Recapping the Moto2 and Moto3 contests from Valencia season finale

4 months ago 65
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Valencia Moto2 Race

Diogo Moreira (Italtrans Racing Team) is the 2025 Moto2 World Champion, securing the title with a 10th-place finish in Valencia. The Brazilian only needed to score points to seal the crown and did so comfortably after his sole remaining rival, Manuel Gonzalez (Liqui Moly Dynavolt Intact GP), was forced to pit with a tyre issue while running inside the top ten.

21-year-old Diogo Moreira from Sao Paolo won the Moto2 World Championship ahead of his MotoGP move in 2026 with Yamaha.

At the front, Izan Guevara (BLUCRU Pramac Yamaha Moto2) claimed his first Moto2 victory, becoming the 11th different winner of the season. Daniel Holgado (CFMOTO Inde Aspar Team) finished second, while Iván Ortolá (QJMotor – FRINSA – MSI) charged forward to claim his first Moto2 podium in third.

Moto2 2025 - Round 22 - Valencia - Guevera the race winner ahead of Holgado and OrtolaMoto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Guevera the race winner ahead of Holgado and Ortola

Moto2 Race Report

Izan Guevara led the field away from the line, with Moreira settling into ninth and Gonzalez maintaining fifth in the early stages. Ahead of him, Guevara, Holgado, Albert Arenas (ITALJET Gresini Moto2) and Senna Agius (Liqui Moly Dynavolt Intact GP) formed the front group.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia

On lap five, Ortolá moved past Gonzalez for fifth, while Moreira remained grouped with Celestino Vietti (Sync SpeedRS Team) and Jake Dixon (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team). Ortolá continued his progress, passing Arenas for fourth on lap seven.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia

Gonzalez began to lose pace mid-race, running wide twice and slipping down the order. Collin Veijer (Red Bull KTM Ajo) moved ahead, followed by Arenas and Filip Salač (ELF Marc VDS Racing Team).

Senna Agius was also in podium contention before his tyres went away from him

With five laps to go, Gonzalez was eighth and Moreira ninth, separated by around 1.5 seconds. Moments later, Gonzalez slowed suddenly and gestured toward the rear of the bike. Moreira overtook him before the Spaniard entered the pits for a rear tyre change. Although he rejoined, his title hopes were over.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia

Guevara continued to lead with Holgado in close pursuit. Despite pressure on the final lap, Guevara held position to record his first win in the class.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia
Izan Guevera – P1

“This victory means so much to me and to the whole team. I want to thank Yamaha and Pramac Racing for the trust they‘ve placed in me — this result is, above all, for them. This team was born barely a year ago, and today, after 22 races, we‘ve taken our first win. It‘s an incredible feeling. We‘ve worked so hard, and now we are a strong group that has proved we can win. A special thank you goes to Gino Borsoi, who believed in me and has played an important role throughout my career. I also want to thank Yamaha for allowing me to be part of the BLU CRU project, and my family for always supporting me. This weekend started in a difficult way, with two crashes on Friday — one of them quite heavy. While I was at the hospital for a check-up, the mechanics worked against the clock to get the bike ready for me. Our Q2 was very solid, and in the race I really enjoyed myself. In the final laps I had to defend because I knew Holgado was ready to attack, but I was determined to win — and we did. We‘ve all learned a lot this year, and this victory must be the starting point as we head into next season.”

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Izan Guevera

Holgado finished second, while Ortolá completed the podium.

Dani Holgado – P2

“I’m very happy with the whole season in general, not just this race. It’s been an incredible year, with a lot of learning and I’ve been evolving in every race. Finishing the weekend and the championship with a podium feels great. I gave it my all, I tried to get the win until the end, but it wasn’t easy. When you give one hundred per cent, you can be very proud of yourself. Competing in Valencia is always different, people come eager to see us, so I hope they enjoyed a good show. See you next year with the same enthusiasm, we will continue working and keeping our feet on the ground. I am very motivated to continue growing.”

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Dani Holgado

Salač originally crossed the line fifth but was penalised for low tyre pressure which promoted Albert Arenas to fifth.

