45000 fans at Beto Carrero for the MXGP Brazil
Tuesday 21 May:  Once again the Grand Prix of Brazil was a great success thanks to the outstanding facilities of Beto Carrero as well as the great racing in both MX1 and MX2 classes and of course in the Super Final.
 

There was just a little bit of 
drizzle at the start of the first race of MX1, so the track conditions 
were perfect to host all the heats of the Grand Prix of Brazil. 
Antonio Cairoli won the Super Final, as well as the MX1 Grand Prix and 
he dedicated his 58th GP victory to his friend Marco Simoncelli who 
passed away in 2011. Clement Desalle was third in the Super Final and 
second overall in the Grand Prix, whereas his teammate Kevin Strijbos 
obtained the third overall position thanks to his second place in the 
Super Final. 
Jeffrey Herlings won the first race but he was the second best MX2 rider
 in the Super Final behind Jose Butrón. Herlings won the Grand Prix, 
Butrón was second and Jordi Tixier completed the MX2 top three. 
MX1 Race 1
Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Antonio Cairoli obtained the GET Athena 
holeshot award, as he was the first one to reach the first corner in the
 MX1 race 1. The Italian succeeded in pulling away in the first laps and
 he dominated the heat until the chequered flag. At the end of the race 
Cairoli admitted that he had enjoyed a lot racing the Beto Carrero 
track, as it was very technical and it suits very much his riding style.
 
Honda World Motocross’ Max Nagl managed to move from his initial fifth 
position to the second final place. The German rider won yesterday’s 
qualifying race and he was very satisfied today for having been able to 
overtake several riders and finish in a well deserved second place in 
the first moto. 
Rockstar Energy Suzuki World’s Clement Desalle did not have such a good 
start in the first race and when he was overtaken by Nagl in the first 
laps of the heat the Belgian could not pass him back. Desalle admitted 
that by the end of the race he tried to attack the German but he 
struggled to find the good lines and he had to settle down with the 
third place. 
Kawasaki Racing Team’s Gautier Paulin did not have a good start in the 
first race and he was down in the eleventh position in the first corners
 of the race. However, the French rider gave it all and he crossed the 
finish line in the fourth place. 
His teammate Jeremy Van Horebeek also had a solid first race; the 
Belgian rider was eighth at the start, but he managed to overtake Kevin 
Strijbos, Ken De Dycker and David Philippaerts and he finished fifth. 
Kevin Strijbos did not have a good start and could not find a good 
rhythm, so in the end he ended sixth. Instead, David Philippaerts had an
 excellent start and rode second during the first four laps of the race.
 The Italian lost a couple of positions with Nagl and Desalle, and while
 he was riding a very consistent race in the fourth position, he had a 
problem with the tear off and he was only able to finish seventh of the 
race. 
Tommy Searle had a really good start in third, but he made a mistake and
 dropped down to the ninth place. In the end the British rider finished 
eighth and Ken De Dycker and Joel Roelants completed the top ten. 
Davide Guarneri had to enter the last chance in order to be qualified 
for the SuperFinal because he was forced to pull out from Race 1 after 
having a big crash in the beginning of the race. 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
MX1 Race 1 top ten: 1. Antonio Cairoli (ITA, KTM), 39:15.493; 
2. Maximilian Nagl (GER, Honda), +0:03.017; 3. Clement Desalle (BEL, 
Suzuki), +0:04.748; 4. Gautier Paulin (FRA, Kawasaki), +0:24.442; 5. 
Jeremy van Horebeek (BEL, Kawasaki), +0:30.333; 6. Kevin Strijbos (BEL, 
Suzuki), +0:36.445; 7. David Philippaerts (ITA, Honda), +0:46.472; 8. 
Tommy Searle (GBR, Kawasaki), +0:49.004; 9. Ken de Dycker (BEL, KTM), 
+0:50.898; 10. Joel Roelants (BEL, Yamaha), +0:53.195;
MX1 Overall top 10: 1. Antonio Cairoli (ITA, KTM), 50 
points; 2. Clement Desalle (BEL, Suzuki), 40 p.; 3. Kevin Strijbos (BEL,
 Suzuki), 37 p.; 4. Maximilian Nagl (GER, Honda), 37 p.; 5. Gautier 
Paulin (FRA, Kawasaki), 36 p.; 6. Jeremy van Horebeek (BEL, Kawasaki), 
29 p.; 7. Ken de Dycker (BEL, KTM), 28 p.; 8. Tommy Searle (GBR, 
Kawasaki), 25 p.; 9. Joel Roelants (BEL, Yamaha), 20 p.; 10. Shaun 
Simpson (GBR, TM), 19 p.;
MX1 Championship top ten: 1. Antonio Cairoli (ITA, 
KTM), 330 points; 2. Gautier Paulin (FRA, Kawasaki), 278 p.; 3. Clement 
Desalle (BEL, Suzuki), 267 p.; 4. Ken de Dycker (BEL, KTM), 245 p.; 5. 
Kevin Strijbos (BEL, Suzuki), 220 p.; 6. Tommy Searle (GBR, Kawasaki), 
205 p.; 7. Maximilian Nagl (GER, Honda), 169 p.; 8. Rui Goncalves (POR, 
KTM), 148 p.; 9. Jeremy van Horebeek (BEL, Kawasaki), 138 p.; 10. David 
Philippaerts (ITA, Honda), 130 p.;
MX1 Manufacturers: 1. KTM, 325 points; 2. Suzuki 279 p.; 3. Kawasaki, 278 p.; 4. Honda, 225 p.; 5. Yamaha, 121 p.; 6. TM, 112 p.
 
