This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

Silva out, Salom in

#22

Joined Oct 2008
6K Posts | 5K+
In Cider
Rider change at Avintia...



Ivan Silva has been demoted from race to test rider by the Avintia Blusens team for the remainder of the 2012 MotoGP season.



Silva, who briefly swapped the FTR frame for a carbon fibre Inmotec design earlier in the season, has scored points on four occasions with the Kawasaki powered machine, including a best finish of twelfth (twice).



Taking Silva's place will be fellow Spaniard David Salom, a former World Supersport podium finisher who has been racing for the Pedercini Kawasaki team in World Superbike this season.



Salom will make his MotoGP debut at the forthcoming Misano round, from September 14-16.



“Avintia Blusens wishes to thank Ivan for his work during the season, as the team benefited from his experience in the work carried out on the development of the new CRT machine,” said a team statement.



“Iván complied perfectly with the objectives both the team and he set early in the season and, thanks to the good work done by him in the development of the bikes, the team has been able to call up David Salom, convinced that the Mallorcan's experience in World SBK will allow him to be very competitive in the near future in the CRT class.”



Salom will ride alongside Yonny Hernandez, who has scored points on seven occasions in 2012, including a ninth place at Indianapolis. Hernandez has used the aluminium FTR frame throughout the year.



2012 was to be 30-year-old Silva's first full season in grand prix, after occasional appearances stretching back to 1998.
 
Excuse my ignorance, but is this a common event in motogp? I mean do they often swap riders mid season like this? It sounds like this rider has been in and out of a ride quite a few times, I assume he brings experience but not wins then.
 
Excuse my ignorance, but is this a common event in motogp? I mean do they often swap riders mid season like this? It sounds like this rider has been in and out of a ride quite a few times, I assume he brings experience but not wins then.



Not really, this is what you get when you try and turn the pinnacle of motorcycle road racing into a club sport.



What he brought, was a willingness to risk his life for free. He was probably demoted for asking for lunch money.
 
Its becoming more common, usually due to money (or lack of) that riders bring in sponsorship. For instance the last race winner in GP2 has been let go before the next round, presumably as his sponsor hasnt coughed up
 

Recent Discussions