Honda MotoGP FIM Road Racing World Championship
AUTO
Honda Achieves 700th FIM Road Racing
World
Championship Grand Prix Victory
by Shrutee K / DNS
INDIANAPOLIS,
USA, August 9, 2015 - Honda
MotoGP rider Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team RC213V) claimed victory in the
MotoGP class, in Round 10 of the 2015 FIM Road Racing World Championship held at
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in Indiana, USA.
Beginning
with its first world grand prix race in 1961, at the hands of Australian rider
Tom Phillis on his Honda RC143 in the 125cc class of the season opening Spanish
Grand Prix, Honda has now achieved an unprecedented 700* grand prix wins.
Takahiro Hachigo, President, CEO and Representative Director, Honda Motor Co., Ltd.
“I am proud of Honda’s 700th victory in the FIM Road Racing World Championship.This achievement could only have been realized through the countless number ofpeople working together, and the support every fan has given for Honda’s racingactivities. I am deeply grateful to everyone for their contributions and support. Thankyou very much.”
By the beginning of the race at the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Honda had tallied 698 grand prix wins. The Moto3
class started under light rain, with most top riders choosing wet tires. 18 year
old Belgian rider Livio Loi (RW Racing GP Honda NSF250RW) had taken a gamble to
start on slicks, which paid off as the wet tire riders inevitably pitted,
allowing Loi to claim his first victory after a consistent ride, taking Honda
one step closer to the 700 win milestone.
Uncertain weather conditions persisted in
the MotoGP class which followed, with lightrain in the latter stages of the
premier class race. Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team RC213V) maintained a 0.5 s
gap with the race leader throughout the race, and with three laps remaining on
lap 24, took the lead for a runaway victory, giving him his second consecutive
win (third for the season), and Honda its 700th grand prix victory.
Honda’s
MotoGP legacy:
In 1954, Honda’s founder Soichiro Honda
declared entry into the premier motor sports event of the time, the Isle of Man
TT, aiming to “realize the dream of becoming the world’s best.”
After five years developing a racing
machine, Honda became the first Japanese motorcycle manufacturer to enter the
Isle of Man TT race. The following year, in 1960, Honda began competing in the
125cc and 250cc classes of the FIM Road Racing World Championship, and in 1961,
Tom Phillis won the season-opening Spanish Grand Prix, giving Honda its first
step towards its 700 victories.
Honda then forayed into the 350cc and 50cc
classes in 1962, and the 500cc class in1966, and won the championship in all
five classes in 1966. At the time, Honda considered its racing activities to be
a “laboratory on wheels,” and new technologies developed to win world
championship races were applied to its production motorcycles.
With dramatically improved quality, the
market had expanded its support for Honda’s motorcycles. At the end of the 1967
season, Honda had paused its factory racing activities, which were to be
restarted 11 years later, with 138 grand prix wins.
In 1979, Honda returned to FIM Road Racing
World Championship racing in the 500cc class. Three years later in 1982,
American rider Freddie Spencer won Round 7 in Belgium on his Honda NS500, giving
Honda its first victory since returning to world grand prix racing. Honda then
went on to win grand prix races in the 125cc and 250cc classes, contributing to
its 500th victory in 2001, when Italian rider Valentino Rossi was victorious in
the 500cc class at the season-opening Japan Grand Prix. In 2005,Spaniard Dani
Pedrosa rode his Honda RS250 RW to victory in the 250cc class in Round 15 in
Australia, marking Honda’s 600th grand prix win.
* Number of wins counted by Honda based on
FIM records
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