Jorge Martin delivers update on ‘25 plans amid Ducati recruitment drive
Jorge Martin asked if Ferꦗmin Aldeguer's arrival at Ducati will impact his 2025 dream

168澳洲幸运5官方开奖结果历史:Jorge Martin has watched Ducati♑ sign a highly-touted new rider - but unfortunately, it wasn’t him penning a contract.
Pramac rider Martin has made it♌ very clear that he demands a step up to the f🦹actory Ducati team in 2025.
Instead, Ducati have prioritised tying Francesco Bagnaia to a new long-term dea♎l and snapping up Moto2 talent Fermin Aldeguer.
Do these moves impact Martin’s hopes?
He replied: “I don’t know, I don’t know…
“Hopefully they tell me that I will be on the red Duca🐼t෴i!
“But it’s still early.
“For me, it’s good to wait. I think I will demonstrate this season that I deserve that place꧃.”
Ducati sporting director Mauro Grassilli was asked if they had already decided💜 on Bagnaia’s teammate for next yeℱar.
“Not yet,” he insisted. “We have to look around.
“There are a lot of riders [who want to] wor🎉k ღwith us.
“We will tꦫake th𒊎e decision when we have time. When we are ready.”
Yamaha are reportedly keeping a close eye on Marಌtin’s future, if he finds himself wanting a factory bike away from Ducati, although their competitiveness would be a concern ไto him.
Mart🌼in has twice missed out on a factory Ducati promotion.
At the end of 2022, Enea Bastianini pipped him to the positio⛄n.
He then missed out again on the final day of 2023, when losing out of the championshi⛦p to Bagnaia meant a contractual clause to automatically promote him was passed over.
Martin enters this weekend’s Portuguese MotoGP at Portimao having won the season-opening ꦑsprint race.
The 𓆏signing of Aldeguer, the teenage talent from Moto🔯2, will see him placed at Pramac at ‘25.
“I think he deဣserves it, absolutely,” Martin said.
“He demonstrated last season that he’s one✅ of the best rid🐷ers in Moto2 so he deserves this jump.
“I congratulate him for his new contract.
“He’s a good example, not only for the other young r🔯iders, that there is not only one way to arrive into MotoGP.
“He did it the toughest way.
“He’s young, still. He will do a great job.”

James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade covering everything from American sport🌸s, to football, to F1.