MX2

MOTOCROSS GP OF LATVIA - SATURDAY - MX2

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Date: 
2026
Event date: 
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Event category: 

MOTOCROSS GP OF LATVIA - SATURDAY - MXGP

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Country: 
Latvia
Date: 
2026
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Event date: 
Saturday, June 6, 2026
Event category: 

MOTOCROSS GP OF LATVIA - FRIDAY - MIX

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Latvia
Date: 
2026
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Event date: 
Friday, June 5, 2026
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WORLDWIDE TV COVERAGE – THE 2026 MXGP WORLD CHAMPIONSHIP HOLDS ITS EIGHTH ROUND AT THE MXGP OF LATVIA!

KEGUMS (Latvia) 5th June 2026 –The 2026 MXGP FIM Motocross World Championship completes its first three-weekend run of the season with the annual trip to the Baltics for the MXGP of Latvia at the challenging Motocenter Zelta Zirgs venue of Kegums!

The local heroes should get the crowd worked up in every class, as the sole Latvian World Champion, Pauls Jonass, is set to take the start at home for the first time since 2022, while brothers Karlis and Janis Reisulis are fired up to challenge at the very top of the MX2 division!

Lucas Coenen holds the series leader’s red plate for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, and is looking for his first victory in this part of the world. In contrast, Jeffrey Herlings, who lost points last weekend in the title chase for Honda HRC Petronas, is on the hunt for his tenth GP victory in this country!

The MX2 class has a new leader, and it’s the twin brother of the MXGP class leader! Sacha Coenen starts a Grand Prix with the red plate for the very first time, and he has won the last two GPs here in MX2 for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing! Simon Längenfelder is only three points behind though, and keen for his first win at this venue, which he was denied with a late crash last year.  This weekend should be red hot in MX2!

Below you can find a list of all TV channels worldwide that will air LIVE and delayed action of the MXGP of Latvia, as well as the 26-minute Behind The Gate magazine show featuring the best moments from the races, exclusive interviews and more.  The team of Paul Malin, Lisa Leyland, and Ben Rumbold will bring all the race action to you, with Saturday’s Time Practice sessions also being broadcast LIVE, and all of this footage, plus the action from the hectic EMX250 European Championship, and the EMX125 Presented by FMF Racing series, will be available on MXGP-TV.com and via our TV magazine partners following the Grand Prix.

As always, MXGP fans can follow the races LIVE throughout the weekend. All you need to do is log onto www.MXGP-TV.com Saturday and Sunday, from wherever you are in the world.  The battle of the Baltics promises to be a thrilling one in all classes, so come and join us!

 

 

USA CANADA

CBS Sports Network

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 09:00 ET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 10:00 ET – LIVE

 

BRAZIL

Bandsports

Saturday 6 June 2026 – EMX 250 Race 1 – 14:40 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – EMX 250 Race 2 – 10:25 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

CENTRAL AMERICA

Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama and Mexico

FOX ONE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

TUBI

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

Tubi México

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

LATIN AMERICA(Except Brazil)

Youtube “Somos FOX”

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

EUROPE

Eurosport 2

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 08:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 09:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 10:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 11:30 CET  – Delayed

 

MAX

Andorra, Belgium, Bosnia Herzegovia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech republic, Denmark, Faroe Islands, Finland, France, Hungary, Kosovo, Macedonia, Moldova, Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Spain, Sweden.

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 08:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 09:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 10:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 11:30 CET  – Delayed

 

BELGIUM 

PLAY SPORTS 3

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

ESTONIA

Go3 Sport Open

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

Go3

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

FINLAND

MTV MAX 

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 19:00 Finnish timing  – LIVE

 

FRANCE

LA CHAINE L’EQUIPE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

Eurosport 2

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 08:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 09:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 10:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 11:30 CET  – Delayed

 

AUTO MOTO TV

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

GREAT BRITAIN

TNT Sports 8

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 11:00 GMT – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 12:00 GMT – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 14:00 GMT – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 15:00 GMT  – LIVE

 

ITALY

RAI Sport

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – tbc

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – tbc

 

Rai Sport Play

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

LATVIA

Go3 Sport Open

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

Go3

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

LITHUANIA
Go3 Sport Open

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

Go3

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

NETHERLAND

NOS

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

SLOVENIA

Sport TV1

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

SPAIN

TVG2

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

Agalega.gal

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE Stream

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE Stream

 

ASIA

Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand
 

EUROSPORT ASIA

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 08:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 09:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 10:30 CET – Delayed

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 11:30 CET  – Delayed

 

JIOSTAR  - Jio Cinema

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

CHINA

TikTok China

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 12:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 13:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 15:00 CET – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 16:00 CET  – LIVE

 

AUSTRALIA

STAN SPORTS

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 1 – 20:00 AEDT – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MXGP Race 1 – 21:00 AEDT – LIVE

Sunday 7 June 2026 – MX2 Race 2 – 23:00 AEDT – LIVE

Monday 08 June 2026 – MXGP Race 2 – 00:00 AEDT  – LIVE

All races on VOD

 

 

26min Behind-the-Gate Magazine Partners:
 

AMERICA

Latin America              You tube Somos FOX              Thursday after each MXGP 8:30pm

Mexico                        FOX ONE                                 Thursday after each MXGP 8:30pm

Central America          FOX Tubi                                  Thursday after each MXGP 8:30pm

                                    FOX ONE                                 Thursday after each MXGP 8:30pm

USA                             RACER                                     tba

 

EUROPE

Albania                        GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Austria                        GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Baltics                          TV3 Sport Open                      Thursday after each MXGP

Belgium                       Play sports                              tba

Bosnia                         GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Croatia                        GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Finland                        MTV MAX                                Wednesday after each event 18:00                                                               Finnish timing

Hungary                      GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Kosovo                        GP1                                        Thursday after each event at 20:15

Montenegro                GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Northern Macedonia  GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Portugal                      SPORT TV                                Tuesday after the event        

Romania                      Look Sport                               Wednesday after each event

Serbia                          GP1                                         Thursday after each event at 20:15

Slovenia                      Sport TV                                  Thursday after each event at 20:15 

Turkey             TRT                                          tba

INDIA and Subcontinent (Bhutan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Bangladesh, Maldives)
 

JIOSTAR                                                                       Wednesday after the event

INDONESIA                  Champions TV

 

AUSTRALIA

Australia                      Stan Sport                               Wednesday after each event

WORLDWIDE

Worldwide                  YouTube – MXGP TV               16 days after the event.

