I can totally see his position, especially regarding contract pay and such, but unfortunately there are more good riders than good factory bikes capable of winning a championship. If he wins it all this year, Ducati can either put him next to Pecco, or let him leave. If he leaves, he arguably won't be a threat unless he takes Miller's spot on the KTM or MAYBE Vinales/Espagaro's seat on the Aprilia. The other factories are no where near championship contention yet. He's in a tough spot.
I think Zarco is a much different proposition. I like him and he's for sure very talented, but he's on the back 9 of his career to say the least and the money is more important than possibly winning a championship, which I don't think even HE believes he's capable of at this point given the racers surrounding him.
He's quietly turned into a tattoo'd spinster - no longer super young and improving, and always the bridesmaid in the standings... I like him and wanted him to get a bump 3-4 years ago but like Joe Roberts - pretty sure that ship has sailed.
When we have our GP watching parties, we have an 'anyone but Canet' mantra. Maybe I should be more compassionate, as the guy clearly has some issues (anybody tatted up to their eyeballs, you have to wonder what happened), but he comes off as a complete douchnozzle. Fast but inconsistent, makes too many mistakes. Definitely has the speed to win a championship, but not the mind.
I do chuckle at his habit of wearing a bowtie on the podium as a middle finger/FU to those who've passed over him for his ink.
I have tattoos so it clearly doesnt bother me about his, but I am in the corporate world and understand the judging that takes place. I have worn long sleeve dress shirts for years to ensure I wasnt judged by my looks. I honestly think he is talented and its such a crap shoot with Moto2 success unless you are a phenom like MM93 or Acosta. I have watched Canet have some amazing moments, way more consistent then 80% of the pack. Sure, he isnt the next Acosta but I think he would produce. Dunno, he isnt getting any younger but still think he has serious talent.
I say to everyone who will listen, he needs to ride for Harley Davidson! Those tats will be an asset not a liability!
Aprilia is the last stop at a good factory team. Would they replace Aleix if they had a chance at Martin and if they have already signed quarter pounder? I would do it if I were in charge.
That would have to be one hell of a massive budget. To go from a championship winning bike to being a grid filler would cost so much that Yamaha wouldn't have a budget to develop the bike.
Aprilia's wet dream to have Fabio and Martin next year instead of Mav and Aleix, especially since chatter is Aleix will then replace Savadori as their test rider.
I just think it is a waste for Martin to go to Yamaha, they seem so far back that it's going to take a year or two to get up to speed. For a guy that wants to win immediately i don't see the allure to Honda or Yamaha not until '26...
Winning is definitely important but the chance to make some major bank definitely has an allure to people. When you look at Marky, he made ridiculous money for so long that he can take a huge pay cut for the chance to win, instead of it being the other way around. With Ducati intentionally suppressing payroll, this might be his chance to get a big money contract for a couple of years because even if he were to get promoted to the factory, they aren't going to pay him a ton of money.
I disagree with the douchenozzle comment, when viewing with American eyes we are so used to "polite" rhetoric during interviews (in any sport) that it's tough for us to view many Latin riders within the context of their culture. Your observation is valid, though, as the sport grows in the US the riders will be coached. But other than that you could have been describing Canet or Vinales. Fortunately for Mav he arrived when there were spaces available. -T
Funny you should mention Vinales. I would put him in the same category. Just my knowledge of both riders interactions with different teams over the years, I feel put them in that category. Nothing to do really with their interview style. Saw Canet at COTA reaming out his mechanics one year, and I've heard that's a common thing for him. Sorry man, screaming at your teammates is bad form, in any business. Doing it repeatedly shows a lack of maturity and respect for other people. I do get where my judgement of the tattoo thing could be narrow minded. Maori often have face tattoos, but there's a cultural significance to that. I've had employees with face tattoos, and they've always had negative experiences in their past that drove that to the decision to do that.