2002 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season

The 2002 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season was the 54th F.I.M. Road racing World Championship season. The season consisted of 16 races, beginning with the Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix on 7 April 2002 and ending with the Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix on 3 November.

2002 World Champions
Valentino Rossi became the MotoGP World Champion
Marco Melandri became the 250cc World Champion
Arnaud Vincent became the 125cc World Champion

The premier class, now renamed MotoGP, introduced new rules and regulations which allowed 990cc four-stroke bikes to race alongside the previous year's 500cc two-stroke bikes. Defending champion Valentino Rossi won his second premier class title by winning 11 races and scoring 355 points. He clinched the title at the Rio de Janeiro Grand Prix, with four races left in the season.[1]

The 250cc title was won by Marco Melandri who won nine races and scored 298 points. He clinched the title at the Australian Grand Prix and became the youngest ever champion in the 250cc class.[2] Arnaud Vincent won the 125cc title by 19 points difference over defending champion Manuel Poggiali. The title was decided in the last race of the season at Valencia with Vincent finishing in second place to secure the title.[3]

Season summary edit

MotoGP class edit

The season marked the start of a new era in the premier class with the arrival of 990cc four-stroke bikes. Four factory teams, Repsol Honda, Marlboro Yamaha, Suzuki and Aprilia, raced with the new four-stroke bikes while all the satellite teams raced with the 500cc two-stroke bike.[4] The season also marked the return of Dunlop and the entry of Bridgestone to the premier class.[5] Dunlop supplied the tyres for Suzuki, Aprilia, Yamaha WCM and Pramac Honda.[6] Bridgestone supplied the tyres for Team Roberts and Kanemoto Racing.[7][8][9] Michelin supplied the tyres for the remaining six teams. However, after only two races, Suzuki switched back to Michelin tyres for the remainder of the season.[10][11]

Valentino Rossi, riding the four-stroke Honda RC211V bike, won the first race of the season at Suzuka under wet conditions. Suzuki's test rider Akira Ryō, who raced as a wildcard entry, and Yamaha's Carlos Checa completed the all four-stroke podium.[12] Rossi's teammate, Tohru Ukawa, won the second race before Rossi went on to dominate the championship by winning seven consecutive races. Max Biaggi handed the four-stroke Yamaha YZR-M1 its first win in the Czech Republic Grand Prix at Brno, while Rossi had to retire due to tyre problems.[13] In that race, Honda also expanded their four-stroke presence by providing the RC211V bike for Honda Gresini rider Daijiro Kato.[14] Rossi then won two consecutive races in Portugal and Brazil, clinching the world championship in the latter.[1]

In the Pacific Grand Prix, Honda Pons rider Alex Barros won his first race riding the RC211V bike.[15] In that race, Kawasaki returned to the world championship after 20 years absence. Kawasaki, with their four-stroke Ninja ZX-RR, raced as wildcards in the last four races of the season as a preparation before entering the championship full-time in the following season.[16] In the following race at Sepang, Yamaha expanded their four-stroke presence by providing the YZR-M1 bikes to Tech 3 pair Olivier Jacque and Shinya Nakano.[17] Another Yamaha rider, Norifumi Abe, raced the fifth YZR-M1 on the grid for the last two races of the season.[18]

Rossi ended the season with 355 points from 11 wins and four second places. Biaggi finished second to Rossi with 215 points and two race wins. Ukawa and Barros completed the top four with 209 and 204 points respectively. Previous year's 250cc champion Daijiro Kato finished in seventh position with two podium finishes and was named as the Rookie of the Year.[19] All races were won by the four-stroke bikes, while the two-strokes only managed to record five podiums finishes. Honda won the constructors championship with 390 points and 14 wins, followed by Yamaha who won the other two races. Repsol Honda team won the teams championship by winning 12 races and scoring 564 points from Rossi and Ukawa. Marlboro Yamaha and Honda Pons who won two races each was second and third respectively.

250cc class edit

The 250cc class was certain to have a new champion as previous year's champion Daijiro Kato and 1993 champion Tetsuya Harada, who finished second to Kato last year, both moved up to the MotoGP class. Only three riders remained from previous year's top six: Marco Melandri, Roberto Rolfo and Fonsi Nieto. Melandri was the only rider in the 250cc class who has previously won a 250cc race; he won his first and only race in the 2001 German Grand Prix.[20] The 250cc entry list also included three former 125cc World Champion: Haruchika Aoki, Roberto Locatelli and Emilio Alzamora.

The season started with a wet race at Suzuka which was won by Japanese wildcard rider Osamu Miyazaki, who was riding for Daytona Yamaha team.[21] Honda's wildcard rider Daisaku Sakai and Aprilia's Randy de Puniet completed the podium.[22] In the following race at Welkom, Aprilia's Marco Melandri took his second career 250cc win.[23] Fonsi Nieto then took his first ever race win in the Spanish Grand Prix.[24] Nieto also took the lead in the championship standings from de Puniet and Franco Battaini. Nieto then won the following race at Le Mans before Melandri won the next three races and overtook the championship lead from Nieto after the Dutch TT.[25] Melandri continued his streak to six consecutive wins and extended his lead in the standings to 37 points after the Czech Republic Grand Prix.[26]

Nieto won the Portuguese Grand Prix for Aprilia's tenth consecutive victory. Nieto, who crashed in lap 13, recovered from seventh position to win the rain-soaked race over Melandri.[27][28] Aprilia's winning streak was broken when Yamaha's Sebastián Porto won the Rio de Janeiro Grand Prix under wet race condition.[29] Rookie Toni Elías won the following race at Motegi after a last-lap battle with Melandri. Melandri finished second and increase his lead over Nieto in the championship standings to 52 points.[30] With 52 points lead and three races to go, Melandri only need to finish in front of Nieto in the Malaysian Grand Prix to clinch the championship.[31] However, he suffered a mechanical failure on the first lap, while Nieto won the race to reduce the gap to 27 points.[32] Melandri finally clinched the 250cc title in the Australian Grand Prix with a close win over Nieto. They fought until the last lap and Melandri won the race with just 0.007 second gap at the finish line.[2] Melandri became the youngest 250cc world champion at the age of 20 years and 74 days.[33]

Melandri ended the season with 298 points from nine race wins, three second-place finishes and one fourth-place finish. Nieto finished second in the standings with 241 points and four wins, followed Honda's Roberto Rolfo and rookie Toni Elías with 219 and 178 points respectively. Elías, who recorded one race win and four further podium finishes, was named as the Rookie of the Year.[34] Aprilia won the constructors championship with 382 points and 14 race wins from Melandri, Nieto and Elías. Honda finished second in the standings with 244 points but failed to record any race win. Yamaha, who won two races courtesy of Miyazaki and Porto's wins in the wet, finished third with 211 points.

125cc class edit

The 125cc entry list was headlined by defending champion Manuel Poggiali and two-time championship runners-up Youichi Ui and Noboru Ueda. There were five other riders who have previously won a 125cc race: Masao Azuma, Lucio Cecchinello, Stefano Perugini, Simone Sanna and Arnaud Vincent.