Worldwide                  Fuel TV                                   

 

 

 

LIVE TIMING – WEEKEND SCHEDULE

SATURDAY

Session

Latvia (UTC+3)

CEST (UTC+2)

Live Studio Show

12:00

11:00

EMX 125 Race 1

14:55

13:55

EMX 250 Race 1

15:40

14:40

MX2 Qualifying Race

16:25

15:25

MXGP Qualifying Race

17:15

16:15

SUNDAY

Session

Latvia (UTC+3)

CEST (UTC+2)

EMX 125 Race 2

09:40

08:40

EMX 250 Race 2

11:25

10:25

MX2 Race 1

13:00

12:00

MXGP Race 1

14:00

13:00

MX2 Race 2

16:00

15:00

MXGP Race 2

17:00

16:00

Catch all the racing LIVE on MXGP-TV! 

Saturday’s Time Practice (MXGP/MX2), the Qualifying Races (MXGP/MX2), and Races from all classes will be broadcasted LIVE on MXGP’s streaming service www.MXGP-TV.com, while results throughout the weekend will be available  HERE.

 

 

LINKS

Infront Moto Racing

FIM

MXGP Latvia

 

Image: 
Category: 
Date: 
Friday, June 5, 2026
Author: 
Infront Moto Racing
Short title: 
TV COVERAGE LATVIA

THE TWINS LEAD THE CHARGE TO KEGUMS AS IT’S TIME FOR THE MXGP OF LATVIA!

KEGUMS (Latvia) – 4th June 2026 – The 2026 FIM Motocross World Championships prepares for its third GP in as many weekends, taking us to the eighth round of the series at the challenging Motocenter Zelta Zirgs venue, near the town of Kegums for the MXGP of Latvia! The general description of this track is always to say that it’s sandy, but there is definitely a harder base than the sand of the Benelux countries, meaning that good hardpack riders can find something for themselves to perform on as well!

Motocross World Championship action has been seen here since 2005, when Belgian Sven Breugelmans won his second Grand Prix on his way to that season’s MX3 world title.  The full MXGP series first came here in 2009, won by Antonio Cairoli, also on a KTM, with Potugal’s Rui Goncalves taking victory in MX2.  We have been back to the Zelta Zirgs, named after the “Golden Horse”, Latvian mythology’s symbol of strength and bravery, every year since then, with the standout event being the Motocross of Nations in 2014.  We even came here for three GPs in eight days to restart the Championship after the Coronavirus suspension was lifted in 2020. 

This year the MXGP World Championship is being fought out between the top two riders here in last year’s GP. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing lead the way with their teenage prodigy Lucas Coenen, and after problems for Honda HRC Petronas rider Jeffrey Herlings in Germany, the Belgian now holds a 31-point advantage over the Dutch legend, who is going for an amazing tenth Grand Prix win at the circuit! Fifty points further back is Kawasaki Racing Team MXGP’s reigning World Champion Romain Febvre, who has yet to win here but is always a contender!  His teammate Pauls Jonass, Latvia’s only Motocross World Champion to date, finally makes it to his home GP after missing it through injury for the last three seasons! He sits just two points outside of the series top ten and will be fired up for his home round!

For the first time in Motocross history we have twin brothers, or indeed brothers of any age difference, leading two World Championships at the same time, as Red Bull KTM Factory Racing flyer Sacha Coenen wears the red plate at Kegums, holding it for the first time at the start of a race weekend. The title chase is closer in MX2 however, as defending Champion Simon Längenfelder is only three points behind the Belgian for Red Bull KTM Factory Racinng, but will be mindful of the fact that Sacha has won the last two MX2 GPs at the Latvian venue!  19 points off the lead is Spaniard Guillem Farres of the Triumph Factory Racing Team, but the home fans will be looking to the Reisulis brothers, Janis and Karlis of the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 squad, to be challenging for their first Grand Prix podium, especially as the younger of the two, Janis, has been getting closer to that top three throughout his rookie season!

The EMX250 European Championship sets up for its sixth round, which will mark the halfway point of the season for them, and the Venum BUD Racing Kawasaki pairing of Francisco Garcia from Spain and Jake Cannon from Australia lead the way, 30 points apart, while Danish rider Nicolai Skovbjerg holds third for Mx-Handel Racing Husqvarna. Local man Jekabs Kubulins has had an up and down season for JK Racing Yamaha, and has pace far better than his 14th place in the standings might suggest!

The EMX125 European Championship Presented by FMF Racing fires into the second half of its series this weekend, and the Norman KTM Factory Rookies squad are dominating with their two Austrians, Moritz Ernecker and Ricardo Bauer, leading the way. Frenchman Sleny Goyer is still giving chase in third for Yamaha Europe Monster Energy MJC, and while there are no Latvian points scorers in this Championship so far, there should be a healthy dose of local support for the prodigious KTM MX Futures Estonian Lucas Leok, as he fights from tenth in the series!

The MXGP of Latvia often delivers some fantastic racing as the shifting sands test even the toughest of competitors, so don’t be missing this intense weekend of Motocross ahead of us!

 




Pauls Jonass

Lucas Coenen looked immaculate with his double victory at last weekend’s Liqui Moly MXGP of Germany, and for sure his main rival Jeffrey Herlings will be hoping that their respective past records in Latvia hold true for another season!  The Belgian has finished second across multiple races at the Zelta Zirgs, including all three races in MXGP last year, for second overall, and in two of the three races in MX2 back in 2024, again claiming second overall! He even took a second in the only Sunday race he finished back in 2023!

In contrast, Herlings is coming to one of his best ever circuits. Literally, in terms of GP victories, his nine wins here are only matched by his nine at Valkenswaard, a venue we haven’t raced at for some time.  He’s been on the podium at Kegums 12 times from his 15 attempts, including his last six visits! Winner of the last three GPs here, and seven of the last nine individual races, his record here is nothing short of ridiculous, stretching back to only his second career victory anywhere, back in 2010.  Does this make him the favourite, or do we think of the sheer pace of Coenen this season, especially in the softer going of Sardegna?  There’s no way that the King of Kegums is going to give it away without a fight!

Romain Febvre has been a solid podium contender for almost as long as “The Bullet”, with six top three results in 13 visits, including third overall last year and third in the Qualifying Race. He hasn’t won an individual race since his first title defence in 2016, but one of the best sand riders ever from France cannot be discounted!