Albert Arenas – P5

“We did a good job throughout the weekend and this allowed me to get a good start and place myself in the top three: our goal was indeed to battle for the podium but the rear grip was not ideal and prevented me from exploiting all the speed we had. I had to stay strong until the end: we’re bringing home a fifth place and ten points, which allowed us to make up one position in the championship. A chapter ends: I’m relaxed and happy with the work we did, thank you to all the people who were with me in this journey!”

Jake Dixon said goodbye to Moto2 with a sixth-place finish and fifth in the Moto2 World Championship points standings. Dixon moves to World Superbike with Honda in 2026.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Senna Agius

Senna Agius was seventh, Celestino Vietti eighth, and Tony Arbolino, while newly crowned Moto2 World Champion Diogo Moreira completed the top ten.

Agius had looked set for a potential podium after running with the leaders early on, but ultimately, premature tyre degradation cruelled his potential.

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Senna Agius
Senna Agius – P7

“It was a bit of a nightmare, unfortunately. We had a good start and a good mentality; expectations were clearly set for winning the race today. In the first few laps, I followed Izan Guevara and Dani Holgado and remained very calm. But then I had problems with the tyre, which ultimately had disastrous consequences. I just tried to get the bike to the finish line and not crash after having some massive moments. The left side of the tyre was worn out. It doesn’t feel fair because this weekend I did most of the laps at a good rhythm in a long time, and the pace was strong too. The guys in the garage worked so well and the bike was really good here, which led to our strong qualifying performance. I really can’t believe the season is ending like this because of something beyond our control.”

Senna Agius was in podium contention before his tyres went away from him

“It’s disappointing because I could have fought for my third win of the season. I know what I’m capable of, and we can do it so that I can end the season on a high note in my head. Once again, a big thank you to Jürgen, Stefan, and Wolfgang for giving me the opportunity to be here, because without them I wouldn’t have gotten this far. I really felt their support this year, and they believed in me during difficult moments. On the other hand, the good moments motivate us for the future. Now we’re going home and set for next year. I have a lot to do in the winter. Fortunately, that keeps me busy so I can come back in good shape in 2026. Finally, I would also like to thank everyone involved in this project for their work and help this year.”

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Senna Agius

Manuel Gonzalez’s chances of winning the title were slim before the season finale, trailing by 24 points. The 23-year-old fought hard in front of his home crowd. After a solid start from fifth position, Gonzalez held sixth place for a long time before struggling with declining grip in the middle of the race. He gradually lost ground, went wide several times and finally had to return to the pits four laps before the end. With a new tyre, he rejoined the race to finish his extremely successful season on the track and together with his fans. With a total of 257 points and a deficit of 29 points behind Diogo Moreira

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Manuel Gonzalez
Manuel Gonzalez – P22 (Second in championship)

“When you put all your energy into chasing your dreams but then, at a crucial moment, you don’t get the chance to fight for them, it’s really hard to accept. On the starting grid, I still had a big smile on my face and was in a really good position. I was enjoying every moment because all I wanted was to finish the race successfully, fight hard, and show how I ride a motorcycle. But I didn’t get the chance. We had problems from the first lap because something wasn’t good with the rear tyre, even though I tried to adapt. But from one lap to the next, the tyre was completely destroyed. So, it was impossible to ride with it, and I had to stop in the pits. At that point, unfortunately, it was all over. But I told my guys to change the tyre because we had to finish the race. I wanted to thank everyone who works for me and helps me every time. At first, I also thought about finishing the race with the destroyed tyre, but that would have been a bit dangerous.”

“I don’t know how to describe my feelings, because events like that in the last race aren’t really nice. But we’ll keep fighting and improving, just as I’ve done my whole life. We’ll also keep working to make this dream come true. We’re very close to the top and have had a fantastic season. So, we’ll just keep going and improve for next season. That’s all. On the other hand, I am 100 per cent satisfied with what I have achieved this season. I have no regrets, neither on my part nor on the part of the team. I am happy with everything; we fought for the championship until the end, and everyone who supported me always gave their best. So, I have no regrets. I would also like to thank everyone for everything they have done for me. We will go into the next season with even more motivation, that’s for sure. We know what we have achieve,d and we know what we are capable of, what we can achieve. And we will learn from the difficult moments.”

Moto2 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Manuel Gonzalez

Moreira’s title caps a consistent year, becoming Brazil’s first World Champion in Grand Prix racing. He will debut in MotoGP machinery immediately, taking part in Tuesday’s post-season Valencia test with Yamaha.