Arnaud Vincent, who returned to Aprilia after a year with Honda, won the opening race at Suzuka under wet condition.[35] He then extended his lead in the championship with two second places in the second and third race behind Manuel Poggiali and Lucio Cecchinello respectively.[36][37] In the following race at Le Mans, Cecchinello won his second successive race ahead of Poggiali, while Vincent finished fourth.[38] Poggiali then took over the championship lead from Vincent after winning the Italian Grand Prix.[39] Poggiali won the following race at Catalunya with a late overtake at the finish line over Spanish teenager Daniel Pedrosa.[40] Two weeks later, Pedrosa bounced back to win his first ever race in the 2002 Dutch TT, with Poggiali finishing in second place.[41]

Vincent, who led the championship in the first four races, returned to the top of the podium with two consecutive wins at Donington Park and Sachsenring.[42][43] After finishing third behind Cecchinello and Pedrosa at Brno, Vincent won the wet Portuguese Grand Prix and retook the championship lead from Poggiali.[44][45] Honda riders, Masao Azuma and Pedrosa, won the following two races at Rio de Janeiro and Motegi while Poggiali reduced Vincent's lead to just eight points courtesy of two podium finishes and Vincent's mechanical problem at Motegi.[46][47] Vincent extended his lead by winning the Malaysian Grand Prix while Poggiali finished in fourth.[48] However, Poggiali won the following race at Phillip Island while Vincent finished in fourth to reduce the lead back to eight points.[49] In the last race of the season at Valencia, Vincent finished second behind Pedrosa to clinch the 125cc title while Poggiali finished in seventh place.[3]

Vincent ended the season with 273 points and five race wins, 19 points ahead of defending champion Poggiali who scored 254 points and four race wins. Pedrosa and Cecchinello finished third and fourth in the standings with three wins each. The Rookie of the Year title was won by Finnish rider Mika Kallio who scored 78 points with the Red Devil Honda team. Aprilia won the constructors championship with 341 points and eight race wins from Vincent and Cecchinello. Honda finished second in the standings with 285 points and four wins from Pedrosa and Azuma while Gilera finished third with 254 points and three wins from Poggiali.

2002 Grand Prix season calendar edit

On 18 October 2001, the FIM confirmed the 2002 calendar.[50] On 4 December 2001, the FIM confirmed that the dates of the Rio and Valencian Community Grands Prix had swapped places.[51]

The following sixteen Grands Prix were scheduled to take place:[52][53]

Round Date Grand Prix Circuit
1 7 April   SKYY vodka Grand Prix of Japan Suzuka Circuit
2 21 April   Africa's Grand Prix Phakisa Freeway
3 5 May   Gran Premio Marlboro de España Circuito de Jerez
4 19 May   Polini Grand Prix de France Bugatti Circuit
5 2 June   Gran Premio Cinzano d'Italia Mugello Circuit
6 16 June   Gran Premi Marlboro de Catalunya Circuit de Catalunya
7 29 June ††   Gauloises Dutch TT TT Circuit Assen
8 14 July   Cinzano British Grand Prix Donington Park
9 21 July   Cinzano Motorrad Grand Prix Deutschland Sachsenring
10 25 August   Gauloises Grand Prix České republiky Brno Circuit
11 8 September   Grande Prémio Marlboro de Portugal Autódromo do Estoril
12 21 September ††   Cinzano Rio Grand Prix Autódromo Internacional Nelson Piquet
13 6 October   Gauloises Pacific Grand Prix of Motegi Twin Ring Motegi
14 13 October   Gauloises Malaysian Motorcycle Grand Prix Sepang International Circuit
15 20 October   SKYY vodka Australian Grand Prix Phillip Island Grand Prix Circuit
16 3 November   Gran Premio Marlboro de la Comunitat Valenciana Circuit Ricardo Tormo
†† = Saturday race

Calendar changes edit

  • The Malaysian and Australian Grand Prix swapped places. The Malaysian round became the 14th round, while the Australian round became the 15th round on the calendar.
  • The Valencian Community Grand Prix swapped position with the Rio Grand Prix. The Valencian round became the last race of the season as the world championship returned to Europe after four flyaway races that started with Rio Grand Prix.

Regulation changes edit

The following changes are made to the regulation for the 2002 season:[54][55]

Sporting regulations edit

  • The name '500cc', which was already used formally since 2000 on promotional material, is now officially changed to 'MotoGP'.
  • All riders in the new MotoGP class must possess an FIM Grand Prix Super License.
  • The maximum age of new riders to participate in the 125cc class has been set at the new standard of 25 years. This also counts for wildcard riders.
  • It is now mandatory for manufacturers in all classes to own a FIM Manufacturers License.
  • If a rider has been entered for participation of a 125cc or 250cc race, the team is not allowed to replace said rider after 17:30 on the first day of the event, which is Friday. An exception is made in the case of the MotoGP class where substitutions can be made up until 12:00 on the second day of the event, which is Saturday.
  • In case of a home grand prix, each grand prix host federation (FMNR) may enter three wildcard riders for the 125cc and 250cc classes.
  • The MSMA can also nominate one wildcard entry for the 250cc and MotoGP classes at all given races.
  • The FIM may nominate two wildcard entries for the 125cc and 250cc classes as well.
  • Dorna, together with the FIM, can nominate one wildcard entry for the MotoGP class at all races.
  • The timetable for qualifying has been changed: The start time for the 125cc has gone from 13:15 to 13:45, the start time for the MotoGP has gone from 14:00 to 15:00 and the 250cc start time has gone from 15:15 to 16:00.
  • Restrictions are imposed on the practice sessions. If there is a break in the championship that lasts two or more consecutive weekends, the testing exceptions will not apply from 09:00 that Wednesday until the start of the following race. The winter testing for the 125cc and 250cc teams will either be restricted to their own continental zones or official IRTA tests.
  • Starter engines may now also be used on the grid. The number of people for each rider on the grid has been set to seven in the MotoGP class and to a maximum of two, three minutes before the start of a race.
  • Riders will only be permitted to start the race from their assigned grid position if they complete at least one sighting lap. It is forbidden for anyone, even the rider, to push the motorcycle onto the grid from the pit lane.
  • Riders are allowed to complete more than one sighting lap via the pit lane if they make any changes on their main bike, swap bikes or have to refuel.
  • Riders who fail to complete at least one sighting lap will have to start the warm-up lap at the back of the grid from the pits under instructions of a marshal who is positioned at the pitlane exit. These riders are not allowed to have any tyre warmers on and cannot change wheels after the display of the "3 minutes" board.
  • In case of two or more riders starting from the back of the grid, they will line up in the order of which they qualified during the Saturday qualification.
  • It's forbidden to communicate anything between a moving motorcycle and anyone who is connected to the motorcycle's rider. Exceptions are made for the signal from the timekeeping transponder, the on-board camera's or the voice communication between the rider and team.
  • All teams will from this season onwards compete for a MotoGP Team Championship and all teams will be consisting out of two riders. The names of the teams will consist out of multiple elements. The first one is the name of the manufacturers of the motorcycle or engines, which is mandatory. The second one is the name of the team, which is mandatory except when the team name is the same as the manufacturer name. The third is the name of the main sponsor, which is optional. All the points which are scored by both riders in the team, including the substitute or replacement riders, will count towards the team's constructors championship. If the team consists out of only one rider, the points by said rider will also count. An exception is made for wild card entries, which do not score any points.
  • In case of an entry, a rider is considered to have taken part the race weekend if he has, at least, participated in one practice session. A rider is considered to have started a race if he, at least, participates in the first lap.
  • For a rider to be classified as a finisher of the race and be included in the final results, he must cross the finish line on the circuit and not in the pitlane within five minutes of the race winner. The rider must, at all times, be in contact with his motorcycle also.
  • The white line which indicates the pole position must be painted one meter before the start/finish line.
  • From 1 January 2003 onwards, races which have changes in the climate because of rain or mixed conditions and have thus changes in adhesion of the circuit, will no longer be stopped.

