Difference between revisions of "Manuel Poggiali"
m |
m |
||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
{| border=1 align="right" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=220 style="margin-left:3em; margin-bottom: 2em;" | {| border=1 align="right" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=220 style="margin-left:3em; margin-bottom: 2em;" | ||
|- | |- | ||
− | |colspan=2|[[Image:Senza nome7.jpg| | + | |colspan=2|[[Image:Senza nome7.jpg|220px]] |
|- | |- | ||
!colspan=2 style="color: white; background: darkred;"|'''Manuel Poggiali''' | !colspan=2 style="color: white; background: darkred;"|'''Manuel Poggiali''' |
Revision as of 11:16, 18 January 2009
220px | |
Manuel Poggiali | |
---|---|
Nationality | San Marino |
Years | 1998 - 2006, 2008 |
Teams | Gilera, KTM, Aprilia, Derbi |
Championships | 2 125cc: 2001 250cc: 2003 |
Races | 131 |
Wins | 12 |
Podiums | 35 |
Poles | 11 |
Points | 1111 |
Fastest laps | 7 |
First race | 1998 125cc Imola Grand Prix |
First win | 2001 125cc French Grand Prix |
Last win | 2004 250cc Brazilian Grand Prix |
Last race | 2008 250cc Czech Republic Grand Prix |
Manuel Poggiali (born February 14, 1983) is a former Grand Prix motorcycle road racing World Champion from San Marino. He was the 2001 125cc World Champion, and the 2003 250cc World Champion. He scored 12 race wins, 11 pole positions, and 25 podium finishes. He often struggled with motivation and the mental side of racing, and this contributed to his early retirement from the sport.
Poggiali began racing Minibikes in 1994, and made his first Grand Prix starts in 1998, also winning the Italian 125cc Championship that year. He went into the 125cc World Championship fulltime in 1999, and showed promise over the next two years, scoring a first podium at Assen in 2000. In 2001 he improved to win the title on a Gilera. He remained in the class in 2002, scoring 7 podia in the first 8 races but failing to defend his title, losing out to Arnaud Vincent.
For 2003 he moved up to 250s, and followed Freddie Spencer and Tetsuya Harada in winning the title at his first attempt, including victories in the season's first two races. He had a disappointing 2004 however, finishing only 9th overall with just three podium results.
For 2005 he returned to 125s, again looking like a shadow of his former self, failing to take a single podium. In 2006 he raced in the 250cc class for the KTM team, but they didn't renew his contract for 2007. Although he received some offers from 125cc, 250cc, and Superbike teams, he decided to refuse the offers and take a sabbatical, hoping to get better offers in 2008. He made his return to racing after announcing that he would ride for Campetella Racing alongside Fabrizio Lai. He decided to retire midseason after losing enthusiasm.
He is also a footballer, he played some matches over the last years for Pennarossa, a football club of San Marino.