The 2026 MotoGP season begins at Chang International Circuit in Thailand, marking the final year of the 1,000cc era as Honda’s Luca Marini and Joan Mir aim for a strong opening round.

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The long road to the MotoGP crown begins once again at MotoGP World Championship’s traditional curtain-raiser in Thailand, as the Thai Grand Prix fires up the new season at Chang International Circuit. The 4.55-kilometre layout will be the first of 22 stops on what promises to be one of the most intriguing seasons in recent memory.
There’s an added layer of significance this year. It marks the closing chapter of the 1,000cc era in MotoGP: the end of a generation of machines that have defined more than a decade of flat-out racing. For Honda, that era has delivered 85 wins with the Honda RC213V since its debut in 2012. Now, all four Honda riders are determined to add a few more trophies before the rulebook turns a page.
Marini aiming higher
For Luca Marini, 2026 represents year three in factory colours with Honda HRC Castrol, and his ambition is crystal clear: move closer to the podium fight.
After a solid step forward between 2024 and 2025, Marini heads into the new campaign with confidence built on steady off-season work. Testing offered valuable data, and more importantly, direction. He knows where the bike stands, at least on paper. But as every MotoGP rider will tell you, once the lights go out, theory and reality can quickly diverge.
Qualifying will be key at Buriram. The long straights and tight braking zones make track position critical, and Marini is fully aware that starting further up the grid could transform his weekend. After finishing 12th in Thailand last year, he’ll be chasing a stronger result to kickstart his season on the right note.
He has made it clear that his motivation keeps growing. He recognizes Honda’s long-term development push inside the garage and is determined to repay that effort with strong results on track.
Mir ready to fight at the front
On the other side of the garage, Joan Mir arrives with renewed energy. The 2020 world champion ended 2025 on a high, grabbing two podium finishes and consistently running in competitive positions. It was a reminder of the level he can reach when everything clicks.
Mir threw himself into pre-season preparation, both physically and technically. Testing revealed further improvements with the RC213V, although he’s the first to admit there’s still work to be done. Five days of running gave the team direction, now it’s about execution under race conditions.
Thailand hasn’t historically been Mir’s strongest venue on the Honda, with 12th his best finish there so far. But momentum can shift quickly in MotoGP, especially over a season that spans 22 rounds and 44 races. That’s a lot of starts, a lot of strategy calls, and plenty of room for surprises.
Mir’s outlook is pragmatic but optimistic: start strong, build consistently, and stay in the fight. In a year that closes one technical era and sets up another, adaptability could be just as important as outright speed.
A season of change
With sweeping regulation changes on the horizon and the final roar of the 1,000cc machines echoing across the paddock, 2026 carries a sense of transition. Every result this year will be a small piece of history.
And as the grid forms up under the Thai sun, one thing feels certain whether you’re a rookie or a seasoned contender, the first race still brings the same buzz. The engines fire, the lights go out, and another unpredictable MotoGP season is underway.



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