Technical regulations edit

  • The 500cc two-stroke machines - in use since the late 1970s - are going to be phased out this season for the new 990cc four-stroke machines.[56]
  • Helmets must now conform to one of the recognized international standards and be of the full face type. The European standards are ECE 22-04 & ECE 22-05 'p', the British standards are BS 6658 Grade A and the American standards are USA: DOT Federal Standard n? 218/SNELL M95 & M2000.
  • The use of materials has been restricted. The basic structure of the crankshaft and camshafts must be created from either steel or cast iron. It is not allowed to use composite structures which use either carbon or aramid fiber reinforcing material on components such as pistons, cylinder heads and cylinder blocks. It is mandatory to have brake calipers which are made from aluminium material with a modulus of elasticity that does not exceed the 80 GPA. None of the parts on the bike can be made from metallic materials which have a specific elasticity modus that is greater than 50 GPA.

2002 Grand Prix season results edit

Round Date Grand Prix Circuit 125cc winner 250cc winner MotoGP winner Report
1 7 April   Japanese motorcycle Grand Prix Suzuka   Arnaud Vincent   Osamu Miyazaki   Valentino Rossi Report
2 21 April   South African motorcycle Grand Prix Phakisa   Manuel Poggiali   Marco Melandri   Tohru Ukawa Report
3 5 May   Spanish motorcycle Grand Prix Jerez   Lucio Cecchinello   Fonsi Nieto   Valentino Rossi Report
4 19 May   French motorcycle Grand Prix Le Mans   Lucio Cecchinello   Fonsi Nieto   Valentino Rossi Report
5 2 June   Italian motorcycle Grand Prix Mugello   Manuel Poggiali   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
6 16 June   Catalan motorcycle Grand Prix Catalunya   Manuel Poggiali   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
7 29 June ††   Dutch TT Assen   Daniel Pedrosa   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
8 14 July   British motorcycle Grand Prix Donington   Arnaud Vincent   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
9 21 July   German motorcycle Grand Prix Sachsenring   Arnaud Vincent   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
10 25 August   Czech Republic motorcycle Grand Prix Brno   Lucio Cecchinello   Marco Melandri   Max Biaggi Report
11 8 September   Portuguese motorcycle Grand Prix Estoril   Arnaud Vincent   Fonsi Nieto   Valentino Rossi Report
12 21 September ††   Rio de Janeiro motorcycle Grand Prix Rio de Janeiro   Masao Azuma   Sebastián Porto   Valentino Rossi Report
13 6 October   Pacific motorcycle Grand Prix Motegi   Daniel Pedrosa   Toni Elías   Alex Barros Report
14 13 October   Malaysian motorcycle Grand Prix Sepang   Arnaud Vincent   Fonsi Nieto   Max Biaggi Report
15 20 October   Australian motorcycle Grand Prix Phillip Island   Manuel Poggiali   Marco Melandri   Valentino Rossi Report
16 3 November   Valencian Community motorcycle Grand Prix Valencia   Daniel Pedrosa   Marco Melandri   Alex Barros Report
†† = Saturday Race

Participants edit

MotoGP participants edit

FIM released a 20-rider entry list on 13 March 2002.[57] Àlex Crivillé, who was listed on the entry list, was replaced by Pere Riba at the Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín team before the start of the season.[58] For 2002 Michelin and Dunlop entered the sport as tire manufacturers beginning a 6 year Tyre war.

Team Constructor Motorcycle Tyres No. Rider Rounds
  MS Aprilia Racing Aprilia RS Cube D 55   Régis Laconi All
  Repsol Honda Team Honda RC211V M 11   Tohru Ukawa All
46   Valentino Rossi All
  Team HRC 72   Shinichi Ito 1
  West Honda Pons 4   Alex Barros 13–16
NSR500 1–12
65   Loris Capirossi 1–7, 10–16
66   Alex Hofmann 8–9
  Fortuna Honda Gresini 74   Daijiro Kato 1–9
RC211V 10–16
  Pramac Honda Racing Team NSR500 D 31   Tetsuya Harada All
  Kanemoto Racing B 17   Jurgen van den Goorbergh All
72   Shinichi Ito 15
  Kawasaki Racing Team Kawasaki Ninja ZX-RR D 48   Akira Yanagawa 13
84   Andrew Pitt 14–16
 /  Proton Team KR Proton KR KR3 B 9   Nobuatsu Aoki All
99   Jeremy McWilliams All
29   David García 16
  Telefónica Movistar Suzuki Suzuki GSV-R D 10   Kenny Roberts Jr. 1–2
M 3–8, 10–16
51   Yukio Kagayama 9
15   Sete Gibernau 3–16
D 1–2
  Telefónica Movistar Suzuki
  Team Suzuki
33   Akira Ryō 1
M 6–10, 14
  Marlboro Yamaha Team Yamaha YZR-M1 M 3   Max Biaggi All
7   Carlos Checa All
  Yamaha Racing Team 45   Wataru Yoshikawa 13
  Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 19   Olivier Jacque 14–16
56   Shinya Nakano 14–16
YZR500 19   Olivier Jacque 1–13
56   Shinya Nakano 1–13
  Yamaha Tech 3 50   Sylvain Guintoli 10
  Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín YZR-M1 6   Norifumi Abe 15–16
YZR500 1–14
20   Pere Riba 1–3, 5–8, 10–11, 13
30   José Luis Cardoso 4, 9, 12, 14–16
  Red Bull Yamaha WCM D 8   Garry McCoy 1–3, 8–16
18   Jean-Michel Bayle 4–5
66   Alex Hofmann 6–7
21   John Hopkins All
Source: [59]
Key
Regular rider
Wildcard rider
Replacement rider

250cc participants edit

The FIM released a 25-rider entry list on 13 March 2002.[57] Alex Hofmann, who was listed on the entry list, withdrew before the start of the season.[58]