Neither can Tim Gajser, who is seven points back from Febvre for Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MXGP, and he has four GP wins and six race wins to his name here, as well as his last attempt at a Qualifying Race win in 2024.  His teammate Maxime Renaux, just five points further back from the Slovenian, took a double race win here in his MX2 title season of 2021, but only a best of fifth in the premiere class.

Kay de Wolf continues to march up the points table for Nestaan Husqvarna Factory Racing, moving up to sixth place after Germany thanks to the injury-enforced absence of Honda HRC Petronas’ Tom Vialle.  The Dutchman won his first ever overall GP here in 2023, and has either crashed or won in most of his outings since. The former MX2 World Champion will be hoping for nothing less than another podium result, while Vialle is uncertain to be riding at the site where he won a single GP back in 2020, but was third on his last visit in 2022. The Frenchman’s  Honda HRC Petronas teammate Ruben Fernandez, still eighth but closer after his German GP podium, has a surprisingly good record here, with fifth overall last year and a podium in 2022.

Another who enjoyed his first 2026 podium in Germany was Andrea Adamo, and the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing pilot will be looking for his first top three result of any kind at Kegums. His fellow Italian Alberto Forato moved into the series top ten with a sixth in Germany, and although he got an EMX250 podium here in 2019, sixth overall with a 4-9 scorecard in 2022 is his best in Latvia at GP level.

The other Kegums GP winner lining up in MXGP is Jago Geerts, who won three times in MX2, and took his best Sunday result yet in the MXGP class here with sixth overall last season.  The MRT Racing Team Beta rider will be hoping for something similar to lift himself from 19th in this year’s Championship, while home hero Pauls Jonass will initially be happy just to be here after three years of missing out on his local fans’ adulation! He actually took second overall the last time he lined up at the Zelta Zirgs, with three second places across the weekend in 2022. Just a single race win in his MX2 title season of 2017, plus an EMX125 victory in 2013, look likely to remain his only victories from home territory, but the Kawasaki Racing Team MXGP man can certainly dream of more!

Be prepared for a stunning showdown this weekend in the MXGP class!

    
1. Lucas Coenen; 2. Kay de Wolf

 

MXGP - World Championship Top 10 Classification: 1. Lucas Coenen (BEL, KTM), 344 points; 2. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, HON), 313 p.; 3. Romain Febvre (FRA, KAW), 263 p.; 4. Tim Gajser (SLO, YAM), 256 p.; 5. Maxime Renaux (FRA, YAM), 251 p.; 6. Kay de Wolf (NED, HUS), 223 p.; 7. Tom Vialle (FRA, HON), 219 p.; 8. Ruben Fernandez (ESP, HON), 216 p.; 9. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), 211 p.; 10. Alberto Forato (ITA, FAN), 142 p.

 




MX2 Start Kegums 2025

The timing could not be better for Sacha Coenen to wear his first ever red plate, apart from those earned on a Saturday, as he returns to the site of his first ever GP victory in 2024, which he repeated last year!  The Red Bull KTM Factory Racing rider was helped by a last lap crash from the lead for his teammate Simon Längenfelder in the 2025 GP, so the German can pick up the pace here to try and reverse that three-point gap between the two! He took last year’s Qualifying Race win, as well as podium trophies from each of the last two visits to Kegums. He needs to dig deep again this weekend!

Guillem Farres didn’t have a great GP in Germany, and he took eighth overall from his only visit to Latvia last season.  From fourth in the Championship, Liam Everts will be looking for his first Kegums podium for Nestaan Husqvarna Factory Racing as he tries to claw back the 20 points to Farres.  He will likely be challenged by the other Triumph Racing Factory Team rider Camden McLellan, who is only three points behind the Belgian and stronger in the sand than his sixth here last year might indicate!

Mathis Valin is riding high from his first ever GP win last weekend for Kawasaki Racing Team MX2, and is on a three-GP podium streak as well, so he will be looking to repeat his 2023 EMX125 victory here and press forward from sixth in the Championship.

Behind him, though, is his successor as EMX250 Champion and absolute home favourite Janis Reisulis, and the Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 rider pushed to this limit to enjoy a perfect day in EMX250 last year, sending the fans into raptures, and they will make intense noise for both him and brother Karlis, who also had a great weekend with his best ever Qualifying result of third last season. Valerio Lata is currently a point ahead of the elder brother for Honda HRC Petronas, and the Italian will be looking to remember his race win here in EMX250 two years ago, rather than his double DNF of last year!

Rounding out the top ten is Julius Mikula, and hopefully the likeable Czech racing for the Ošicka KTM Racing team has recovered well enough from his big crash of last weekend to defend that spot, although Kay Karssemakers will fancy his chances in the sand for Dixon Racing Kawasaki.

With all of their home heroes to cheer on in both major classes, the Latvian fans should generate another fantastic atmosphere around the Zelta Zirgs circuit, and we look forward to a brilliant GP as the top riders battle in the Baltics!

    
1. Janis Reisulis; 2. Karlis Reisulis

 

MX2 - World Championship Top 10 Classification: 1. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), 320 points; 2. Simon Längenfelder (GER, KTM), 317 p.; 3. Guillem Farres (ESP, TRI), 301 p.; 4. Liam Everts (BEL, HUS), 281 p.; 5. Camden Mc Lellan (RSA, TRI), 278 p.; 6. Mathis Valin (FRA, KAW), 264 p.; 7. Janis Martins Reisulis (LAT, YAM), 252 p.; 8. Valerio Lata (ITA, HON), 189 p.; 9. Karlis Alberts Reisulis (LAT, YAM), 188 p.; 10. Julius Mikula (CZE, KTM), 144 p.

 

 

All the photos from the MXGP of Latvia will be available HERE.

You can find the complete results HERE.

 

TIMETABLE

SATURDAY:
07:40 EMX125 Group 1 Free Practice, 08:10 EMX125 Group 2 Free Practice, 08:40 EMX250 Group 1 Free Practice, 09:10 EMX250 Group 2 Free Practice, 09:50 EMX125 Group 1 Qualifying Practice, 10:30 MX2 Free Practice, 11:00 MXGP Free Practice, 11:50 EMX125 Group 2 Qualifying Practice, 12:25 EMX250 Group 1 Qualifying Practice, 13:00 EMX250 Group 2 Qualifying Practice, 13:40 MX2 Time Practice, 14:15 MXGP Time Practice, 15:00 EMX125 Race 1, 15:45 EMX250 Race 1, 16:35 MX2 Qualifying Race, 17:25 MXGP Qualifying Race.

