Avintia has become the first team on the 2021 MotoGP grid to unveil its colours for the new season, with the squad sporting a new look with its all-rookie line-up.
The Ducati satellite squad enters its 10th season in the premier class in 2021, fielding reigning Moto2 world champion Enea Bastianini and series runner-up Luca Marini in an all-new rider pairing. Marini – half-brother to MotoGP legend Valentino Rossi – will be backed by the VR46 team in his debut season, and will run the outfit’s livery, having unveiled it during Italy’s version of the X Factor late last year.
Bastianini’s 2019-spec Ducati will be run in revised Avintia colours, unveiled at the team’s virtual launch event on Instagram on Friday evening.
Avintia’s first season as an official Ducati satellite (having previously been merely a customer team) netted it its first-ever MotoGP podium, courtesy of Pramac-bound Johann Zarco in last year’s Czech Grand Prix.
The team will continue to have some technical support from Ducati, though both riders will be on two-year-old bikes owing to the freeze on engine development brought in as part of COVID-19 cost-saving measures.
Avintia’s future beyond the 2021 season remains unclear, with team owner Raul Romero admitting to Autosport last year he will not renew with Dorna Sports for 2022 and beyond.
This came amid speculation VR46 could take over Avintia’s grid slots for 2021 – something which will be easier in 2022 at the dawn of a new contract period between MotoGP and the teams.
With Marini running VR46 colours (above) and elements of the VR46 team set to join him at Avintia this year, this only strengthens the team’s prospects of stepping up properly in 2022.
From here, the launches come thick and fast, with the works Ducati squad the next to show off their 2021 colours 9 February, before KTM unwraps its factory and Tech3 liveries on 12 February.
The 2021 MotoGP season is due to start on 28 March with the Qatar GP, with a second race at Losail added to the schedule following the postponement of the US and Argentine GPs due to the COVID-19 pandemic.