Team Constructor Motorcycle Tyres No. Rider Rounds
MS Aprilia Racing Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 3   Marco Melandri All
Fortuna Honda Gresini Honda Honda NSR250 D 4   Roberto Rolfo All
7   Emilio Alzamora 1–9, 11–16
84   David García 10
Campetella Racing Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 6   Alex Debón All
17   Randy de Puniet All
Dark Dog Yamaha Kurz Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 8   Naoki Matsudo All
76   Taro Sekiguchi 1–9
13   Jaroslav Huleš 10–16
Petronas Sprinta Yamaha TVK Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 9   Sebastián Porto All
18   Shahrol Yuzy All
Telefónica Movistar – Repsol YPF Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 10   Fonsi Nieto All
24   Toni Elías All
DeGraaf Grand Prix Team Honda Honda NSR250 D 11   Haruchika Aoki All
41   Jarno Janssen 1–9
29   Henk van de Lagemaat 10
30   Rob Filart 11
96   Jakub Smrž 12–16
Cibertel Honda BQR Honda Honda RS250R D 12   Jay Vincent All
19   Leon Haslam All
34   Eric Bataille 3, 6, 11–12, 16
Motoracing / TU Racing Team Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 15   Roberto Locatelli All
Imola Circuit Exalt Cycle Race Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 21   Franco Battaini All
RFME Equipo Nacional Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 22   Raúl Jara All
32   Héctor Faubel All
Equipe de France – Scrab GP Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 25   Vincent Philippe 1–9
36   Erwan Nigon 10–16
51   Hugo Marchand 1–10, 12–16
57   Grégory Lefort 11
Safilo Oxydo Race LCR Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 27   Casey Stoner All
42   David Checa All
Aprilia Germany Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 28   Dirk Heidolf All
UGT 3000 – Abruzzo Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 26   Ralf Waldmann 7, 9–10
Ipone Tecmas Racing Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 35   Thierry van den Bosch 4
77 7, 9
Edf Espoir Honda Honda RS250R D 36   Erwan Nigon 4
Aspi Honda Honda RS250R D 37   Yann Lussiana 4
Cordoba Patrimonio Hum. Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 39   Luis Castro 3, 16
Faster by Fuller Racing Honda Honda RS250R D 43   Christopher Sansome 8
Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 44   Andrew Whittley 8
Team Racer Bike Honda Honda RS250R D 45   Samuel Aubry 4
RM Racing Honda Honda RS250R D 47   Jason Boyce 8
Team Kotake RSC Honda Honda RS250R D 48   Shinichi Nakatomi 1
Burning Blood R.T. Honda Honda RS250R D 49   Chojun Kameya 1
Endurance Honda Honda NSR250 D 50   Daisaku Sakai 1
Kiefer Castrol Honda Honda Honda RS250R D 52   Christian Gemmel 9
Neukirchner Racing Team Honda Honda RS250R D 53   Max Neukirchner 9
Kehrer Racing Team Honda Honda RS250R D 54   Nico Kehrer 9
MRTT – Hugen Racing Honda Honda RS250R D 58   Jan Blok 7
59   Peter Politiek 7
Sierhekwerk W v/d Pol Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 60   Gert Pieper 7
Jovink Raps Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 61   Jarno Boesveld 7
Klub Racing Team Znojmo Honda Honda RS250R D 62   Radomil Rous 10
Bird Racing Team Honda Honda RS250R D 63   Gábor Rizmayer 10
Slovnaft Yamaha Racing Team Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 64   Vladimir Častka 10
Heierli Racing Pvm Team Honda Honda RS250R D 65   Roger Heierli 10
Hitman RC Koshien Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 68   Tekkyu Kayo 13
SP Tadao Racing Team Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 69   Nobuyuki Osaki 13
Morinokumasan Miztec RT Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 70   Ryuji Yokoe 13
Technospeed Nakasuga Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 71   Katsuyuki Nakasuga 13
Team HRC Honda Honda NSR250 D 72   Yuki Takahashi 13
Racing Damas Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 74   Ángel Rodríguez 16
EMS Racing Honda Honda RS250R D 78   Peter Taplin 15
RGV Spares Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 79   Russell Holland 15
Impact Racing Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 80   Earl Lynch 15
STU Avant – Msr – Elf Honda Honda RS250R D 81   Mark Stanley 15
Motorex Daytona Yamaha Yamaha YZR 250 D 89   Osamu Miyazaki 1
Team Stargel Aprilia Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 90   Chuck Sorensen 16
Team Harc-Pro Honda Honda RS250R D 92   Hiroshi Aoyama 1, 13
Ferro Moto Sport Aprilia Aprilia RSV 250 D 93   Hervé Mora 4
Source: [60]
Key
Regular rider
Wildcard rider
Replacement rider

125cc participants edit

FIM released a 33-rider entry list on 13 March 2002.[57]