SUNDAY:
09:40 EMX125 Race 2, 10:25 MX2 Warm-up, 10:45 MXGP Warm-up, 11:30 EMX250 Race 2, 13:15 MX2 Race 1, 14:15 MXGP Race 1, 16:10 MX2 Race 2, 17:10 MXGP Race 2.

 

 

LINKS

Infront Moto Racing

FIM

FIM Europe

MXGP Latvia

 

Image: 
Category: 
Date: 
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Author: 
Infront Moto Racing

BEHIND THE GATE – THE INTERVIEWS: NOEL ZANOCZ

The Behind The Gate documentary series, which is produced after every GP and aired immediately on MXGP-TV.com, continued with Episode Six, “Making The Break”, which focused on the MXGP of Trentino, before the five-week break in the schedule prior to the MXGP of France.  We went behind the scenes with Venrooy KTM Racing, and their MX2 rookie Noel Zanocz, who was even treated to a fine dining experience at the Arciduca Ristorante in Arco with his girlfriend Paula, which the teenager enjoyed, maybe a little too much! It all made for great content for the programme.

We interviewed Noel on the Friday of the MXGP of France, as Noel sought shelter from the surprising heat of the Lacapelle-Marival sunshine to give his views on his rookie season so far, after finishing 15th overall at Trentino and holding that position in the Championship.

As always, these interviews have to be edited to fit within a 26-minute programme, but here is the full transcript of what Noel said to the Behind The Gate cameras.

 

BTG: [Before the cameras roll] Just for sound-check: do you know any more famous people with your name? Noel Gallagher? You know who Noel Gallagher is? Oasis?

NZ: No, I don't know them. Christmas! It's Christmas in French.

 

BTG: Wow, I wasn't going to go there! I wasn't going to be that unkind to you! So, Noel, coming to Trentino, you’ve had a few decent results in the past there. What are your thoughts on Trentino, and for our recording, tell us about your season so far before that weekend. How are you feeling about being in MX2, for your first season so far?

NZ: Yeah, so I had a pretty rough pre-season. I had a thumb injury, and a ligament problem in my knee. So, I'm still struggling with that, but we tried to make the best out of it. We made a little progress, Sardegna was one step ahead, and yeah, just crossing the fingers to survive Trentino. It’s not been so easy for me there in the past, and yeah, just try to get some feeling on the track, and putting in the hours on the bike to get the feeling, and basically, that's the plan for the weekend.

 

BTG:  Obviously, you've gone up from EMX250. Not too many of you starting this year compared to before. You know, yourself and Janis Reisulis are really the main two that have moved up there. So, how has it been for you? You know, you're now going from two races across two days to three races instead, you know, one and then two on the Sunday. What's it like for you? How are you finding it? How are you dealing with it? And have you made much changes to your training, for example, to cope with it?

NZ: Yeah, so far it has been quite a big change. Also, as I said, my winter was not so easy, so I'm not fully prepped yet. I'm struggling with many, many things. Also, I'm not super confident yet in myself, and yeah, it's also been a big change. Like, we have way more riding time, so it's a little bit hard, let's say, physical-wise, to really see where you must push or not. Already from Time Practice, it's quite important, I think, to have a good gate pick in the Qualifying Race, and from then on, obviously, we are racing for points, and that's already a big difference from EMX250. But I'm excited to learn, and I'm really here to get the experience this year.

 

BTG:  Now, you're on the team, obviously, the Venrooy KTM team with Mattia Guadagnini. How are you finding the bike, and how are you finding the team with Mattia as your teammate? Is it good for the atmosphere, and how much contact do you have with him as part of your whole life in the team?

NZ: Yeah, so obviously, the KTM is a really good bike, and I have been enjoying riding it. It's really cool to have Mattia as a teammate, and he has obviously a lot of experience with the KTM group. Yeah, he has a lot of, let's say, nice advice for me on the racetracks and everything. He has been a factory rider, so he knows what it takes to be up front, and he can share his opinion. We spent time together with the team in the pre-season in Sardinia in January and it was going really well. Then, yeah, he was also helping a lot, like just in general. So, yeah, it was a really nice time with him.

 

BTG: So, yeah, going through to Trentino itself, obviously, you scored points and you had your best Qualifying Race yet to get there on the Saturday. So, how are you feeling before the actual start of the race? The Sunday, you're good with the track, the bike’s dialled in, how's it looking for you before the start?

NZ: Yeah, so actually it was better than what I expected on Saturday. And yeah, I had a good feeling, but the track was really, really dry and sketchy. So, that was tricky, but I could manage it, I think, quite good. I had quite a nice start, and then yeah, I could ride a little bit my race. So, I was excited for Sunday as we saw the weather podcast. Maybe it's gonna be a little bit rainy in the first race, but yeah, normally the weather should be fine.

 

BTG: You had a great start in MX2 Race 1, right towards the front, it was absolutely amazing for you. You got a great start from that side of it. Obviously, a lot of riders came past you, and I guess that's tricky to deal with. But yeah, how did that feel being up there on the first lap? And was it more stress because you had more people around you, or how did all that feel with the start?

NZ: Yeah, I've been always a really good starter when the rain came down, so it might be because of my weight or I don't know. Just why, with the rain, I always love to ride in it, but yeah, the track didn't turn out to be that bad, like what I expected. I thought it's gonna be way more slippery, so I really tried to take it easy and calm in the first couple of laps, but it didn't really pay off because I dropped back really quickly, so I was quite disappointed in that. But yeah, tried to ride a little bit my race, let's say, and just gaining the hours on the bike.

 

BTG: Were you feeling it much with the thumb injury? Is that pretty much now behind you? You got through Trentino, okay?

NZ: Yeah, I would say the knee is more of a struggle. After the pre-season races, I got injured with my knee. Several ligaments were not completely torn, but a little bit screwed up, let's say. And yeah, I try to survive. I thought ‘Now we're gonna have one month of break. I will really try to use that time to get back my fitness and also a little bit more confidence with the knee, make it stronger, and really just put in the hours on the bike and also off the bike to be fit again’.

 

BTG: Great stuff, and obviously, we can see there that you're 15th in the Championship right now, and you've only got a few points ahead of you to get past guys like Scott Smulders and Jens Walvoort, and of course, Cas Valk is now out as well. So, you’ve got a chance there of getting in the top dozen in the world. Was this the kind of aim at the start of the year to get up there? I mean, what did you have your sights on at the start of the year?