The 2025 Moto2 season witnessed six different race winners, with 17 new lap records and 19 new all-time lap records in the Triumph-powered and Pirelli-shod class.

With the 2025 season now wrapped up, all eyes will be on 2026, where the Moto2 World Championship will return on 27 February – 1 March at Thailand’s Chang International Circuit.

21-year-old Diogo Moreira from Sao Paolo won the Moto2 World Championship ahead of his MotoGP move in 2026 with Yamaha.
21-year-old Diogo Moreira won the Moto2 World Championship

Valencia Moto2 Results

Pos

Rider

Bike

Time/Gap

1

I. Guevara

Bos

34m19.229

2

D. Holgado

Kal

+0.717

3

I. Ortola

Bos

+2.327

4

C. Veijer

Kal

+2.888

5

A. Arenas

Kal

+7.867

6

J. Dixon

Bos

+8.595

7

S. Agius

Kal

+8.944

8

C. Vietti

Bos

+11.075

9

T. Arbolino

Bos

+11.520

10

D. Moreira

Kal

+12.019

11

A. Lopez

Bos

+14.100

12

M. Ramirez

Kal

+15.715

13

A. Escrig

For

+15.985

14

F. Salac

Bos

+21.714

15

A. Canet

Kal

+21.975

16

Z. Vd goorbergh

Kal

+22.099

17

M. Aji

Kal

+22.800

18

D. Alonso

Kal

+23.925

19

J. Navarro

For

+31.723

20

Y. Kunii

Kal

+31.778

21

X. Zurutuza

Kal

+33.805

22

M. Gonzalez

Kal

+1 lap

23

D. Muñoz

Kal

+1 lap

Not Classified

NC

E. Fernandez

Bos

14 laps

NC

H. Garzo

Nts

15 laps

NC

S. Garcia

Kal

17 laps

DNF

B. Baltus

Kal

DNF

Valencia Moto2 Top Speeds

Pos

Rider

Bike

Average 

Speed

1

T. Arbolino

Bos

277.5

281.8

2

I. Ortola

Bos

278.3

280.6

3

M. Ramirez

Kal

276.3

280.6

4

C. Vietti

Bos

277.9

279.5

5

D. Alonso

Kal

275.3

279.5

6

X. Zurutuza

Kal

277.2

279.5

7

Y. Kunii

Kal

275.7

279.5

8

D. Moreira

Kal

276.7

278.3

9

M. Gonzalez

Kal

275.9

278.3

10

A. Arenas

Kal

277.0

278.3

11

C. Veijer

Kal

277.4

278.3

12

F. Salac

Bos

274.8

277.2

13

S. Garcia

Kal

260.0

276.1

14

A. Lopez

Bos

273.9

276.1

15

E. Fernandez

Bos

272.8

276.1

16

M. Aji

Kal

273.9

276.1

17

S. Agius

Kal

274.6

276.1

18

J. Navarro

For

273.5

275.0

19

H. Garzo

Nts

274.8

275.0

20

D. Holgado

Kal

275.0

275.0

21

A. Canet

Kal

273.7

275.0

22

Z. Vd goorbergh

Kal

273.5

275.0

23

J. Dixon

Bos

273.0

275.0

24

I. Guevara

Bos

273.0

273.9

25

A. Escrig

For

271.7

272.8

26

D. Muñoz

Kal

268.8

269.6

27

B. Baltus

Kal

206.0

Final 2025 Moto2 Championship Points

Moto2 Constructor Standings

Pos

Constructor

Points

1

Kalex

518

2

Boscoscuro

342

3

Forward

28

Moto2 Team Standings

Pos

Team

Points

1

Fantic Racing

459

2

LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP

406

3

CFMOTO Inde Aspar Team

361

4

Italtrans Racing Team

314

5

ELF Marc VDS Racing Team

310

6

Sync SpeedRS Team

240

7

Red Bull KTM Ajo

234

8

BLU CRU Pramac Yamaha Moto2

210

9

Onlyfans American Racing Team

197

10

ITALJET Gresini Moto2

175

11

QJMOTOR – FRINSA – MSI

95

12

RW-Idrofoglia Racing GP

43

13

KLINT Forward Factory Team

28

14

IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia

8


Valencia Moto3 Race

Adrian Fernandez (Leopard Racing) claimed his first Moto3 Grand Prix victory in his 86th start, converting pole position into a controlled win in the 2025 season finale at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo. The Spaniard led for the majority of the 20-lap race and held off Alvaro Carpe (Red Bull KTM Ajo) and Taiyo Furusato (Honda Team Asia), the latter demoted to third for exceeding track limits on the final lap.