Team Constructor Motorcycle Tyres No. Rider Rounds
Gilera Racing Gilera Gilera 125 GP D 1   Manuel Poggiali All
Safilo Oxydo Race LCR Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 4   Lucio Cecchinello All
15   Alex de Angelis All
Tribe by Breil Honda Honda RS125R B 5   Masao Azuma All
Scot Racing Team Honda Honda RS125R D 6   Mirko Giansanti All
34   Andrea Dovizioso All
Italjet Racing Service Italjet Italjet F125 D 7   Stefano Perugini All
8   Gábor Talmácsi 1–5
42   Christian Pistoni 9–16
B 24   Leon Camier 6–8
PEV Moto ADAC Sachsen Honda Honda RS125R B 10   Jarno Müller 1–3
30   Gaspare Caffiero 5
8   Gábor Talmácsi 7–16
12   Klaus Nöhles 1–5, 9–16
66   Shuhei Aoyama 7–8
Semprucci Angaia Racing Honda Honda RS125R D 9   Noboru Ueda 1–5, 11–16
44   Alessandro Brannetti 6
75   Fabrizio Lai 7–8
76   Matej Smrž 9
72   Dario Giuseppetti 10
20   Imre Tóth All
76   Matej Smrž 10
Motoracing / TU Racing Team Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 11   Max Sabbatani 13–16
16   Simone Sanna All
Bossini Sterilgarda Racing Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 11   Max Sabbatani 1–5, 8–11
32   Gianluigi Scalvini 6–7
33   Stefano Bianco 1–8, 10–16
B 50   Andrea Ballerini 12–16
UGT 3000 – Abruzzo Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 17   Steve Jenkner All
19   Alex Baldolini All
23   Gino Borsoi All
Elit Grand Prix Honda Honda RS125R D 18   Jakub Smrž 1–7
B 77   Thomas Lüthi 9–12, 14–16
97   Hideyuki Nakajo 13
Imola Circuit Exalt Cycle Race Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 21   Arnaud Vincent All
Master – Aspar Team Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 22   Pablo Nieto All
47   Ángel Rodríguez 1–9
80   Héctor Barberá All
Telefónica Movistar jnr Team Honda Honda RS125R D 25   Joan Olivé All
26   Daniel Pedrosa All
52   Julián Simón 3, 6, 11, 16
CWF – Matteoni Racing Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 39   Jaroslav Huleš 1–7
28   Ivan Goi 8–9
37   Marco Simoncelli 10–12, 14–16
57   Chaz Davies All
Team Italia Gilera Gilera 125 GP D 31   Mattia Angeloni All
84   Michel Fabrizio All
Red Devil Honda Honda Honda RS125R D 36   Mika Kallio All
88   Robbin Harms 10
Caja Madrid Derbi Racing Derbi Derbi 125 GP D 41   Youichi Ui All
48   Jorge Lorenzo 3–16
Sutthisam Vaewsamana Honda Honda RS125R D 46   Suhathai Chaemsap 1
OMV Team Hanusch Honda Honda RS125R D 49   Igor Kalab 10
FCC – TSR Honda Honda RS125R B 50   Andrea Ballerini 1–11
72   Dario Giuseppetti 12–16
83   Josh Waters 14–15
Atletico de Madrid Aprilia Aprilia RS125R B 51   Álvaro Bautista 3, 6, 16
Team Gabrielli Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 53   Gioele Pellino 5, 10
RCGM – Rubincone Corse Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 54   Marco Petrini 5
Team Machado Honda Honda RS125R D 55   Javier Machado 6
Kart Centrum Honda Honda RS125R D 56   Lukáš Pešek 10
Team Technimoto Cavaillon Honda Honda RS125R D 58   Yohann Tiberio 4
Team Philippe Coulon Honda Honda RS125R D 59   Vincent Braillard 4, 16
MG Parts – RG Racing Team Honda Honda RS125R D 60   Randy Gevers 7
De Graaf Junior Team Honda Honda RS125R D 61   Raymond Schouten 7
Roteg Racing Honda Honda RS125R B 62   Gerald Perdon 7
Racing Moto Sport Honda Honda RS125R D 63   Jimmy Petit 4
Holmes Earth Moving Honda Honda RS125R D 64   Peter Holmes 15
Honda Kumamoto Racing Honda Honda RS125R D 65   Toshihisa Kuzuhara 1, 13
Showa Denki Honda Honda RS125R D 66   Shuhei Aoyama 1, 13
Team Plus One Honda Honda RS125R D 67   Hideyuki Ogata 1, 13
Dinky Racing Honda Honda RS125R D 68   Akira Komuro 1, 13
UK Racing Honda Honda RS125R D 69   Christian Elkin 8
Wilson Racing Honda Honda RS125R B 70   Chris Martin 8
MIR Racing Aprilia Aprilia RS125R B 71   Ruben Catalan 3, 16
Giuseppetti Viba Team Honda Honda RS125R D 72   Dario Giuseppetti 9
Kiefer Castrol Honda Honda Honda RS125R D 73   Claudius Klein 9
RPS Racing Saalfeld Honda Honda RS125R D 74   Jascha Büsch 9
TZM Racing Team Honda Honda RS125R D 78   Pedro Monteiro 11
International Racing Team Honda Honda RS125R D 79   João Pinto 11
CMSA Protectaprint Honda Honda RS125R D 81   Tim Inkster 15
Ruffnuts/Gulf Western Honda Honda RS125R D 82   Jeremy Crowe 15
RMS Honda Honda RS125R D 85   Gregory Leblanc 4
Provence Motor Sport Aprilia Aprilia RS125R D 86   Gregory Lefort 4
Polini Honda Honda RS125R D 87   Simone Corsi 5
DB Racing Team Honda Honda RS125R D 89   Adri den Bekker 7
Red Bull Rookies Honda Honda RS125R D 90   Guy Farbrother 8
91   Midge Smart 8
ADAC Sashsen Motorrad Unger Honda Honda RS125R D 92   Patrick Unger 9
ADAC Sachsen Honda Honda RS125R D 93   Manuel Mickan 9
Sergi Motos Yamaha Yamaha TZ125 D 94   Filipe Costa 11
Team Harc-Pro Honda Honda RS125R D 95   Takashi Yasuda 13
Bikecards.com Honda Honda RS125R D 98   Chris Peris 16
Source: [61]
Key
Regular rider
Wildcard rider
Replacement rider

Standings edit

MotoGP standings edit

Scoring system

Points were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th 
Points 25 20 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Riders' standings edit

  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
  • Riders marked with light blue background were eligible for Rookie of the Year awards.
Pos Rider Bike Team JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Valentino Rossi Honda Repsol Honda Team 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Ret 1 1 2 2 1 2 355
2   Max Biaggi Yamaha Marlboro Yamaha Team Ret 9 DSQ 3 2 4 4 2 2 1 6 2 Ret 1 6 3 215
3   Tohru Ukawa Honda Repsol Honda Team Ret 1 3 2 3 2 5 WD 3 3 3 Ret 4 4 3 5 209
4   Alex Barros Honda West Honda Pons 6 Ret 5 8 5 5 2 3 Ret 9 5 4 1 3 2 1 204
5   Carlos Checa Yamaha Marlboro Yamaha Team 3 5 Ret Ret 4 3 3 Ret 4 5 2 Ret 5 7 11 Ret 141
6   Norifumi Abe Yamaha Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín 5 7 6 4 7 16 9 4 6 8 7 6 8 10 DNS 10 129
7   Daijiro Kato Honda Fortuna Honda Gresini 10 4 2 Ret Ret 8 12 7 Ret 2 Ret Ret Ret 5 4 4 117
8   Loris Capirossi Honda West Honda Pons 9 3 4 7 6 6 Ret 6 Ret 5 3 9 Ret Ret 109
9   Kenny Roberts Jr. Suzuki Telefónica Movistar Suzuki Ret Ret 8 5 Ret 7 6 14 11 4 3 6 8 9 Ret 99
10   Olivier Jacque Yamaha Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 Ret 6 11 Ret 9 9 14 5 Ret 10 Ret 7 7 Ret 8 9 81
11   Shinya Nakano Yamaha Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 Ret 8 17 13 11 Ret 8 10 5 Ret 12 Ret 16 6 13 6 68
12   Nobuatsu Aoki Proton KR Proton Team KR 7 Ret 7 6 Ret Ret Ret 9 8 Ret Ret 12 9 Ret 7 Ret 63
13   Jurgen van den Goorbergh Honda Kanemoto Racing Ret 11 12 15 14 Ret 10 15 12 12 Ret 9 13 13 5 7 60
14   Jeremy McWilliams Proton KR Proton Team KR Ret Ret 16 10 Ret 12 Ret Ret 7 7 9 Ret 10 12 10 8 59
15   John Hopkins Yamaha Red Bull Yamaha WCM 12 14 13 11 12 10 7 8 DNS Ret 8 14 14 18 16 11 58
16   Sete Gibernau Suzuki Telefónica Movistar Suzuki Ret 16 9 12 Ret Ret Ret 6 Ret 4 Ret 8 Ret 14 12 13 51
17   Tetsuya Harada Honda Pramac Honda Racing Team 11 12 10 Ret 10 13 13 11 Ret 15 10 13 15 Ret 14 14 47
18   Akira Ryō Suzuki Team Suzuki 2 11 15 13 11 14 11 41
19   Régis Laconi Aprilia MS Aprilia Racing 8 15 14 9 8 14 Ret 16 Ret 16 Ret Ret 11 17 Ret Ret 33
20   Garry McCoy Yamaha Red Bull Yamaha WCM Ret 10 15 12 9 13 11 10 17 15 18 Ret 33
21   Shinichi Ito Honda Team HRC 4 13
Kanemoto Racing Ret
22   Alex Hofmann Yamaha Red Bull Yamaha WCM Ret 11 11
Honda West Honda Pons 17 10
23   José Luis Cardoso Yamaha Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín 16 13 11 16 15 Ret 9
24   Jean-Michel Bayle Yamaha Red Bull Yamaha WCM 14 13 5
25   Wataru Yoshikawa Yamaha Yamaha Racing Team 12 4
26   Andrew Pitt Kawasaki Kawasaki Racing Team 19 17 12 4
27   Pere Riba Yamaha Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín DNQ 13 Ret Ret 15 Ret DNS DNS Ret DNS 4
  Sylvain Guintoli Yamaha Yamaha Tech 3 17 0
  Yukio Kagayama Suzuki Telefónica Movistar Suzuki Ret 0
  Akira Yanagawa Kawasaki Kawasaki Racing Team Ret 0
  David García Proton KR Proton Team KR Ret 0
Pos Rider Bike Team JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole position
Italics – Fastest lap

