Motorsport Week
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
  • Formula 1
    • 2025 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2025 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Motorsport Week
Home Motorbikes MotoGP

Rins: ‘This victory showed the world Suzuki can still win’

by Kyle Francis
3 years ago
A A
Rins: ‘This victory showed the world Suzuki can still win’
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

An emotional Alex Rins admitted he was “proud” to show the “world that Suzuki can still win” having scored a second victory in the past three races on its swansong.

The Japanese manufacturer announced that it would quit the MotoGP world championship at the end of 2022 ahead of the Spanish Grand Prix back in May, bringing an end to its six year GSX-RR project which up that point had accrued a total of five wins as well as a teams and rider’s title for Joan Mir in 2020.

The squad struggled for speed following the announcement after a strong start to the campaign, Rins not standing on the rostrum again until his victory in the Australian GP last month before he scored a second win of the year in the season-ending Valencia GP having led every lap.

Rins admitted he was “crying like hell” as he faced his last race in blue before joining the LCR Honda team for 2023 having only ever raced with Suzuki in the premier class, though managed to pull himself together to pull off an “amazing” last dance for the GSX-RR.

RelatedPosts

Yamaha riders split over V4 engine debut in Misano MotoGP test

Yamaha riders split over V4 engine debut in Misano MotoGP test

2 days ago
Toprak Razgatlioglu: Winning WorldSBK’s 1,000th race is ‘very special’

Toprak Razgatlioglu’s first MotoGP Yamaha V4 test now revealed – report

2 days ago

“The race was amazing, throughout all the weekend I tried to stay calm with the emotions and everything, but on the grid at the last minute when I said bye to all the grid members I was crying like hell,” explained Rins.

“It’s been such a nice six years but I told myself to stop crying because I still had a race to do, so I had to concentrate again but it was amazing.

“We did an unbelievable start from P5 to get into the lead at the first corner, but the race was not easy to control because I led all the laps and the rider behind was always 0.5, 0.7 behind so it was really important to not make any errors.

“In the end we pulled it off and I’m super happy and proud because I deserved this victory, Suzuki deserved the victory and all the fans too.”

The Spaniard insisted that he has “respect” for Suzuki’s decision to close its MotoGP operation, though conceded he was left with mixed emotions because the “project still has a lot of potential.”

“With this win we showed the world that Suzuki can still win, I respect the decision to close the team and I did everything in my control so I’m super proud,” added Rins.

“The emotions are mixed because the project still has a lot of potential, the only thing I can ask now is that they give me the bike, I think I deserve it!”

Tags: MotoGPRinsSuzukiValenciaGP
Share200Tweet125Share

Related Posts

WorldSBK unveils 2026 calendar with revised dates for Aragon and Cremona
Motorbikes

Former champion says WorldSBK ‘deserves more’ than what current calendar offers

2 hours ago
Yuki Tsunoda's position at Red Bull is precarious
Feature

Could Aston Martin’s impending F1 partnership with Honda hand a reprieve to Yuki Tsunoda?

20 hours ago
The FIA is warning that exploiting 2026's F1 rules will come with a cost
Formula 1

FIA warns F1 teams 2026 rule exploitation would be ‘suicide’

22 hours ago
Load More

Discussion about this post

Yamaha riders split over V4 engine debut in Misano MotoGP test
MotoGP

Yamaha riders split over V4 engine debut in Misano MotoGP test

September 16, 2025
Toprak Razgatlioglu: Winning WorldSBK’s 1,000th race is ‘very special’
MotoGP

Toprak Razgatlioglu’s first MotoGP Yamaha V4 test now revealed – report

September 16, 2025

Riders’ Standings

#RiderPoints
1Alex Marquez140
2Marc Marquez139
3Francesco Bagnaia120
4Franco Morbidelli84
5Fabio Di Giannantonio63
6Fabio Quartararo50
7Johann Zarco43
8Ai Ogura37
9Marco Bezzecchi36
10Pedro Acosta33

Click here for full Riders’ Standings

Motorsport Week

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd

Other Links

  • About & Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Motorsport Monday

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Formula 1
    • Latest News
    • 2025 F1 Calendar
    • 2025 F1 Championship Standings
  • Formula E
    • Latest News
    • 2025 FE Calendar
    • 2025 FE Championship Standings
  • MotoGP
    • Latest News
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • WRC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WRC Calendar
    • 2025 WRC Standings
  • IndyCar
    • Latest News
    • 2025 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WEC
    • Latest News
    • 2025 WEC Calendar
  • Live Updates
  • Other
    • IMSA
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • Galleries
  • About/Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd