In 2023, MotoGP introduced sprint races for the first time in the series’ history and ran them at every grand prix weekend (the Australian GP sprint was cancelled due to bad weather).
The idea behind the sprints was to offer more value for money for fans at the track and attract a bigger audience watching at home.
Of the 20 rounds run this year, 15 events showed an uptick in Saturday attendance (Austin figures not available, India was a first event, Indonesia and Argentina dipped, while Australia’s schedule was altered due to the weather, meaning the GP ran on Saturday).
However, not a single race in 2023 was started with the entire full-time 2023 grid present, which a number of riders blamed on the increase in races.
“It’s not a coincidence. It’s a big problem,” 2021 world champion Quartararo said. “I think it’s already a dangerous sport, but as a rider I can guarantee you that in the sprint race you get much more tired in the sprint than in the long race.
“And physically the bike that we are using is every time more physical and I don’t think we need one sprint race in every single GP.
“You are in Valencia, it’s the end of the season, you know that it’s always full.
“So, why do you want to add another one on Saturday? We cannot do this anymore.
“I am not the guy that organises everything, I don’t know what the opinion is for all of the other riders. But I don’t think it’s the correct way.
“Now 42 races or 44, it will not really change much. But it’s a shame that we do all these races and we see that nobody from the original grid was there doing all of the races. So, it’s a shame.”
Source: Autosport