Constructors' standings edit

  • Each constructor got the same number of points as their best placed rider in each race.
  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Honda 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 390
2   Yamaha 3 5 6 3 2 3 3 2 2 1 2 2 5 1 6 3 272
3   Suzuki 2 16 8 5 Ret 7 6 6 11 4 4 3 6 8 9 13 143
4  /  Proton KR 7 Ret 7 6 Ret 12 Ret 9 7 7 9 12 9 12 7 8 96
5   Aprilia 8 15 14 9 8 14 Ret 16 Ret 16 Ret Ret 11 17 Ret Ret 33
6   Kawasaki Ret 19 17 12 4
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts

Teams' standings edit

  • Each team got the total points scored by their two riders, including replacement riders. In one rider team, only the points scored by that rider was counted. Wildcard riders did not score points.
  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
Pos Team Bike
No.
JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Repsol Honda Team 11 Ret 1 3 2 3 2 5 DNS 3 3 3 Ret 4 4 3 5 564
46 1 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 Ret 1 1 2 2 1 2
2   Marlboro Yamaha Team 3 Ret 9 DSQ 3 2 4 4 2 2 1 6 2 Ret 1 6 3 356
7 3 5 Ret Ret 4 3 3 Ret 4 5 2 Ret 5 7 11 Ret
3   West Honda Pons 4 6 Ret 5 8 5 5 2 3 Ret 9 5 4 1 3 2 1 319
65 9 3 4 7 6 6 Ret 6 Ret 5 3 9 Ret Ret
66 17 10
4   Telefónica Movistar Suzuki 10 Ret Ret 8 5 Ret 7 6 14 11 4 3 6 8 9 Ret 150
15 Ret 16 9 12 Ret Ret Ret 6 Ret 4 Ret 8 Ret 14 12 13
51 Ret
5   Gauloises Yamaha Tech 3 19 Ret 6 11 Ret 9 9 14 5 Ret 10 Ret 7 7 Ret 8 9 149
56 Ret 8 17 13 11 Ret 8 10 5 Ret 12 Ret 16 6 13 6
6   Antena 3 Yamaha d'Antín 6 5 7 6 4 7 16 9 4 6 8 7 6 8 10 DNS 10 142
20 DNS 13 Ret Ret 15 Ret DNS DNS Ret DNS
30 16 13 11 16 15 Ret
7  /  Proton Team KR 9 7 Ret 7 6 Ret Ret Ret 9 8 Ret Ret 12 9 Ret 7 Ret 122
99 Ret Ret 16 10 Ret 12 Ret Ret 7 7 9 Ret 10 12 10 8
8   Fortuna Honda Gresini 74 10 4 2 Ret Ret 8 12 7 Ret 2 Ret Ret Ret 5 4 4 117
9   Red Bull Yamaha WCM 8 Ret 10 15 12 9 13 11 10 17 15 18 Ret 101
18 14 13
21 12 14 13 11 12 10 7 8 DNS Ret 8 14 14 18 16 11
66 Ret 11
10   Kanemoto Racing 17 Ret 11 12 15 14 Ret 10 15 12 12 Ret 9 13 13 5 7 60
11   Pramac Honda Racing Team 31 11 12 10 Ret 10 13 13 11 Ret 15 10 13 15 Ret 14 14 47
12   MS Aprilia Racing 55 8 15 14 9 8 14 Ret 16 Ret 16 Ret Ret 11 17 Ret Ret 33
Pos Team Bike
No.
JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts

250cc standings edit

Scoring system

Points were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th 
Points 25 20 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Riders' standings edit