	
	
	
	Cairoli cheered to win 58 by Brazilian crowd - Cairoli leading the MX1 Race1 after the start.
	
	
	
	
		
		
		
		
 
MX2 Race 1
Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Jeffrey Herlings struggled once again with
 his start in the first race, but he did an incredible recovery and he 
made the crowd go crazy lap after lap. The Dutch was 12th at the start 
and even if most of the riders said that it was very difficult to pass, 
Herlings managed to win the first race with almost twelve seconds 
difference with the second.
Standing Construct KTM’s Glenn Coldenhoff started second behind 
Alexander Tonkov, who had taken the Get Athena Holeshot, but the Dutch 
rider overtook the Russian after the first three laps and Coldenhoff 
took the lead of the race. Coldenhoff was feeling really good, but he 
could not keep his compatriot Herlings at the back, so Coldenhoff had to
 settle down with the second position. 
Wilvo Nestaan JM Racing KTM’s Jake Nicholls had a very consistent first 
race and he managed to finish third. The British rider started third and
 in lap four he overtook Tonkov and moved up to second. However, 
Herlings was coming really fast from behind and Nicholls dropped one 
position. 
Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Jordi Tixier could not have a good start 
in the first race and he was sixth in the first lap. During the first 
laps the French rider struggled to find a good rhythm, but by the middle
 of the race Tixier was able to overtake Dylan Ferrandis, Alexander 
Tonkov and Mel Pocock, so the French rider ended fourth. 
Monster Energy Yamaha’s Mel Pocock obtained his best result of the 
season by finishing fifth in the first race. The British rider had a 
really good start and he was fourth in the first laps, but Herlings 
overtook him and he dropped down to fifth. The British rider managed to 
pass Tonkov by the middle of the heat but Pocock was overtaken by Tixier
 in the last minutes of the race and he had to settle down with the 
fifth position. 
Jose Butrón did not have a very good start in the first race and he 
struggled to find a good rhythm. After racing eighth most of the heat, 
the Spanish rider started feeling better and he overtook a couple of 
riders and he crossed the finish line sixth. 
Dean Ferris finished seventh, Dylan Ferrandis was eighth and Alexander Tonkov and Alessandro Lupino completed the top ten. 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
MX2 Race 1 top ten: 1. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, KTM), 40:08.386; 
2. Glenn Coldenhoff (NED, KTM), +0:11.680; 3. Jake Nicholls (GBR, KTM), 
+0:16.551; 4. Jordi Tixier (FRA, KTM), +0:23.711; 5. Mel Pocock (GBR, 
Yamaha), +0:30.415; 6. Jose Butron (ESP, KTM), +0:32.337; 7. Dean Ferris
 (AUS, Yamaha), +0:37.039; 8. Dylan Ferrandis (FRA, Kawasaki), 
+0:42.374; 9. Alexander Tonkov (RUS, Honda), +0:44.771; 10. Alessandro 
Lupino (ITA, Kawasaki), +0:47.844;
MX2 Overall top 10: 1. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, KTM), 47 
points; 2. Jose Butron (ESP, KTM), 40 p.; 3. Jordi Tixier (FRA, KTM), 38
 p.; 4. Glenn Coldenhoff (NED, KTM), 31 p.; 5. Dean Ferris (AUS, 
Yamaha), 30 p.; 6. Christophe Charlier (FRA, Yamaha), 27 p.; 7. Mel 
Pocock (GBR, Yamaha), 26 p.; 8. Alessandro Lupino (ITA, Kawasaki), 25 
p.; 9. Alexander Tonkov (RUS, Honda), 25 p.; 10. Dylan Ferrandis (FRA, 