NZ: Yeah, so actually, till November, I felt really good, and then I had an unfortunate thumb injury in a practice. What I've been struggling with for three months, and it was really hard to get back the trust in it. I've been to many doctors, everyone said different things, and some said some bone injuries, some said the ligament problems. And in the end, they never really could find out the real problems, so that has been a little bit difficult. And then, yeah, I mean, till that moment, I was really hoping for, let's say, a top eight finish, be in the mix with the factory guys, and try to put decent results in every weekend. And now, with the injuries and everything, I had to change a little bit, because it was unrealistic. Now, I really want to take each race as it comes and really to take this year for learning as much as I can and put in the work and see where we end up. I'm still pretty convinced that I can do good in the second part of the season, and I will do everything to get there.

 

BTG: Just to find out a bit more about you, you ride with the number 716, you have for as long as I've seen you riding. So, yeah, talk us through the number. How come it's 716?

NZ: Yeah, so in Hungary we say always when you're born, you start with which year you're born, then the month, and then the day. And because I was born in 2007, January 6th, I took the 7 of the 2007. January is obviously the first month of the year, and then the 6th when I was born that's how my number came!

 

BTG: You said about Hungary there. Obviously, there aren't many riders or professional athletes in motorsport at the very top level from Hungary. So, how did you make your way to this point? Did you just start winning everything in Hungary, then went further afield? Tell us please about going through the youth ranks and how you started, and where you started to race through to this level.

NZ:  I started really, really young. When I was three, I was already on a bike. And yeah, I think when I was five, I did my first race in Hungary, when I was a five-year-old on a 50cc. And then for two years, I finished last in every race that I started. And then, yeah, obviously, that was not so easy to move from there! I didn't really want to ride back then. My dad always had to, let's say, motivate me with some different kinds of things to keep me on the bike. I really wanted to play football back then, but yeah, I started to get some decent results in Hungary. Then we started to go to the Czech Republic on the 50cc. I started riding really good there. So I moved up to 65cc pretty young. I think I was 10 years old when I won Free Practice in EMX65, in Loket, that was really good. But then, yeah, the races didn't really end up how I wanted. And then I moved up to 85cc really, really young. I rode the 85s for four years, I believe I did some races in the ADAC, and obviously EMX and the Junior World Championship. Then moving up to 125, that was really the time when we started to travel a lot, winter camps in Italy and just do all the series. And my first year I did only a couple of rounds and the Junior World Championship. So, then in 2024, it was the first year when I really got the chance to be a part of a factory team, and then last year with Jackie on the Honda. I had two really decent years, results wise, and everything. Now we are here in MX2! It's kind of a big deal. I don't really remember when was the last time, or if anyone from my country has rode in the past in the MX2 World Championship. So it's really a big thing from Hungary.

 

BR:  Nice, and there's a few of you coming through as well, like Aaron Katona, for example. So, are these guys riders that are following your way, or has there been a new wave of riders from Hungary that we are likely to see in the future?

NZ: Yeah, I think this opened a lot of doors for kids, just to see that it's possible. And I really hope that we are going to have some other talents from Hungary, because it would be really nice for the sport and everything.

 

BTG: One last one for you, just a bit of a different one. Can you say, so far, what has been your very best day in the sport? What was the day that you can remember going away from the track, being absolutely full of it, buzzed up? What's your very best moment in motocross, basically?

NZ: That's a difficult one. I have three top ones. Like, obviously, winning the World Junior Championship in Heerde [The Netherlands, 2024], that was something amazing, being the first Hungarian to win a world title, and it was just amazing. Then again, the same year, but in Spain, when I win the European EMX125 title, it was just amazing. I was leading the Championship for the whole year, but then in Switzerland, the penultimate round, I had a broken engine and I dropped back into second place in the Championship. So, arriving there, knowing that, yeah, I have to give my all to make sure that I can win the title, and in the end, it paid off. So, that was really an amazing day.

And a little bit different, yeah, one that was good, was 2022, the Motocross of Nations in Redbud. I had the opportunity to ride with FIM Team Europe there, and I was just 15 at the time. To race the Open class on a 250 bike, and battling with my idols like Dylan Ferrandis, it was just an amazing experience. So, yeah. That was a really, really cool one.

 

Epilogue: The progress continued for Noel with his best GP yet at Lacapelle-Marival. Fifteenth again in the Qualifying Race was followed by twelfth overall from 13-12 results on Sunday, advancing him to fourteenth in the standings.  Just 14 ahead of him is the injured Cas Valk, who will be unable to compete for most of the season, but the Hungarian is only two behind Maxime Grau before the Liqui Moly MXGP of Germany, so a place in the top dozen in MX2 is well within his grasp. Massive thanks to him for being great with us in Trentino, and to Venrooy KTM Racing for getting him organised!

Image: 
Category: 
Date: 
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Author: 
Infront Moto Racing - Ben Rumbold

TIMETABLE AND ENTRY LISTS FOR THE 2026 MXGP OF LATVIA

MONACO (Principailty of Monaco) 3 June 2026 – The 2026 FIM Motocross World Championship is all set to go straight to Kegums for the MXGP of Latvia on the 6th and 7th of June.

Checkout the Timetable and Entry Lists for the MXGP of Latvia below:

TIMETABLE

MXGP ENTRY LIST

MX2 ENTRY LIST

EMX250 ENTRY LIST

EMX125 Presented by FMF Racing ENTRY LIST

Image: 
Category: 
Date: 
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Author: 
Infront Moto Racing

LUCAS COENEN AND VALIN ARE THE GIANTS OF THE LIQUI MOLY MXGP OF GERMANY!

TEUTSCHENTHAL (Germany) 31st May 2026 – The cacophony of noise from horns, whistles, voices, and of course the chainless chainsaws meant that we could only be in one place – the Talkessel circuit near Teutschenthal for the Liqui Moly MXGP of Germany!  Round seven of the 2026 FIM World Motocross Championships saw some mixed conditions, a track that had every challenge thrown at it, and some incredible racing action to continue the tradition of the fantastic Germanic atmosphere unique to this classic venue!

The MXGP class was dominated, for the third time this season, by Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Championship leader Lucas Coenen, who scored a perfect 1-1 victory and benefitted from problems for his title rivals. Andrea Adamo scored his first MXGP class podium to make it a 1-2 for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing, and the Honda HRC Petronas teamster Ruben Fernandez climbed onto his first podium of the season with a fighting third overall.

