MV Agusta 'releases' Torres to focus on MotoGP
Jordi Torres is to part ൩company with the MV Agusta WorldSBK team due to his ongoing substitute rides in MotoGP.
The Spaniard stepped in to replace the injured Tito Rabat last time at Aragon and will make his second premier-class appearance for Av♐intia Ducati this weekend in Thaಞiland.

Jordi Torres is to part company with the MV Agusta WorldSBK team due to his ꦜongoing substitute rides in MotoGP.
The Spaniard stepped in to replace the iꦉnjured Tito Rabat last time at Aragon and will make his second premier-class appearance for Avintia Ducati this weekend in Thailand.
An MV Agusta statement said: 'Considering the fact that Jordi Torres will substitute for Tito Rabat on the Ducati of Team Avintia also in Thailand and maybe in Japan, the team and rider have decided tℱogether, taking into consideration the extreme time differences that the rider would have had to face during the coming weeks, to terminate in advance their collaboration, giving Jordi the chance to fully focus on his MotoG🥂P races.
🧔'The team thanks Jordi for his great professionalism ꦯand wishes him all the very best for his future.'
Torres - who joined MV this season -🌌 is 13t🌠h in the WorldSBK standings with two rounds remaining, in Argentina and Qatar.
Argentina takes place between the Thai and Japanese MotoGPs, while the Qatar WorldSBK finale ꦓwould have been a direct clash with the Australian MotoGP, should Rabat still be unfit.
Torres finished 20th and lasꦇt ෴at Aragon, but was within one-second of team-mate Xavier Simeon, riding the newer GP17 Ducati.
Although Rabat is yet to be officially confirmed at Avintia for 2019, the Spaniard (like Takaaki Nakagami at LCR) is set to stay and there are therefore th☂ought to be no remaining vacancies on the premier-class grid. Karel Abraham has already been announcꦿed as joining Avintia next season.
Former MotoGP r𒊎ider Yonny Hernandez, who looks to have split from Pedercini Kawasaki, is among those tipped to replace Torres at MV for the remaining WorldSBK rounds.

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He i🐻s at the forefront𓆏 of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.