Kawasaki), 25 p.;
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
MX2 Championship top ten: 1. Jeffrey Herlings (NED, KTM), 347 
points; 2. Jordi Tixier (FRA, KTM), 257 p.; 3. Jose Butron (ESP, KTM), 
218 p.; 4. Glenn Coldenhoff (NED, KTM), 214 p.; 5. Christophe Charlier 
(FRA, Yamaha), 198 p.; 6. Dean Ferris (AUS, Yamaha), 182 p.; 7. Max 
Anstie (GBR, Suzuki), 172 p.; 8. Jake Nicholls (GBR, KTM), 150 p.; 9. 
Alessandro Lupino (ITA, Kawasaki), 148 p.; 10. Mel Pocock (GBR, Yamaha),
 138 p.;
MX2 Manufacturers: 1. KTM, 350 points; 2. Yamaha, 247 
p.; 3. Suzuki, 194 p.; 4. Kawasaki, 187 p.; 5. Honda, 132 p.; 6. TM, 37 
p.; 7. Husqvarna, 1 p.;
 Aussie - Dean Ferris
Aussie - Dean Ferris
Super Final 
The Grand Prix of Brazil hosted the last Super Final of 2013 and it was 
slightly different from the ones in Qatar and Thailand. The MX1 and MX2 
riders lined up for the Super Final in their respective championship 
standings up to the tenth gate pick, i.e. Cairoli, Herlings, Paulin, 
Tixier and so on. However, Herlings decided not to be next to Cairoli 
and he chose the first gate from the inside. 
ICE1Racing’s Rui Gonçalves took the holeshot of the Super Final, but 
after the first few corners Rockstar Energy Suzuki’s Kevin Strijbos 
overtook him and the Belgian led the race until there were three laps to
 go. Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Antonio Cairoli had a good start but 
he almost crashed in the opening lap so he went down in fourth; the 
Italian tried to overtake the front riders as soon as possible, but when
 he was second Strijbos had already opened a big gap and Cairoli started
 getting some arm pump. In the end Strijbos got a little bit tired so 
Cairoli could close the gap and with three laps to go the Italian took 
the lead. 
Rockstar Energy Suzuki’s Clement Desalle admitted that he did not feel 
really comfortable today, but he managed to ride a consistent moto in 
third. Kawasaki Racing Team’s Gautier Paulin was fifth in the first lap 
of the Super Final, but after four laps he managed to overtake Ken De 
Dycker and he kept the fourth position until the chequered flag, 
position that gave him the overall fourth place of the Grand Prix of 
Brazil. 
Red Bull KTM Factory Racing’s Ken De Dycker struggled in the first race 
but he managed to have a good start in the Super Final and he rode a 
consistent race in fifth. However, the Belgian rider was only seventh 
overall in the Grand Prix. Honda World Motocross’ Max Nagl was sixth in 
the Super Final, so he obtained his best result of the season by 
finishing fourth overall in the Grand Prix. 
Rui Gonçalves could not keep his initial second position and crossed the
 finish line seventh, followed by Jeremy Van Horebeek and Tommy Searle. 
Jose Butrón was tenth and he was the best MX2 rider in the Super Final. 
Jeffrey Herlings finished thirteenth and Jordi Tixier fifteenth. 
Super Final top 10: 1. Antonio Cairoli (ITA, KTM), 
40:49.230; 2. Kevin Strijbos (BEL, Suzuki), +0:02.830; 3. Clement 
Desalle (BEL, Suzuki), +0:25.606; 4. Gautier Paulin (FRA, Kawasaki), 
+0:31.078; 5. Ken de Dycker (BEL, KTM), +0:41.121; 6. Maximilian Nagl 
(GER, Honda), +0:44.766; 7. Rui Goncalves (POR, KTM), +0:45.861; 8. 
Jeremy van Horebeek (BEL, Kawasaki), +0:50.619; 9. Tommy Searle (GBR, 
Kawasaki), +1:03.885; 10. Jose Butron (ESP, KTM), +1:09.255;
	