The MX2 class saw an emotional first Grand Prix victory for Mathis Valin, as the young Frenchman took 2-1 race finishes to become the third first-time GP winner this season, also taking the first GP win for his Kawasaki Racing Team MX2 squad in its current form.  Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Sacha Coenen had to be content with second overall after crashing from the lead in race two, but he can console himself with his new position as the red plate holder after taking the lead of the series. South African star Camden McLellan took a solid third overall for the Triumph Racing Factory Team.

It was a difficult day at the office for many of the fancied runners, and it leaves both of the men’s World Championships in much different shapes than they were in before!

 



MXGP Start Germany 2026

Under much drier conditions, Maxime Renaux set the fastest time for Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MXGP in the morning Warm-Up, with Honda HRC Petronas’ Jeffrey Herlings in second ahead of Renaux’s teammate Tim Gajser.

Lucas Coenen was irresistible into the first corner at the start of race one, however, and took his fourth Fox Holeshot Award of the season, as Ruben Fernandez and Gajser disputed second place.  The Slovenian passed his former teammate on the exit to the tight corner before Pit Lane, and gave chase to the flying Belgian out in front.  In the meantime, the Spaniard’s teammate Herlings had started down in 15th, and was struggling to progress at the rate expected.

Andrea Adamo held fourth ahead of Qualifying Race winner Romain Febvre, and the Kawasaki Racing Team MXGP man was doing all he could to pass the Italian, who was holding steady!  Alberto Forato, again gating well for Fantic Factory Racing MXGP, was passed by Renaux at the start of the first full lap to lose sixth place, as Febvre’s teammate Pauls Jonass held eighth ahead of Nestaan Husqvarna Factory Racing’s Kay de Wolf.  Herlings completed the first full lap in tenth.

Passing may have been tough with the rutted conditions worsened by sporadic rain, but there was still plenty happening, as Adamo passed Fernandez briefly on lap four, before tangling with the Spaniard at the end of the start straight, in a collision which left the Italian on the floor!  He remounted in ninth, just behind Herlings!

Suddenly, a visibly struggling Jeffrey pulled into Pit Lane with a technical issue, unable to finish the race!  On the same lap, De Wolf made a forceful move on Forato to take sixth place.  Renaux found some good pace to close in on Febvre, and made a brilliant move to pass his countryman over the new “Dragon’s Back” obstacle after the finish line jump.  The Champ tried to retaliate instantly, but got caught out in the ruts and crashed awkwardly!  He struggled to restart in the sticky conditions, and dropped to 17th at the flag!

Coenen eased away to a five second win over Gajser, with Fernandez a delighted third.  De Wolf had closed on Renaux, but fell in a tight left-handed corner, recovering to hold fifth ahead of Forato, Adamo, Jonass, and with his season’s best race finish, Brent van Doninck, making it two riders in the top ten for the Fantic Factory Racing MXGP squad!  Dutchman Roan van de Moosdijk took a good tenth for Kosak KTM Racing, but his countryman Herlings’ DNF meant that Coenen now held a strong 28-point lead in the Championship.

 

To add further momentum to his title campaign, the teenaged Belgian took yet another Fox Holeshot Award at the start of race two, although Adamo was able to rail around the outside in the second corner, just as Febvre and the Team Honda Motoblouz SR Motul rider Kevin Horgmo passed Herlings into third and fourth!  “The Bullet” was able to respond quickly, but another title contender then hit problems as Gajser crashed in the fast valley between the Pit Lane and the finish line jump!  It put the Slovenian towards the back of the pack, and he would only be able to recover to 19th at the chequered flag.

At the furthest end of the circuit from the start, Coenen made his move past Adamo to take the lead in convincing fashion, and again nobody could catch him, even though Herlings did his best after firing across the bows of Adamo to take second into the last corner of the first full lap!  Febvre, Fernandez, Horgmo, De Wolf, and Renaux were all giving chase in the top order!

Febvre caught Adamo quickly, but as the Italian got cross-rutted he had to change direction, just as the Champion was drawing near, and the Frenchman hit the ground as his front wheel hit the back one of the KTM!  He was able to remount quickly enough to stay in fifth.  He was fortunate to do so, as De Wolf nearly crashed trying to pass Fernandez, and just as Renaux was catching them after passing Horgmo for seventh, the Dutchman attacked in the same corner, and they both went down as they hit the same rut in unison!  De Wolf was up quickest, and Renaux pounced on Fernandez to take seventh!  The move dropped Fernandez to third overall, promoting Adamo to second.  Renaux needed one more spot for a podium, but De Wolf had too much pace and finished fifth in the race behind winner Coenen, Herlings, Adamo, and Febvre, who tried again to pass Adamo but was unable to.

Fernandez took seventh, good enough for the podium result by a point from Renaux, with De Wolf fifth overall.  Horgmo, Forato, and Red Bull Ducati Factory MX Team pilot Andrea Bonacorsi rounded out the top ten in race two, after Forato had pulled a late pass in the clash of the two tall Italians!   Forato was therefore a season-best-equalling sixth overall with Gajser seventh, Horgmo eighth, Herlings’ single score good enough for ninth, and Febvre rounding out the overall top ten!

Coenen claimed his 19th career Grand Prix win with another controlled five-second victory, and extends his points lead over Herlings to an impressive 31.  Adamo and Fernandez both scored their first podium results since China in 2025.

Next weekend the series heads to Kegums for the MXGP of Latvia. Herlings has won a record nine times at that circuit, while Lucas has yet to taste victory in the Baltics!  Will this situation change, or will “The Bullet” continue his run in the Latvian sand?  You have to join us for round eight to find out!

 

Lucas Coenen: “Good weekend, two hole shots and just led every single lap. The track was crazy, every time you hit one you were almost looping out. I had two big moments and I said, let the race finish because I don’t want to end up on my ear. Overall I’m happy, I think I did a good job this weekend. I'm looking forward to the next weekend in Latvia.”

Andrea Adamo: “It’s amazing! It’s my first podium in my rookie season and there are many fast guys out there, many world champions. The line between P3 and P10 is really thin. Following is almost more easy than leading at the moment because I learn quite well when I’m behind. The expectations are not so high; I came into the season just to learn every race, keep pushing, don’t give up and learn. That’s the main goal for this season.”

Ruben Fernandez: “It’s always good getting back on the box, especially after the last podium in China last year. I haven’t been feeling the best on the bike lately. Been working with the team and changing some stuff to try and get a better feeling. Seems like it’s getting better. The speed, the results; it’s the feeling I have when I’m riding. I’m hoping to feel a little bit better and to be like myself again.”

