Three MotoGP races cancelled due to
pandemic, one added in Europe
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[July 31, 2020]
(Reuters) - MotoGP races in
Argentina, Thailand and Malaysia this year have been cancelled due
to the COVID-19 pandemic but one more race will be added to the
calendar and will be held in Europe in November, MotoGP announced on
Friday.
A number of races have been axed this season due to the new
coronavirus outbreak, including the Qatar, Dutch, German, Finnish,
British, Australian, Japanese, Italian and American rounds.
"The FIM, IRTA and Dorna Sports regret to announce the cancellation
of the Gran Premio Motul de la Republica Argentina, OR Thailand
Grand Prix and Shell Malaysia Motorcycle Grand Prix in 2020," MotoGP
said in a joint statement with the governing FIM and teams'
association IRTA.
"After the Gran Premio Motul de la Comunitat Valenciana, another
race weekend will take place from the 20th to the 22nd of November
at a venue in Europe, becoming the 2020 season finale."
The host venue in Europe has not yet been decided and will be
confirmed on Aug. 10.
The season restarted earlier this month with back-to-back races at
the Jerez circuit in Spain. The country will host seven races as
part of the revised European calendar while four more circuits are
set to host double-headers.
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Promoter Dorna Sports added that the Thai Grand Prix will remain on
the MotoGP calendar until at least 2026 and that they had started
work on discussing possible dates for races in Argentina and
Malaysia next year.
Fabio Quartararo of Petronas Yamaha leads the world championship
standings after winning the first two races in Jerez while Maverick
Vinales of Yamaha is second, 10 points behind.
Defending champion Marc Marquez of Repsol Honda is yet to open his
account after crashing in the season-opening race and missing the
second race after failing to recover from surgery to a broken arm.
(Reporting by Rohith Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Frances Kerry and
Christian Radnedge)
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