 17 16 11 21 15 19 21 18 18 20 Ret 14 20 9
24 Michael Laverty PBM Paul Bird Motorsport (Open Entry) 16 16 18 16 16 16 17 21 Ret 14 Ret 17 17 16 18 13 12 19 9
25 Mike Di Meglio Avintia Avintia Racing (Open Entry) 17 18 19 Ret 19 18 Ret 20 22 12 18 20 Ret 17 19 14 13 21 9
26 Katsuyuki Nakasuga Yamaha YAMALUBE Racing Team with YSP 12 4
27 Leon Camier Honda Drive M7 Aspar (Open Entry) Ret 15 16 16 1
Michel Fabrizio ART Octo IodaRacing Team (Open Entry) Ret 20 0
Randy de Puniet Suzuki Team Suzuki MotoGP Ret 0
Pos Rider Bike Team QAT
AME
ARG
ESP
FRA
ITA
CAT
NED
GER
INP
CZE
GBR
RSM
ARA
JPN
AUS
MAL
VAL
Pts

Constructors' standings

Scoring system

Points are awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider has to finish the race to earn points.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th 
Points 25 20 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
  • Each constructor gets the same number of points as their best placed rider in each race.
Pos Constructor QAT
AME
ARG
ESP
FRA
ITA
CAT
NED
GER
INP
CZE
GBR
RSM
ARA
JPN
AUS
MAL
VAL
Pts
1 Honda 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 4 2 6 1 1 409
2 Yamaha 2 5 3 2 2 2 2 5 3 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 2 2 354
3 Ducati 5 3 6 5 8 6 8 2 5 7 5 5 4 3 5 4 7 4 211
4 Forward Yamaha 4 9 15 7 9 9 6 4 6 13 8 9 14 2 11 9 Ret 7 138
5 ART 14 17 Ret DNS Ret 20 15 15 Ret Ret 18 Ret 11 Ret 12 Ret 12 17
6 PBM 15 16 18 16 16 16 16 11 21 14 19 17 17 16 18 13 12 19 15
7 Avintia 17 15 16 15 19 18 19 18 18 12 17 19 19 17 19 14 13 21 11
Suzuki Ret 0
Pos Constructor QAT
AME
ARG
ESP
FRA
ITA
CAT
NED
GER
INP
CZE
GBR
RSM
ARA
JPN
AUS
MAL
VAL
Pts

References

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