We've Known Pedro Acosta Is Going to Ducati For Months. This Problem Is Bigger Than It Seems
The state of the rider transfer market has seriously detracted from the 2026 season. It's time to do something about it.
If you follow MotoGP whatsoever, you knew that Pedro Acosta was going to the Ducati Lenovo Factory team for the past six months. However, that information was only officially announced this week. What makes the whole thing even stranger is that his current team acknowledged the move before it was officially announced because KTM wanted to explain the reason he was allowed to test the 2027 prototype, even though he was headed to a new manufacturer—the craziness of the rider market revolves around this.
When I heard that Acosta was officially going to Ducati in 2027, I had to do a double-take because I was sure that had been made official a long time ago. But, like so many other rider transfers, it had just been in unofficial talks since before the 2026 season. Semi-confirmed rider transfers for two seasons ahead of time aren't the norm in MotoGP, but the new ruleset coming in 2027 has teams and riders scrambling in hopes of dominating the 850cc era. And this is detracting from the current season.
Just from a fan's perspective, knowing Jorge Martin has been fighting for a title for a team that he won't be with next season takes some of the spectacle away. It takes the feeling that you're supporting a team and rider, and instead, you're just supporting a rider. And the media coverage is exacerbating this issue.
Since before the 2026 season started, trade rumors have been front and center of MotoGP news, rather than the championship itself. Now that so many rider trades are being officially announced, and the fight for the title is heating up, the coverage is making it feel more involving again. But this is how it should've been all along.
It's not just detracting from the fans' experience, but the riders' and teams' too. Riders are hearing speculation about who'll replace them before the current season has even started. Couple this with the fact that teams will become more guarded with the information they give riders who are getting the axe, and you can only imagine the tension in the garages. Just check out Marc Marquez refusing to deeply discuss Acosta's move until winter, due to the respect he has for his current teammate, Francesco Bagnaia.
As much as this rider market hurts fans and teams, it's also a financially low ROI for manufacturers. Using Acosta as an example, how beneficial will he be to KTM's marketing campaigns throughout the year when we've known, before the season started, that he's headed to Ducati? Not very.
Riders beginning transfer negotiations more than a year ahead of time isn't good for the sport on any level, and MotoGP knows it. Carlos Ezpeleta, MotoGP's executive director, has acknowledged that implementing a transfer window, whereby teams and riders could only negotiate contracts during a defined period during the season, is being studied. It's unfortunate that the sport probably needs to regulate transfers, but hopefully, it will stop a repeat of what's happened this year.
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