Moto3 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Adrian Fernandez leading Furusato and Quiles

Meanwhile, sixth place was enough for Angel Piqueras (FRINSA – MT Helmets – MSI) to secure second in the 2025 Moto3 World Championship, finishing the season eight points ahead of Maximo Quiles.

Maximo Quiles made the best launch from the front row to take the holeshot, but Fernandez regained the lead immediately at Turn 2.

David Almansa, starting from P2, briefly led at the end of lap one before being pushed wide by teammate Fernandez at Turn 14, dropping him to eighth.

Luca Lunetta (SIC58 Squadra Corse) capitalised on the early shuffle to move into third as an eight-rider lead group formed. Piqueras circulated in ninth, doing enough to protect his Championship position.

By lap eight, Almansa had recovered to fourth but was soon pushed back again as Furusato, Lunetta, Carpe and Guido Pini (LIQUI MOLY Dynavolt Intact GP) all moved past.

Into the second half of the race, Fernandez increased the pace and stretched the field. Furusato took over second from Quiles with Pini holding fourth, while Carpe continued his battle with Lunetta behind the front group.

Further back, Almansa, Piqueras and Marco Morelli (GRYD – MLav Racing) contested seventh place.

Despite several attempts from the chasing group, Fernandez maintained control into the final lap. Carpe and Quiles swapped places through Turns 6 to 8, but neither could prevent Fernandez from maintaining a small but decisive margin.

Furusato attacked at the final corner and crossed the line second, but a last-lap track-limits infraction dropped him to third, promoting Carpe to P2 – matching his best result of the season.

Moto3 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Fernandez the winner ahead of Carpe and Furusato

Behind the podium, both Carpe and Pini passed Quiles at the final corner, leaving the CFMOTO rider fifth and finalising his position of third overall in the Championship.

Guido Pini – P4

“To be honest, despite a strong comeback in the race like this, I’m not satisfied because the podium is always the goal, and today it was within reach. That’s why I’m not happy, because I always want to be a little bit better until I reach first place. It was certainly a strong race, but we missed out something by a whisker. Still, we have to be satisfied. Many thanks to the entire team, because we worked really well this weekend to prepare for the race. Unfortunately, we made a mistake in the last lap of qualifying. If that hadn’t happened, it would certainly have been easier with a start further up the grid. But the good thing is that we didn’t make any mistakes in the race, and I finished with a good result by always riding smart. I’m happy about that. It was also important to see the checkered flag after the last few races, even if P4 isn’t what I wanted. Finally, a big thank you to the entire Intact GP team for the great cooperation this year. I’ve definitely learned a lot for my future.”

Maximo Quiles – P5

“I felt really good during the race. I think I had everything I needed to finish on the podium, at the very least. Mentally, I was a bit demoralised when Taiyo Furusato stepped on the green zone. My mind had settled, but at that moment I should have attacked. I didn’t think quickly and we lost the podium in the last few metres. These situations help us learn a lot for the future. Apart from the race, I’m happy with the incredible season we’ve had. I’m very motivated for the next season and I’m looking forward to giving it my all in 2026 with the team.”

It was not a great day for the Australians, with Joel Kelso and Jacob Roulstone failing to make inroads into the top ten.

Jacob Roulstone – P16

“It was probably one of the hardest races I have ever done. I gave it my all although the hand was painful, I was trying to stretch it in the straights when I could to try to save as much energy as I could for the end. I am pleased to have finished the race though, even if it is not how I wanted to end the season. I am very proud though to have been able to race here in Valencia. It was not the easiest weekend, it was not the easiest year either, but the team and I gave it everything. I want to thank the boys and everyone in Tech3 for these two seasons, and also a big thank you to Hervé for giving me the opportunity. I will always feel part of the Tech3 family.”

Moto3 2025 – Round 22 – Valencia – Jacob Roulstone

Joel Kelso was knocking on the door of the top ten before losing the front late on lap three. Kelso dusted himself off and got back on the bike before ultimately finishing 22nd just ahead of young Kiwi Cormac Buchanan.

