Located 30 km north of Florence, in the heart of Tuscany, Mugello, which hosts the Italian Grand Prix, is one of the most modern circuits on the calendar. MotoGP. Purchased by Ferrari in 1988, the Italian circuit was completely renovated and now enjoys undeniable prestige. A clever mix of slow corners, fast curves and long straights, Mugello is a particularly demanding circuit, both for drivers and engineers. After hosting a first Grand Prix in 1976, the circuit has been an essential stage of the MotoGP World Championship since 1991.
Between Italy and MotoGP it is a lasting love story which only grows stronger with each passing season. Moto Guzzi, Gilera, MV Agusta, Cagiva and now Aprilia and Ducati have had one success after another, and what can we say about the two kings of the discipline, Giacomo Agostini and Valentino Rossi.
2022 winner – 1 Francesco Bagnaia – 41'18''923 – 175.1 km/h
Best lap in the race – 2022 – 1 Francesco Bagnaia – 1'46''588 – 177.1 km/h
Best Pole - 2021 - 20 fabio quartararo – 1'45''187 – 179.5 km/h
Absolute record – 2021 – 20 Fabio Quartararo – 1'45''187 – 179.5 km/h
Top speed – 2022 – 89 Jorge Martin – 363,6 km/h
The program for the Italian Grand Prix MotoGP 2023
Friday 09 June:
Free Practice 1: 10:45 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Free Practice 2: 15:00 a.m. – 16:00 a.m.
Saturday 10 June:
Free Practice 3: 10:10 a.m. – 10:40 a.m.
Qualifications 1: 10:50 – 11:05
Qualifications 2: 11:15 p.m. – 11:30 p.m.
Sprint race: 15:00 p.m.
Sunday June 11:
Warm-up: 09:45 p.m. – 09:55 p.m.
Race: 14:00 a.m.
ALSO READ > Delayed return for Pol Espargaró
Comments
*The space reserved for logged in users. Please connect to be able to respond or post a comment!
0 Comment (s)
To write a comment
0 View comments)