By Michael Gougis
The night before the 2024 season-ending test at Circuit de Barcelona – Catalunya, Ducati Corse General Manager Luigi “Gigi” Dall’Igna met with members of the international media covering MotoGP. The architect of the fastest road racing motorcycles in history (see footnote), Dall’Igna talked about the 2025 season’s machinery, challenges and riders.
Dall’Igna said that while the GP24’s performance was a significant step forward from the prior year’s model, he did not anticipate a similar jump between the GP24 and the GP25, nor would such a leap forward be necessary.
In prior seasons, the new factory Ducatis could take some time to fine-tune to the point where they were consistently better than the Desmosedici of the year before. In 2024, it was clear from the start that the GP24 was a lot faster.
Enea Bastianini, Jorge Martin and Francesco Bagnaia won 10 of the first 11 races on the GP24. It took the talents of eight-time World Champion Marc Marquez to wrestle the GP23 onto the top of the podium, and no other GP23 rider won a race.
“Honestly speaking, the 2025 at this time is not the same step forward. The level of the GP24 at the moment is quite high and if you introduce a lot of differences between the two bikes, you have to take some risks. At the moment, I think it’s not necessary,” Dall’Igna said.
“I think that we have to improve a little bit the speed of the bike on the straight, because some of our competitors I think (are) a bit stronger than us on that point. And I would like to improve a little bit the speed in the middle of the corner.”
One of the areas where the GP24 excelled was in using the new-for-2024 Michelin rear slick to its ultimate performance capability. Riders on other brands said Ducati riders were fast on new tires and could conserve the tire more during a race. Dall’Igna, not surprisingly, said his team’s efforts were not focused on improvements in that area.
“I think we can improve (tire conservation) a little bit, but it is not a real problem at the moment. I think we have an advantage in comparison to the others. It’s not something we are looking for,” Dall’Igna said. When asked why the GP24 was so much better at using the new rear tire than the GP23, Dall’Igna giggled, not about to divulge a performance secret to his competitors. “It’s difficult to explain, you know. Actually, it’s not difficult, but I can’t,” he said, then started laughing out loud.
Ducati is focused on improving braking performance with the GP25, Dall’Igna said.
“The braking point and the braking stability of the bike is one of the keys, because to overtake the others is really difficult. So you need to have this on the bike,” he said. After the test, Bagnaia said the GP25’s braking is not yet to the level of the braking performance of the GP24, but that the GP25 was much better at this stage of development than any Ducati he had tested in the past.
In 2025, Ducati will drop from eight to six bikes on the grid and from four to three of the latest specification machines. Ducati has profited from having so many bikes on the track, as the company can gather more data to fine-tune all aspects of the motorcycles. It’s so critical that at the Sachsenring round, when rumors spread that Ducati was likely to have only three GP25s on the grid, Bagnaia said it was a concern and that he would be happier with four of the latest factory-spec machines in the field. Bagnaia’s comments indicate just how critical data collection has become in MotoGP – when is the last time a racer on a title-winning bike wanted to share that equipment with more riders, not fewer?
Is the reduction in machines a worry for Ducati?
“Honestly speaking, no,” Dall’Igna said. “The real problem (in 2025) is that the other manufacturers have, I think, better riders. Because in the past, you see some bikes, for example, Aprilia, make a step from two bikes to four. The results were more or less the same. So I don’t think to have only six bikes on the grid with six riders will be a real problem for us. The real problem is (2024 MotoGP World Champion Jorge) Martin is leaving for another company, and same for Enea (Bastianini, a seven-time race winner). I think this is the difference between 2024 and 2025.
“From a money point of view, this is the best solution. With three (GP25) bikes, it’s simply better from the economics point of view. On the technical point of view, it’s not any real advantage to have four factory bikes instead of three.”
Dall’Igna said he and other Ducati managers knew that there was every chance that they would lose Martin after 2024, and that there was every chance that he would take the title with him elsewhere, if they didn’t give him a spot on the factory team. After all, Martin had been overlooked before for the factory Ducati ride – Bastianini got the spot, not him. And other teams were approaching Martin with offers. But Ducati still promoted Marquez to the factory team, setting off a chain reaction that saw Martin sign with Aprilia, Bastianini switch to KTM and Ducati’s satellite Pramac Racing team switch to Yamaha.
After a year of working with Marquez, Dall’Igna said promoting the eight-time World Champion to the factory Ducati team was the best move Ducati could make.
“When I took this decision, for sure we thought quite a lot. Also, we thought that Martin could win the Championship this year. This is something that we had to evaluate, and we took the decision. I don’t change my idea at the moment, and I’m convinced that we have the best possible solution,” Dall’Igna says.
At the beginning of 2024, Ducati signed Moto2 standout Fermin Aldeguer to a MotoGP contract for 2025, and later assigned him a place on the Gresini Racing Team. Aldeguer then suffered through an underwhelming Moto2 season, crashing frequently, winning only three races and finishing fifth in the overall standings. Dall’Igna said he still stands by the decision to sign Aldeguer, but admitted the young rider has some work to do.
“He is one of the young talents of the MotoGP. I’m really happy to have him in one of our teams. He has a lot of really good things – and some things that he has to develop and understand better. I think we can help him to do this,” Dall’Igna said. “I’m convinced that in a couple of years he will be in a fight for the Championship.”
Lastly, Dall’Igna reminded everyone that past results are no guarantee of future performance. After a year like 2024, with 19 wins in 20 starts, Ducati is justified in looking for small performance gains that do not come at the expense of performance losses elsewhere. But to win in MotoGP, you must always look for more performance, he said.
“The new season is a completely new book. The manufacturer who is in trouble can make a jump in front. You never know. You have to be focused on the problems that you have to solve and to try to develop the bike as much as possible. This is our job and this is what we have to do,” he said.
Footnote: KTM’s RC16 has clocked a 0.501 mph higher top speed at Mugello, 227.483 mph to the Ducati Desmosedici’s 226.676 mph. However, of the 18 circuits listed on the MotoGP.com website with lap record information, Ducati’s Desmosedici GP24 holds the outright lap record at 12 of them – and the GP23 holds the outright lap record at another.