  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
  • Riders marked with light blue background were eligible for Rookie of the Year awards.
Pos Rider Bike JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Marco Melandri Aprilia Ret 1 Ret 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 4 2 Ret 1 1 298
2   Fonsi Nieto Aprilia 13 3 1 1 3 3 5 2 4 4 1 Ret 4 1 2 Ret 241
3   Roberto Rolfo Honda 8 4 2 5 8 2 3 5 2 Ret 4 2 6 3 4 2 219
4   Toni Elías Aprilia 11 16 10 6 4 10 2 3 6 3 13 5 1 2 5 10 178
5   Sebastián Porto Yamaha 5 8 7 8 7 Ret 4 Ret 3 2 3 1 8 4 3 Ret 172
6   Franco Battaini Aprilia 10 2 4 Ret 6 5 9 4 8 Ret Ret 3 7 5 7 7 142
7   Emilio Alzamora Honda 4 7 3 7 11 9 Ret 12 Ret 6 7 5 8 13 3 120
8   Roberto Locatelli Aprilia 16 5 5 4 2 Ret 7 13 5 7 5 Ret 9 13 Ret 5 119
9   Randy de Puniet Aprilia 3 6 Ret 3 5 4 Ret 6 Ret 6 Ret Ret Ret 6 6 4 119
10   Naoki Matsudo Yamaha 6 11 9 11 14 7 14 8 7 8 Ret 8 16 7 14 8 92
11   Alex Debón Aprilia 9 9 8 9 Ret 13 12 9 10 13 Ret Ret 10 Ret 9 9 72
12   Casey Stoner Aprilia Ret Ret 6 Ret DNS 6 8 11 Ret 5 Ret 6 17 11 10 13 68
13   David Checa Aprilia DNS 10 Ret 10 10 12 16 15 15 18 8 12 21 10 8 6 60
14   Haruchika Aoki Honda Ret 13 12 Ret 12 11 6 7 Ret 9 Ret Ret 13 12 11 12 58
15   Shahrol Yuzy Yamaha Ret Ret 13 13 9 8 10 10 11 Ret Ret 9 18 9 15 11 58
16   Osamu Miyazaki Yamaha 1 25
17   Daisaku Sakai Honda 2 20
18   Leon Haslam Honda Ret 15 19 Ret 18 18 Ret 17 13 17 7 10 Ret 17 18 17 19
19   Ralf Waldmann Aprilia 11 9 11 17
20   Dirk Heidolf Aprilia DNQ 14 Ret 18 Ret 21 20 18 12 14 9 14 20 18 16 19 17
21   Yuki Takahashi Honda 3 16
22   Jay Vincent Honda Ret 12 17 15 15 19 19 16 14 12 Ret Ret 19 14 Ret 14 16
23   Héctor Faubel Aprilia Ret Ret 11 14 16 20 Ret 20 18 Ret 10 17 22 Ret 19 15 14
24   Jaroslav Huleš Yamaha Ret Ret 11 15 15 12 16 11
25   Raúl Jara Aprilia 15 Ret 16 19 17 15 13 Ret 17 15 11 16 Ret Ret Ret Ret 11
26   Chojun Kameya Honda 7 9
27   Hiroshi Aoyama Honda 12 11 9
28   Erwan Nigon Aprilia 16 12 13 23 Ret Ret 20 7
Honda 20
29   Taro Sekiguchi Yamaha Ret Ret 15 12 Ret 16 17 14 16 7
30   David García Honda 10 6
31   Katsuyuki Nakasuga Yamaha 12 4
32   Vincent Philippe Aprilia Ret Ret 18 16 13 17 15 Ret Ret 4
33   Hugo Marchand Aprilia 14 Ret Ret DNQ Ret 14 Ret Ret Ret Ret Ret Ret 19 DNS Ret 4
34   Eric Bataille Honda 14 Ret Ret Ret Ret 2
35   Ryuji Yokoe Yamaha 14 2
36   Jakub Smrž Honda 15 24 16 17 Ret 1
  Jarno Janssen Honda Ret 17 20 17 Ret 22 18 19 Ret 0
  Ángel Rodríguez Aprilia 18 0
  Max Neukirchner Honda 19 0
  Henk van de Lagemaat Honda 19 0
  Gábor Rizmayer Honda 20 0
  Russell Holland Yamaha 20 0
  Peter Politiek Honda 21 0
  Andrew Whittley Aprilia 21 0
  Chuck Sorensen Aprilia 21 0
  Jarno Boesveld Aprilia 22 0
  Gert Pieper Aprilia 23 0
  Thierry van den Bosch Honda Ret DNQ Ret 0
  Shinichi Nakatomi Honda Ret 0
  Christian Gemmel Honda Ret 0
  Nico Kehrer Honda Ret 0
  Vladimir Častka Yamaha Ret 0
  Grégory Lefort Aprilia Ret 0
  Tekkyu Kayo Yamaha Ret 0
  Noboyuki Osaki Yamaha Ret 0
  Radomil Rous Honda DNS 0
  Yann Lussiana Honda DNQ 0
  Samuel Aubry Honda DNQ 0
  Hervé Mora Aprilia DNQ 0
  Jan Blok Honda DNQ 0
  Christopher Sansome Honda DNQ 0
  Jason Boyce Honda WD 0
  Roger Heierli Honda DNQ 0
  Rob Filart Honda DNQ 0
  Peter Taplin Honda DNQ 0
  Earl Lynch Yamaha DNQ 0
  Mark Stanley Honda DNQ 0
  Luis Castro Yamaha DNQ 0
Pos Rider Bike JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole position
Italics – Fastest lap

Constructors' standings edit

  • Each constructor got the same number of points as their best placed rider in each race.
  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Aprilia 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 382
2   Honda 2 4 2 5 8 2 3 5 2 9 4 2 3 3 4 2 244
3   Yamaha 1 8 7 8 7 7 4 8 3 2 3 1 8 4 3 8 211
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts

125cc standings edit

Scoring system

Points were awarded to the top fifteen finishers. A rider had to finish the race to earn points.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th 
Points 25 20 16 13 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Riders' standings edit

