Motorsports
Pedro Acosta has been accused of continuing with KTM until 2026
Albert Varerathe MotoGP pilot super manager had a fierce weekend in the Asepadok, before the office and media. I had to wiggle the case tree Jorge Martin This is because Aprilia was shut down with the band and threatened to reach a court despite her willingness to reach an agreement that would disrupt the situation at Misano’s Aprilia All Star Star on June 1.
Varera is also a manager at Jorge Martin. Pedro AcostaAnother front page was opened due to the young man’s complaints about the current situation at KTM. This is an extension of the year until 2026, when the pass to official Team Red Bull KTM was consumed last year and now criticised. And his name was linked to Yamaha client Pramac and Ducati client VR46 with Honda, which was confirmed on Saturday at Dazun in Assenvarera. Pedro must fulfill his contract with KTM and set him free, unless he can appeal to KTM’s will.
He asked if he was asked directly about Isascan Lewis, or if Pedro Acosta would remain with the official team next year with “yes.”
“We hope for the best. We know that KTM is working hard to reach evolution and improve in the summer. If we don’t improve, we will have to wait for another year of suffering, new ones to arrive, and forcing KTM’s will.”
Varera denied that despite the rumors he had already appealed to Matfen’s will. “For now, we have tested very well in Aragon, and unfortunately these evolutions take some time to arrive.
“Eventually he was a boy who won the Red Bull Rookie Cup, Moto3 and Moto2 and knew he had to give KTM these first years for everything he did for him in Moto3 and Moto2, but this third year, given another situation, we found out that it wasn’t happening in a different scenario: the sense of the world that doesn’t change the team’s year-round.
And he proposes accusations of the MEA. “I’m responsible for encouraging him to sign with KTM for his third year. He knows Pedro Grief very badly because he’s an epic kid, superhuman, winner.
Source: Mundo Deportivo
I am a writer at Sportish, where I mainly cover sports news. I’ve also written for The Guardian and ESPN Brasil, and my work has been featured on NBC Sports, SI.com and more. Before working in journalism, I was an athlete: I played football for Colgate University and competed in the US Open Cross Country Championships.
