The Motocross World Champs start the final trio of events of the series, as the MXGP of Türkiye welcomes round 18 to the mountainous west of the country, roughly 450km to the south-east of the capital, Istanbul.
This will be the eighth MXGP event to be held in the Republic of Türkiye, with the first being held in 2009 at Hezarfen, in the district of Istanbul, won by Antonio Cairoli in MXGP and Zach Osborne in MX2.
Since then, MXGP came back to the country in 2018 to the Afyon Motor Sports Center in Afyonkarahisar and has run here every year apart from 2020, returning to run two events in 2021.
The MXGP class has only seen two winners at Afyon in those six GPs. Jeffrey Herlings won all four Grands Prix for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing from 2018 to 2021 but hasn’t raced here since.
The last two GPs in Türkiye have both been won by Tim Gajser (pictured here), for Team HRC, who comes to this event after extending his championship points lead with a double race win at the MXGP of Switzerland.
In the MX2 division, points leader Kay de Wolf from Nestaan Husqvarna Factory Racing seriously helped his cause with overall victory in Frauenfeld, when a dire day for Belgium’s Lucas Coenen left him with a 61-point gap to chase down to his team-mate.
If the gap stays over 60 after the following round in China, De Wolf will be champion a round early.
Neither rider has seen the podium in Türkiye, however, as the GP was won last season by Belgium’s Liam Everts for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, after race wins for Germnany’s Simon Laengenfelder and Norway’s Kevin Horgmo.
Laengenfelder sits third in the 2024 series for Red Bull GASGAS Factory Racing but lies 104 points behind.
There will be a world title decided in Türkiye however, as the FIM Women’s Motocross World Championship comes to a conclusion with the year-long battle between De Baets Yamaha star Lotte van Drunen and Daniela Guillen on the RFME Spain National Team GASGAS.
They go to Afyon just 17 points apart, meaning that if van Drunen wins Saturday’s race, then she will clinch the title if Guillen is fifth or worse. It is therefore highly likely to go to the very last day.
Lynn Valk is 44 points off the leader, so she has an outside mathematical chance of the title for Schmicker Racing KTM.
New Zealand’s 2023 world champion Courtney Duncan is unable to defend her title for F & H Racing Team but will feel good at a circuit where she has won four of the five WMX events ever held.
This weekend sees the penultimate round of the EMX250 Championship fight between points leader Mathis Valin for Bud Racing Kawasaki and Valerio Lata for Beddini GASGAS Factory Juniors.
The gap is only 11 points between them, and Cas Valk of the Gabriel SS24 KTM is only another eight further back. This one should go right to the wire!
Meanwhile, Gajser’s domination of the MXGP of Switzerland presented by iXS leaves him in a very strong position in the three-way battle for world championship honours, but it is still far from over.
Reigning MXGP World Champion Jorge Prado now has an 18-point deficit to make up in order to take a second straight title for Red Bull GASGAS Factory Racing, and his most recent success here was in MX2, back in 2019.
Herlings is another 24 points behind and admitting that he “needs some luck” to claim his sixth world title, sitting 42 behind Gajser.
The Dutchman has won six individual races at Afyon compared to the Slovenian’s three, while Frenchman Romain Febvre has taken two race wins and two overall podiums for his current Kawasaki Racing Team.
France’s Maxime Renaux of the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MXGP team is the only other MXGP race winner here, taking one in 2022 to add to his race wins in MX2 from each of the previous two seasons, although he is yet to win overall here, finishing third in 2023.
Horgmo of Team Ship to Cycle Honda Motoblouz SR has got great memories from last season, as he won the second race in MX2, his only race victory at GP level so far.
Most of the top 10 championship positions are not too closely fought, as Swiss rider Jeremy Seewer currently lies in fourth place for Kawasaki Racing Team, 37 ahead of Dutchman Calvin Vlaanderen, who will be fighting to return, for Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MXGP, from a knee injury which kept him out of the Swiss round.
Febvre is only 23 behind Vlaanderen in sixth, and 13 ahead of Fantic Factory Racing’s Glenn Coldenhoff.
Vlaanderen’s team-mate Jago Geerts continues his recovery from injury and returns to a track where he was third in MX2 last season.
It’s possible for a bit of history to be made in Türkiye, as Gajser’s win in Switzerland put him on 49 career GP victories, one short of the former all-time record of Belgian legend Joel Robert, who is currently fifth in the all-time GP win list.
Who will come out on top in the battle of titans in Türkiye, the first of the final trilogy of races to decide the World MXGP Championship?
Photo courtesy Honda
Find BikesportNZ.com on FACEBOOK here
STANDINGS AFTER ROUND 17 of 20:
MXGP – World Championship – Top 10 Classification:
1. Tim Gajser (SLO, HON), 860 points; 2. Jorge Prado (ESP, GAS), 842 p.; 3. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, KTM), 818 p.; 4. Jeremy Seewer (SUI, KAW), 587 p.; 5. Calvin Vlaanderen (NED, YAM), 550 p.; 6. Romain Febvre (FRA, KAW), 527 p.; 7. Glenn Coldenhoff (NED, FAN), 514 p.; 8. Kevin Horgmo (NOR, HON), 386 p.; 9. Valentin Guillod (SUI, HON), 329 p.; 10. Brian Bogers (NED, FAN), 295 p.
MX2 – World Championship Classification:
1. Kay de Wolf (NED, HUS), 831 points; 2. Lucas Coenen (BEL, HUS), 770 p.; 3. Simon Laengenfelder (GER, GAS), 727 p.; 4. Liam Everts (BEL, KTM), 681 p.; 5. Mikkel Haarup (DEN, TRI), 581 p.; 6. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), 570 p.; 7. Rick Elzinga (NED, YAM), 511 p.; 8. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), 456 p.; 9. Camden McLellan (RSA, TRI), 337 p.; 10. Ferruccio Zanchi (ITA, HON), 317 p.