A fresh look at Jeffrey Herlings’ departure from Red Bull KTM after 16 transformative years, exploring how their iconic partnership reshaped modern motocross, set new performance standards and created one of the sport’s most influential rider–team legacies.

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In professional motocross, few partnerships have defined an era the way Jeffrey Herlings and Red Bull KTM Factory Racing have. Their 16-year journey, beginning with a fearless teenager in 2010 and ending with one of the sport’s most decorated modern champions, was not merely about wins, titles or statistics. It was about the creation of a competitive standard that shifted expectations across MX2 and MXGP.
As the alliance now concludes, the wider industry reflects not only on what Herlings achieved with KTM, but how the Herlings–KTM phenomenon recalibrated the very culture of elite motocross.
A Partnership Built on Relentless Pace, Not Comfort
What made the Herlings–KTM relationship distinctive was its unwavering intensity. At 15, Herlings was already riding with the attitude of someone chasing world titles. KTM, a manufacturer known for investing heavily in emerging talent, found in him a rider whose training ethic matched its racing philosophy.
Herlings’ early MX2 years became a template for modern youth development:
- Immediate competitiveness: podium on his second Grand Prix start
- Rapid evolution: first win two weeks later
- Sustained dominance: three MX2 titles and 61 wins on the KTM 250 SX-F
Rather than plateauing, Herlings carried this momentum into MXGP, showing that progression from KTM’s 250 SX-F to 450 SX-F wasn’t merely a step up in machinery, but a continuation of an already razor-sharp winning mentality.
A Career Marked by Adversity, Recovery and Unmatched Speed
Herlings’ speed was often labelled “once-in-a-generation”. But that speed came with a price: injuries that repeatedly threatened to derail his career. Yet each time, he returned, redefining what “recovery” means in motocross.
With KTM, he:
- Captured two MXGP world titles (2018, 2021)
- Won at least one GP every active season in the premier class
- Became KTM’s second-most successful world champion of all time
- Cemented himself with 112 GP victories, the majority secured in KTM orange
This resilience, paired with KTM’s engineering, testing depth and loyalty from a nearly unchanged crew, created one of the most formidable rider–team ecosystems in modern motocross.
Beyond MXGP: A Global Competitor
Herlings’ ability to transcend series and continents strengthened his legacy. His AMA Pro Motocross appearances, domestic championships in Europe, and success at the Motocross of Nations showed a rider who wasn’t defined by one championship but by a global hunger to compete wherever speed mattered.
This international dimension also made KTM’s investment in Herlings symbolic: he wasn’t simply a factory rider, but a global ambassador for the brand’s racing identity.
Why This Departure Matters
Herlings leaving KTM isn’t just another transfer headline, it marks the closure of one of the most stable and iconic team–rider pairings in motocross history.
For KTM:
- It ends a 16-year chapter that shaped its identity in MX2 and MXGP.
- It marks the departure of a racer who delivered unmatched milestones.
- It prompts the beginning of a new development cycle for emerging orange-brand talents.
For Herlings:
- It opens a rare late-career window to reinvent himself outside the KTM ecosystem.
- It brings a new layer to his already remarkable story.
- It positions him as a veteran whose next move will carry enormous sport-wide interest.
The Legacy That Remains
Pit Beirer and Robert Jonas both highlighted Herlings’ work ethic, intensity and loyalty—qualities that shaped KTM’s culture as much as they shaped his results.
But beyond words, the legacy is practical and enduring:
- A reimagined standard of speed in MX2
- A demonstration that raw pace and relentless training can overcome injury cycles
- A blueprint for nurturing teenage talent into world champions
- A catalogue of performances that redefined what a “dominant season” looks like
Few partnerships in motorsport produce this level of dual elevation, where both rider and manufacturer grow into historic forces because of one another.
The End, But Not the Final Chapter
As Herlings steps away from KTM, the motocross world prepares for the next phase of a rider who still has the pace to win and the mindset to do the extraordinary. KTM, meanwhile, closes one of its proudest stories.
The 16-year Herlings–KTM alliance may have ended, but it leaves behind a legacy that will continue to influence how teams scout, train and build champions for years to come.



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