    
1. Andrea Adamo; 2. Ruben Fernandez

 

MXGP - Grand Prix Race 1 - Top 10 Classification: 1. Lucas Coenen (BEL, KTM), 36:20.693; 2. Tim Gajser (SLO, Yamaha), +0:04.947; 3. Ruben Fernandez (ESP, Honda), +0:16.681; 4. Maxime Renaux (FRA, Yamaha), +0:19.783; 5. Kay de Wolf (NED, Husqvarna), +0:36.312; 6. Alberto Forato (ITA, Fantic), +0:42.925; 7. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), +1:07.904; 8. Pauls Jonass (LAT, Kawasaki), +1:13.145; 9. Brent Van doninck (BEL, Fantic), +1:17.545; 10. Roan Van De Moosdijk (NED, KTM), +1:21.993.

MXGP - Grand Prix Race 2 - Top 10 Classification: 1. Lucas Coenen (BEL, KTM), 34:47.752; 2. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, Honda), +0:04.841; 3. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), +0:25.605; 4. Romain Febvre (FRA, Kawasaki), +0:28.046; 5. Kay de Wolf (NED, Husqvarna), +0:40.060; 6. Maxime Renaux (FRA, Yamaha), +0:43.987; 7. Ruben Fernandez (ESP, Honda), +0:53.477; 8. Kevin Horgmo (NOR, Honda), +0:56.716; 9. Alberto Forato (ITA, Fantic), +0:58.284; 10. Andrea Bonacorsi (ITA, Ducati), +1:00.488.

MXGP Overall - Top 10 Classification: 1. Lucas Coenen (BEL, KTM), 50 pts; 2. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), 34 pts; 3. Ruben Fernandez (ESP, Honda), 34 pts; 4. Maxime Renaux (FRA, Yamaha), 33 pts; 5. Kay de Wolf (NED, Husqvarna), 32 pts; 6. Alberto Forato (ITA, Fantic), 27 pts; 7. Tim Gajser (SLO, Yamaha), 24 pts; 8. Kevin Horgmo (NOR, Honda), 23 pts; 9. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, Honda), 22 pts; 10. Romain Febvre (FRA, Kawasaki), 22 pts.

MXGP - World Championship - Top 10 Classification: 1. Lucas Coenen (BEL, KTM), 344 pts; 2. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, Honda), 313 pts; 3. Romain Febvre (FRA, Kawasaki), 263 pts; 4. Tim Gajser (SLO, Yamaha), 256 pts; 5. Maxime Renaux (FRA, Yamaha), 251 pts; 6. Kay de Wolf (NED, Husqvarna), 223 pts; 7. Tom Vialle (FRA, Honda), 219 pts; 8. Ruben Fernandez (ESP, Honda), 216 pts; 9. Andrea Adamo (ITA, KTM), 211 pts; 10. Alberto Forato (ITA, Fantic), 142 pts.

MXGP - Manufacturers Classification: 1. Honda, 384 points; 2. KTM, 360 p.; 3. Yamaha, 315 p.; 4. Kawasaki, 288 p.; 5. Husqvarna, 223 p.; 6. Fantic, 156 p.; 7. Ducati, 148 p.; 8. Beta, 49 p.; 9. Triumph, 45 p


MXGP Podium Germany 2026

 



Mathis Valin

Sacha Coenen yet again showed his one-lap pace with the fastest time in the Warm-Up session, ahead of Honda HRC Petronas’ hardpack lover Valerio Lata and Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2 rookie Janis Reisulis.

The Belgian rocketed to yet another Fox Holeshot Award in race one, with Mathis Valin instantly giving chase ahead of Lata and Camden McLellan. Liam Everts ran off-track out of turn one on his Nestaan Husqvarna Factory Racing machine, and did well to recover to 12th by the end of the first lap!

In the muddy conditions, it was Karlis Reisulis who held fifth initially for Monster Energy Yamaha Factory MX2, but brother Janis was soon past him and challenging McLellan for fourth!  He struck at the South African before the end of the first lap, as the second Triumph Racing Factory Team rider Guillem Farres passed Karlis for sixth. Julius Mikula held eighth for Osička Racing KTM, with DRT Kawasaki pilot Kay Karssemakers ninth.  Then came the man most of the fans had come to see, reigning World Champion and home hero Simon Längenfelder, and the Red Bull KTM Factory Racing rider was not 100% after battling with a cold all weekend.  He and Karssemakers both passed Mikula on lap three, with the German then moving to the inside of the Dutchman a lap later.

McLellan got back past Janis Reisulis for fourth on lap six, but Coenen was doing enough to keep Valin far enough back to not be a threat.  Längenfelder and Karlis Reisulis exchanged passes and crashes for seventh place, with the Latvian eventually falling to tenth behind Mikula.  Everts caught the Champion by the final lap, who then fell right in front of him in the penultimate corner! With the Belgian only briefly held up, they would remount quickly to hold seventh and eighth!

With a few laps to go, Lata suffered a small crash on a downhill, dropping from third to fifth behind McLellan and Janis Reisulis. Farres was sixth ahead of Everts.  Coenen’s win put him in front of the Championship, suddenly with a six-point advantage going into race two!

 

At the start of race two, the Belgian duly won a drag race with Valin to claim his eighth Fox Holeshot Award of the year, but Längenfelder was much higher up in third ahead of McLellan and the Maddi Racing Honda ABF Italia of Maxime Grau!  Farres soon got by the Frenchman, who dropped down the order quickly with a few mistakes despite the track being considerably improved during the break in racing. McLellan also lost places down to eighth with his own mistake!

Janis Reisulis held fifth behind Farres at the end of the first full lap, then came Lata, Karssemakers, McLellan, and a slow-starting Everts.  Towards the end of lap four, Coenen dropped the bike in a dip between jumps, and both Valin and the Champ got past, sending the crowd into its loudest cheer of the day!  It was short-lived though, as Coenen was able to re-pass the German into the very next corner! 

The track became very tough to pass on, and Mikula suffered a big crash on lap 12.  The next time around, Sacha Coenen jumped on the yellow flags, instantly apologising with a wave, but the Penalty was then applied and he was to be docked five points as a result. 

Noel Zanocz fought his way into the top ten, his first such finish in MX2 for Venrooy KTM Racing, with Karssemakers ninth behind a crestfallen Lata.  Crestfallen because Everts had passed him on the very last lap for seventh!