Kelso will join GRYD MLav Racing for his fifth season in the Moto3 World Championship in 2026 on a two-year deal with a clause that will allow the Australian to step up to Moto2 should he be offered a seat in the next tier category.

Valencia Moto3 Results

Pos

Rider

Bike

Time/Gap

1

A. Fernandez

Hon

32m48.909

2

A. Carpe

KTM

+0.286

3

T. Furusato

Hon

+0.109

4

G. Pini

KTM

+0.397

5

M. Quiles

KTM

+0.448

6

A. Piqueras

KTM

+5.844

7

L. Lunetta

Hon

+5.934

8

D. Almansa

Hon

+5.935

9

J. Rios

Hon

+14.236

10

V. Perrone

KTM

+14.382

11

S. Nepa

Hon

+14.507

12

M. Morelli

Hon

+15.021

13

C. O’gorman

Ktm

+17.079

14

H. Danish

KTM

+17.166

15

A. Cruces

KTM

+17.173

16

J. Roulstone

KTM

+17.382

17

B. Uriarte

KTM

+17.522

18

N. Carraro

Hon

+32.315

19

M. Bertelle

KTM

+32.283

20

E. O’shea

Hon

+32.403

21

D. Foggia

KTM

+32.932

22

R. Moodley

KTM

+32.993

23

J. Kelso

KTM

+35.392

24

C. Buchanan

KTM

+47.939

Not Classified

NC

Z. Mitani

Hon

7 laps

DNF

S. Ogden

KTM

DNF

Valencia Moto3 Top Speeds

Pos

Rider

Bike

Average 

Speed

1

C. O’Gorman

KTM

234.6

237.9

2

A. Cruces

KTM

233.7

236.2

3

J. Roulstone

KTM

234.9

236.2

4

G. Pini

KTM

234.9

236.2

5

H. Danish

KTM

233.4

235.4

6

M. Bertelle

KTM

232.3

235.4

7

A. Piqueras

KTM

234.4

235.4

8

B. Uriarte

KTM

234.6

235.4

9

R. Moodley

KTM

233.3

234.6

10

D. Almansa

Hon

233.5

234.6

11

M. Quiles

KTM

233.5

234.6

12

A. Fernandez

Hon

230.1

234.6

13

L. Lunetta

Hon

233.6

234.6

14

T. Furusato

Hon

233.9

234.6

15

S. Nepa

Hon

232.7

234.6

16

A. Carpe

KTM

233.9

234.6

17

J. Kelso

KTM

228.4

233.8

18

D. Foggia

KTM

232.9

233.8

19

V. Perrone

KTM

232.4

233.8

20

E. O’shea

Hon

231.6

233.0

21

N. Carraro

Hon

231.6

232.2

22

J. Rios

Hon

231.5

232.2

23

M. Morelli

Hon

229.6

231.5

24

C. Buchanan

KTM

227.6

230.7

25

Z. Mitani

Hon

227.5

227.6

26

S. Ogden

KTM

186.8

Final 2025 Moto3 Championship Points

Pos

Rider

Points

1

J. Rueda

365

2

A. Piqueras

281

3

M. Quiles

274

4

A. Carpe

215

5

D. Muñoz

197

6

J. Kelso

193

7

A. Fernandez

179

8

T. Furusato

172

9

R. Yamanaka

136

10

V. Perrone

134

11

D. Almansa

134

12

L. Lunetta

125

13

G. Pini

111

14

D. Foggia

96

15

S. Ogden

62

16

J. Roulstone

61

17

M. Bertelle

55

18

S. Nepa

51

19

J. Esteban

33

20

C. Buchanan

32

21

N. Carraro

31

22

R. Rossi

24

23

M. Uriarte

22

24

M. Morelli

18

25

C. O’gorman

16

26

A. Cruces

14

27

R. Moodley

14

28

B. Uriarte

11

29

V. Perez

7

30

J. Rios

7

31

H. Danish

6

32

E. O’shea

3

33

T. Buasri

1

34

N. Dettwiler

35

J. Rosenthaler

36

L. Phommar a

37

A. Aditama

38

Z. Mitani

39

L. Abruzzo

40

M. Cook

Moto3 Constructor Standings

Pos

Constructor

Points

1

KTM

540

2

Honda

308

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