	Brazil's Beto Carrero to host 2017 FIM Motocross of Nations
	
	
		
		 Left to right: Mr Duarte, Mr Romagnolli, Mr Luongo and Dr Srb
Left to right: Mr Duarte, Mr Romagnolli, Mr Luongo and Dr Srb  
After Saturday’s qualifying races
Giuseppe Luongo, Youthstream’s president, Carlinhos Romagnolli, CEO 
of Romagnolli Promoções e Eventos, and Dr Wolfgang Srb, FIM/CMS 
director, jointly announced that the 2017 FIM Motocross of Nations will be at Beto Carrero in Brazil. It is not only important
 for Brazil, but it also shows the strong partnership 
between Youthstream, the FIM and Romagnolli Promoções e Eventos.  
	
	
The last time that the FIM Motocross of Nations took part in Brazil was 
back in 1999 in the track of Indaiatuba.
Giuseppe Luongo: "First of all I would like to congratulate Mr Romagnolli
 for the fantastic organisation and set up of the Grand Prix of Brazil, 
which was already really good last year but it has been improved 
significantly in 2013. Organizing the MXoN in Beto 
Carrero in 2017 is part of a long-term partnership between Mr Romagnolli
 and Youthstream, which started last year but which has been reinforced 
in 2013. Such partnership also includes a future cooperation to develop 
the motocross in Brazil thanks to the Youth Academy with the goal of 
bringing up new Brazilian talents in the near future. What Mr Romagnolli has achieved in these 
two years here in Beto Carrero is the standards that Youthstream would 
like to have for the future of the Grand Prix, a great race in a great 
venue with fantastic facilities and with a big crowd, so we are sure 
that the 2017 MXoN will be a big success.” 
	
	
	
	
Carlinhos Romagnolli: "Organising a Grand Prix was already a dream for me,
 but being able to announce that Romagnolli Promoções e Eventos, 
together with Youthstream and the FIM, will bring the MXoN back in 
Brazil in 2017 is a real privilege for me. I would like to thank 
Youthstream for trusting us, as well as the FIM for all the support they
 give us to organize this Grand Prix and the future MXoN.” 
	
	
	
	
Dr Wolfgang Srb: "For us this is wonderful 
news; the MXoN is the best motocross event in the world and it should be
 organised in venues and countries where there is enthusiasm for the 
sport, fans, riders, and of course a good venue like the one we have 
here in Beto Carrero. I am also glad to hear that Youthstream’s Youth 
Academy will work together with Mr Romagnolli to support and give a good
 formation to the young motocross Brazilian riders, but my wish for 2017
 MXoN is to see Team Brazil being one of the top players of the event.”