  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by rain.
  • Riders marked with light blue background were eligible for Rookie of the Year awards.
Pos Rider Bike JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Arnaud Vincent Aprilia 1 2 2 4 9 11 4 1 1 3 1 2 15 1 4 2 273
2   Manuel Poggiali Gilera 3 1 DSQ 2 1 1 2 3 4 5 Ret 3 2 4 1 7 254
3   Daniel Pedrosa Honda 8 3 4 3 4 2 1 2 7 2 10 Ret 1 3 5 1 243
4   Lucio Cecchinello Aprilia 9 Ret 1 1 6 4 5 Ret Ret 1 6 10 Ret 2 2 8 180
5   Steve Jenkner Aprilia 15 4 3 11 8 3 6 5 3 6 3 18 3 6 7 5 168
6   Pablo Nieto Aprilia Ret 5 Ret 6 3 8 7 Ret 5 Ret 4 5 4 5 3 3 145
7   Simone Sanna Aprilia 5 8 7 Ret 11 5 12 17 6 7 2 14 Ret 11 6 14 106
8   Masao Azuma Honda Ret 9 8 5 13 15 14 4 15 12 5 1 18 9 8 18 101
9   Alex de Angelis Aprilia Ret 6 Ret Ret 7 Ret 9 7 2 8 Ret 11 Ret 10 Ret 4 87
10   Gino Borsoi Aprilia 10 7 10 10 5 Ret 13 Ret 10 9 7 12 7 19 Ret 10 82
11   Mika Kallio Honda Ret 12 5 8 Ret 9 Ret Ret 9 10 8 8 6 7 Ret 17 78
12   Joan Olivé Honda 13 Ret 9 Ret Ret 6 3 6 11 Ret Ret 22 8 13 9 9 76
13   Youichi Ui Derbi Ret Ret 6 Ret 2 Ret 8 8 8 17 Ret Ret 12 12 13 Ret 65
14   Héctor Barberá Aprilia 16 DNS 12 15 Ret 18 20 Ret 21 4 Ret 15 5 8 14 6 50
15   Mirko Giansanti Honda 2 16 14 12 Ret 10 19 15 12 14 Ret 20 14 16 15 19 42
16   Andrea Dovizioso Honda Ret 10 Ret 9 12 Ret 11 9 13 21 Ret 13 Ret 15 10 16 42
17   Stefano Perugini Italjet 11 24 16 Ret 15 13 Ret 11 Ret 18 Ret 6 20 Ret 12 Ret 28
18   Andrea Ballerini Honda Ret 14 15 16 10 12 18 12 Ret Ret Ret 26
Aprilia 16 22 Ret 11 12
19   Stefano Bianco Aprilia Ret 22 19 7 Ret 7 29 Ret 13 Ret 17 17 Ret Ret 13 24
20   Shuhei Aoyama Honda 6 25 10 11 21
21   Jorge Lorenzo Derbi 22 19 20 14 16 13 17 20 Ret 7 9 20 Ret 22 21
22   Gábor Talmácsi Italjet Ret 18 20 Ret Ret 20
Honda 15 Ret 18 11 Ret 4 21 Ret 16 15
23   Noboru Ueda Honda 4 11 17 Ret DNS Ret 25 27 18 21 Ret 18
24   Ángel Rodríguez Aprilia 7 Ret Ret Ret Ret Ret 10 Ret 14 17
25   Max Sabbatani Aprilia Ret 13 11 13 DNS Ret 22 15 Ret 19 Ret 17 11 17
26   Klaus Nöhles Honda 12 Ret Ret 14 DNS 16 16 Ret 9 25 14 18 21 15
27   Thomas Lüthi Honda 26 19 9 24 21 Ret 24 7
28   Hideyuki Nakajo Honda 10 6
29   Chaz Davies Aprilia Ret 21 24 18 18 Ret 24 16 20 Ret 11 29 24 25 22 28 5
30   Christian Pistoni Italjet Ret Ret 12 19 Ret Ret Ret Ret 4
31   Michel Fabrizio Gilera Ret 15 18 17 16 Ret Ret Ret 23 25 Ret 23 13 26 Ret 20 4
32   Jakub Smrž Honda Ret Ret 13 Ret Ret 16 22 3
33   Marco Simoncelli Aprilia 27 13 21 Ret Ret Ret 3
34   Alex Baldolini Aprilia 14 20 21 Ret 19 20 21 18 19 Ret Ret Ret 26 23 20 Ret 2
35   Gioele Pellino Aprilia 14 22 2
36   Julián Simón Honda Ret 22 14 Ret 2
37   Fabrizio Lai Honda 23 14 2
  Takashi Yasuda Honda 16 0
  Mattia Angeloni Gilera 17 17 23 21 Ret 19 26 23 27 24 Ret 27 28 17 19 Ret 0
  Jaroslav Huleš Aprilia Ret Ret Ret Ret Ret 21 17 0
  Gaspare Caffiero Honda 17 0
  Gianluigi Scalvini Aprilia 17 Ret 0
  Imre Tóth Honda 18 23 27 22 21 23 27 20 25 26 Ret 28 23 22 23 25 0
  Ivan Goi Aprilia 19 24 0
  Jarno Müller Honda Ret 19 26 0
  Suhathai Chaemsap Honda 19 0
  Gregory Lefort Aprilia 20 0
  Christian Elkin Honda 21 0
  Simone Corsi Honda 22 0
  Chris Martin Honda 22 0
  Álvaro Bautista Aprilia 25 Ret 23 0
  Jimmy Petit Honda 23 0
  Robbin Harms Honda 23 0
  Dario Giuseppetti Honda 28 29 26 Ret 24 24 27 0
  Leon Camier Italjet 24 28 24 0
  Gregory Leblanc Honda 24 0
  Yohann Tiberio Honda 25 0
  Josh Waters Honda Ret 25 0
  Ruben Catalan Aprilia DNS 26 0
  Peter Holmes Honda 26 0
  Jeremy Crowe Honda 27 0
  Igor Kalab Honda 28 0
  Vincent Braillard Honda Ret 29 0
  Claudius Klein Honda 29 0
  Matej Smrž Honda 32 30 0
  Adri den Bekker Honda 30 0
  Patrick Unger Honda 30 0
  Randy Gevers Honda 31 0
  Jascha Büsch Honda 31 0
  Gerald Perdon Honda 32 0
  Manuel Mickan Honda 33 0
  Toshihisa Kuzuhara Honda Ret Ret 0
  Hideyuki Ogata Honda Ret Ret 0
  Akira Komuro Honda Ret Ret 0
  Marco Petrini Aprilia Ret 0
  Alessandro Brannetti Honda Ret 0
  Raymond Schouten Honda Ret 0
  Guy Farbrother Honda Ret 0
  Midge Smart Honda Ret 0
  Lukáš Pešek Honda Ret 0
  Chris Peris Honda Ret 0
  Javier Machado Honda DNQ 0
  Pedro Monteiro Honda DNQ 0
  João Pinto Honda DNQ 0
  Filipe Costa Yamaha DNQ 0
  Tim Inkster Honda DNQ 0
Pos Rider Bike JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole position
Italics – Fastest lap

Constructors' standings edit

  • Each constructor got the same number of points as their best placed rider in each race.
  • Rounds marked with a light blue background were under wet race conditions or stopped by frain.
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts
1   Aprilia 1 2 1 1 3 3 4 1 1 1 1 2 3 1 2 2 341
2   Honda 2 3 4 3 4 2 1 2 7 2 5 1 1 3 5 1 285
3   Gilera 3 1 18 2 1 1 2 3 4 5 Ret 3 2 4 1 7 254
4   Derbi Ret Ret 6 19 2 14 8 8 8 17 Ret 7 9 12 13 22 79
5   Italjet 11 18 16 Ret 15 13 28 11 Ret 18 12 6 20 Ret 12 Ret 32
Pos Constructor JPN
 
RSA
 
SPA
 
FRA
 
ITA
 
CAT
 
NED
 
GBR
 
GER
 
CZE
 
POR
 
RIO
 
PAC
 
MAL
 
AUS
 
VAL
 
Pts

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Rossi rides the storm to fourth world title". Crash.net. 21 September 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  2. ^ a b "Melandri claims 250cc crown – by 0.007secs!". Crash.net. 20 October 2002. Archived from the original on 17 July 2012. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  3. ^ a b "First Frenchman Vincent seals 125cc crown". Crash.net. 3 November 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  4. ^ "Suzuka heralds the new era". Crash.net. 3 April 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  5. ^ "MotoGP: Did you know?". Crash.net. 4 April 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  6. ^ "Red Bull Yamaha Leaning Toward Dunlop After Sepang Tests". 5 December 2001.
  7. ^ Sports, Dorna. "Proton Team KR complete chassis and tyre tests in Almeria | MotoGP". motogp.com.
  8. ^ "Bridgestone accepts Proton four-stroke challenge". Crash. 10 October 2002.
  9. ^ Sports, Dorna. "Kanemoto and Bridgestone officially confirm collaboration with Honda for 2002 | MotoGP". motogp.com.
  10. ^ "Suzuki drop Dunlop". BBC Sport. BBC. 1 May 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  11. ^ "Suzuki tired with Dunlop". motorcyclenews.com.
  12. ^ "Rossi and RCV triumphant at Suzuka". Crash.net. 7 April 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  13. ^ "Biaggi victorious as Rossi gets tyred". Crash.net. 25 August 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  14. ^ "Kato gets RC211V for Brno". Crash.net. 19 July 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  15. ^ "Barros guides RC211V to victory ahead of Rossi and Capirossi". MotoGP.com. Dorna Sports. 6 October 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  16. ^ "Kawasaki to start third MotoGP era in Motegi". Crash.net. 27 September 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  17. ^ "Gauloises M1's are GO!!!!!!! from Malaysia". Crash.net. 16 September 2002. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  18. ^ "Abe gets M1". Crash.net. 10 October 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  19. ^ "Daijiro Kato, first Rookie of the Year in the MotoGP class". MotoGP.com. Dorna Sports. 6 November 2002. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  20. ^ "250cc: Did you know?". Crash.net. 4 April 2002. Archived from the original on 9 July 2013. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
  21. ^ "Miyazaki wins 250cc race for Yamaha". Crash.net. 7 April 2002. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
  22. ^ "Honda wildcard takes podium finish". Crash.net. 7 April 2002. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
  23. ^ "Melandri takes second victory in the class at Welkom". MotoGP.com. Dorna Sports. 21 April 2002. Retrieved 4 December 2011.
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External links edit