The top six stayed in place as Valin, Coenen, Längenfelder, Farres, Janis Reisulis and McLellan all fought with the conditions.  Valin’s first career Sunday win gave him his first ever Grand Prix victory, and his third podium result in a row.  The Frenchman becomes the first rider from his country to win in MX2 since the heroic Thibault Benistant in 2023.  We obviously wish Thibault well in his current struggles, and we’re sure that he would not be unhappy at seeing this result today.

Valin’s win is also the first in the class for Kawasaki since Dylan Ferrandis back in July 2016 at Loket, and it lifts him back up to sixth in the Championship this year.  Sacha’s penalty from second overall still leaves him with a three-point lead over Längenfelder, and the Belgian leaves a GP for the first time in his career with the red plate in his pocket!  McLellan scores his second straight podium, and Janis Reisulis achieved another career best with fourth overall. The Champion salvaged fifth from a rough day, ahead of Farres, Lata, Everts, Karssemakers, and Karlis Reisulis.  

The Championship moves to Latvia, home of the Reisulis brothers, in a week’s time, where Sacha Coenen has won for both of the last two years, so he will be as confident as ever of bringing home a win and defending that red plate!

Come and join us in just a few days’ time for round eight – yes, we’re that far into 2026 already!  Time flies when you’re having fun and following MXGP Motocross!

 

Mathis Valin: “It was a nice weekend. I had a good speed and two good starts. In the second race Sacha had a small crash, so I had the opportunity to pass, and after that I was quite good. I don’t know exactly what changed about my starts especially because we didn’t change so many things but it’s working. Just having more confidence is key. I know that if I can start in front and that my speed is coming back I can keep performing. I did three podiums in a row, so I think I can do it every weekend.. I hope so!”

Sacha Coenen: “I did two good starts, two FOX holeshots, led the first race all the way and managed to win. Second race was a bit different, I was in the lead and lost the front coming off the start straight, had to come back from third, passed second quickly and chased my pace, but it was quite difficult to pass. I was a bit disappointed because of the five-point penalty. Two brothers having the red plate on the same weekend, it’s quite nice. I’m just going weekend by weekend and having fun on the bike.”

Camden Mc Lellan: “It’s not been the best day to be honest because I screwed both my starts. I spent 35 minutes in the second race trying to find somewhere to pass and there was nothing. I’m pretty upset. A lot of it’s on me, I needed to start. I have the speed, that’s not an issue. I have the fitness, that’s far from the issue. I need to get out the gates consistently. I believe I’m back on the level where I should be winning races and I’m the best guy on the track when I’m feeling it.”

    
1. Sacha Coenen; 2. Camden Mc Lellan

 

MX2 - Grand Prix Race 1 - Top 10 Classification: 1. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), 36:17.071; 2. Mathis Valin (FRA, Kawasaki), +0:05.492; 3. Camden Mc Lellan (RSA, Triumph), +0:33.211; 4. Janis Martins Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), +0:35.096; 5. Valerio Lata (ITA, Honda), +0:40.721; 6. Guillem Farres (ESP, Triumph), +0:43.140; 7. Liam Everts (BEL, Husqvarna), +1:02.204; 8. Simon Längenfelder (GER, KTM), +1:09.283; 9. Julius Mikula (CZE, KTM), +1:22.819; 10. Karlis Alberts Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), +1:31.319.

MX2 - Grand Prix Race 2 – Top 10 Classification: 1. Mathis Valin (FRA, Kawasaki), 35:09.458; 2. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), +0:01.049; 3. Simon Längenfelder (GER, KTM), +0:02.549; 4. Guillem Farres (ESP, Triumph), +0:04.136; 5. Janis Martins Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), +0:25.711; 6. Camden Mc Lellan (RSA, Triumph), +0:27.042; 7. Liam Everts (BEL, Husqvarna), +0:33.726; 8. Valerio Lata (ITA, Honda), +0:34.693; 9. Kay Karssemakers (NED, Kawasaki), +1:07.330; 10. Noel Zanocz (HUN, KTM), +1:21.070.

MX2 Overall – Top 10 Classification: 1. Mathis Valin (FRA, Kawasaki), 47 pts; 2. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), 47 pts; 3. Camden Mc Lellan (RSA, Triumph), 35 pts; 4. Janis Martins Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), 34 pts; 5. Simon Längenfelder (GER, KTM), 33 pts; 6. Guillem Farres (ESP, Triumph), 33 pts; 7. Valerio Lata (ITA, Honda), 29 pts; 8. Liam Everts (BEL, Husqvarna), 28 pts; 9. Kay Karssemakers (NED, Kawasaki), 22 pts; 10. Karlis Alberts Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), 20 pts.

MX2 - World Championship Classification: 1. Sacha Coenen (BEL, KTM), 320 pts; 2. Simon Längenfelder (GER, KTM), 314 pts; 3. Guillem Farres (ESP, Triumph), 294 pts; 4. Liam Everts (BEL, Husqvarna), 273 pts; 5. Camden Mc Lellan (RSA, Triumph), 268 pts; 6. Mathis Valin (FRA, Kawasaki), 258 pts; 7. Janis Martins Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), 243 pts; 8. Karlis Alberts Reisulis (LAT, Yamaha), 187 pts; 9. Valerio Lata (ITA, Honda), 185 pts; 10. Julius Mikula (CZE, KTM), 142 pts.

MX2 - Manufacturers Classification: 1. KTM, 377 points; 2. Triumph, 359 p.; 3. Kawasaki, 288 p.; 4. Husqvarna, 281 p.; 5. Yamaha, 270 p.; 6. Honda, 212 p.; 7. TM, 87 p.; 8. Ducati, 58 p.; 9. GASGAS, 27 p.; 10. Fantic, 8 p.;


​MX2 Podium Germany 2026

 

All the photos from the Liqui Moly MXGP of Germany will be available HERE.

You can find the complete results HERE.

 

 

MXGP OF GERMANY QUICK FACTS:

Circuit length: 1550m

Type of ground: Hard Pack

Temperature: 24˚

Weather conditions: Cloudy

Crowd attendance: 31,068

 

 

LINKS

Infront Moto Racing

FIM

 

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Category: 
Date: 
Sunday, May 31, 2026
Author: 
Infront Moto Racing

MOTOCROSS GP OF GERMANY - SUNDAY - MIX 2

Thumbnail image: 
Photos: 
Category: 
Country: 
Germany
Date: 
2026
Event date: 
Sunday, May 31, 2026

MOTOCROSS GP OF GERMANY - SUNDAY - MIX 1

Thumbnail image: 
Photos: 
Category: 
Country: 
Germany
Date: 
2026
Event date: 
Sunday, May 31, 2026

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