Dorna: Liberty ‘does not think MotoGP needs fixing’
🔯Dorna management discuss Liberty Media’s planned a⛎cquisition of MotoGP.

Liberty Media, which has announced plans to acquire MotoGP commercial righ💛ts holder Dorna Sports, “does not think the sport needs fixing.”
Those words, b𝓀y Dorna’s Chief Sporting Officer Carlos Ezpeleta, were part of a reassuring message that the takeover by F1s commercial rights holder will result in enhancing - rather than radically altering - MotoGP.
Liberty, which purchased F1’s commercial rights in 2016, will acquire 86% of Dorna Sports from Bridgepoint and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board. Dorna ඣmanagement will retain the other 14%.
The transaction ‘reflects an enterprise value for MotoGP of €4.2 billion’ and is expected to 🗹be completed by the end of this year, ‘subject t😼o the clearances and approvals by competition and foreign investment law authorities in various jurisdictions’.
“Carmelo and his management team have built a great sporting spectacle that we can expand to a wider global audience,” Greg Maffei, Liberty Media President and CEO, said when the MotoGP deal was announced. “The business has significant upsiꦜde, and we intend to grow the sport for MotoGP fans, teams, commercial partners and our shareh𓂃olders.”
Senior🅷 Dorna management - Carmelo Ezpeleta (CEO), Carlos Ezpeleta (CSO) and Dan Rossomondo (CCO) - faced the media on Thursday at COTA to discuss what the Liberty agreement will mean for the sport.
“I think fans will only have things to look forward to and more people to s🐼hare their⛄ fandom with,” said Carlos Ezpeleta.
“Liberty does not think the sport needs any fixing. We firmly agree with that. We think that we have an amazing sport that we’ve built togethe🍨r with all the stakeholders in the paddock.
“I think that will just work together on a lot ꦕof the things that we have already initiated du🐈ring the last couple of seasons. Big changes to our [weekend] format, which we already commenced.
“That’s all trying to increase the visibility and awareness of the sport globally whilst continuing to satisfy al𓆉l the traditional fans and our traditional markets.
“So a lot to look forward to when the deal is complete. I don’t think there will be a lot of big changes which will affect our current fa🍷ns.”
Rossomonꦍdo, who joined Dorna as ♛Chief Commercial Officer from the NBA exactly a year ago, added:
“I’m very conscious of our hardcore fans and how special they think the sport is. And I tend to go down 💟deep rabbit holes looking at feeds and twitter comments, where I see people don’t want a lot of changes to our sport.
“But I think those same fans also want to share the sport with so many others. I think that’s what we are going to focus on [𒅌in future] and what we have been fo🐼cussed on.
“We’ve been doing a lot of stuff over this last year, and before me, on how to make this spectacle෴ transcend just motorsport𓆏 and become more culturally relevant.
“We do believe it is the world’s most exciting sᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚport so it’s about preaching that and shouting it from the rooftops.”
Asked to sum up his own emotions at the Liberty deal, after leading Dorna since it ❀took over the MotoGP rꩲights in 1992, Carmelo Ezpeleta said:
“You’ve known me for 32 years ago and this is the result of the work we’ve made together. Everybody here, plus the press, the fans and the rest of the peop🔯le that made it possible.
“We started in 1992 with a different level and now we are one🎐 of the most important s🎶ports in the world. This is a very big emotion for me. To know that a company like Liberty Media have decided to [join] with us.
“It’s really somet♚hing important but it’s not just for me. I think all of you must be very proud th🦂at together we obtained this possibility.
“I reme🅰mber the difficult days during the pandemic and everybody worked together. This is one step more in the history of the past 32 years. For me it’s a very big thing.”
One of Liberty’s biggest successes in F1 has been the seismic growth of the American market, helped by the popularity of Drive to Survive.
The US was specifically named as one of MotoGP’s🌺 ‘Key Growth Markets’ in the literature accompanying the Liberty takeover, with female fans and those under the age of 24 also labelled as ‘Growth Segments’.
This weekend’s Austin round is MotoGP’s only American event but, in cont🍌rast to the 400,000+ fan-packed grandstands for the circuit’s F1 race (now one of three events held in the USA), COTA refuses to publish official MotoGP attendanc🔯e figures.
American riders dominated motorcycle gr🐽and pr🌜ix racing from Kenny Roberts in the late 1970s until Kevin Schwantz in 1993.
However, the last American champion was the ꦏlate Nicky Hayden in 2006 and thꦏe most recent race win by Ben Spies in 2011. The MotoGP class has been without a single full-time American since 2015.
But the USA now has a home team in the form of Trackhouse, which replaced RNF a🐈s Aprilia’s satellite team this season, plus a rising star in Joe Roberts, currently second in the Moto2 World Championship.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit 💙story and Marc Mar𓃲quez’s injury issues.