2003 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season
- 2003 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season
MotoGP season
Previous = 2002
Current = 2003
Next = 2004
The 2003 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season was the 55th F.I.M. Road racing World Championship season.
eason Summary
Defending champion Valentino Rossi won his 3rd MotoGP championship in 2003, winning 9 races, highlighted by his win at Phillip Island where he was given a 10 second penalty for passing under a yellow flag and he overcame the penalty by winning the race with more than 10 seconds in hand. Rossi had become dissatisfied with his relationship with the Honda Racing Corporation [Noyes, D. [http://www.speedtv.com/articles/moto/motogp/8419/ "Rossi: Last Honda offer “unacceptable,” but denies “signing with anybody”".] SpeedTV.com, October 9 2003.] and as the season progressed and HRC tried to get Rossi to sign a new contract, Rossi demurred until finally announcing at the end of the year that he would be leaving Honda. He soon signed with Yamaha and took Jeremy Burgess with him to be his crew chief.
Daijiro Kato died at the first round at Suzuka. He lost control of his motorcycle on the approach to the Casio Triangle and hit a barrier at high speed. His heart was restarted by track paramedics, but he did not wake from a coma and died 2 weeks later. Controversy arose because the race was not red-flagged to allow Kato to be removed from the track with maximum care. [ [http://www.crash.net/feature_view~cid~6~id~4182~pid~0.htm "Kato inquiry: Racing accident, barriers to blame."] Crash.net, November 28, 2003.] Suzuka has since been removed from the MotoGP calendar. Teammate Sete Gibernau would inherit Kato's factory-spec RC211V.
MotoGP rookies for 2003 included Nicky Hayden (Rookie of the Year), Troy Bayliss and Colin Edwards. A new constructor also arrived: Ducati. After much success in Superbike racing, Ducati returned to the premier-class of GP with their GP3. It made an immediate impression with its raw speed, and they finished the constructor's championship in second place, ahead of Yamaha and behind Honda.
Grands Prix
MotoGP Constructor's Championship
Notes
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