Mike Di Meglio

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Mike Di Meglio

Mike Di Meglio 2013.jpg
Di Meglio at the 2013 French Grand Prix.

Nationality
France French
Born
(1988-01-17) 17 January 1988 (age 31)[1]
Toulouse, France
Current teamEG 0,0 Marc VDS
Bike number63


































Motorcycle racing career statistics
MotoGP World Championship
Active years
2014–2015
Manufacturers
Avintia, Ducati
Championships0

2015 championship position
24th (8 pts)












StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
36000017
Moto2 World Championship
Active years
2010–2013
Manufacturers
RSV, Suter, Tech 3, Speed Up, MZ-RE Honda, Kalex, Motobi
Championships0

2013 championship position
20th (19 pts)












StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
590000100
250cc World Championship
Active years2009
ManufacturersAprilia
Championships0

2009 championship position
8th (107 pts)












StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
160210107
125cc World Championship
Active years
2003–2008
Manufacturers
Honda, Aprilia, Derbi
Championships1 (2008)

2008 championship position
1st (264 pts)












StartsWinsPodiumsPolesF. lapsPoints
9151124464

Mike Di Meglio (born 17 January 1988) is a French Grand Prix motorcycle road racer and 2008 world champion in the 125cc class.[2] In 2019, he will compete in the MotoE World Cup aboard an Energica Ego Corsa. Of Italian descent, his paternal grandfather was born in Lentini (Province of Siracusa).


Di Meglio first came to the attention of the Fédération Française de Motocyclisme (French Motorcycle Federation) 2002 Prix de l'Avenir. He also took a trial with the Liegois team in Carole, with whom he took part in a Spanish Championship race. Later he raced at world championship level between 2003 and 2015.




Contents





  • 1 Biography

    • 1.1 125cc World Championship

      • 1.1.1 2003


      • 1.1.2 2004


      • 1.1.3 2005


      • 1.1.4 2006


      • 1.1.5 2007


      • 1.1.6 2008



    • 1.2 250cc and Moto2 World Championships

      • 1.2.1 2009


      • 1.2.2 2010




  • 2 Grand Prix motorcycle racing career

    • 2.1 By class


    • 2.2 By seasons and teams


    • 2.3 Races by year



  • 3 References


  • 4 External links




Biography


Di Meglio was born in Toulouse.



125cc World Championship



2003


When Di Meglio turned 15 years old, he decided to accept offers by the Italian Freesoul Racing Team on Aprilia to debut in the 125cc world championship in 2003. Although he managed to score points, including 13th place at Catalunya, it was a difficult season for him, crashing often and not achieving good results. Later, at the mid-season, he was offered by the Italian MetaSystem Rg Service to replace Italian veteran Andrea Ballerini, but this time the team was on Honda, he tried to attempt to achieve his goals, but he failed to improve and didn't score any championship points.



2004


After a disappointing 2003, Di Meglio vowed to salvage a wrecked debut. He signed with Globet.com Racing on Aprilia alongside Gino Borsoi for the 2004 Grand Prix motorcycle racing season. The start was promising with a front-row start and a fifth-place finish at South Africa, but he failed to be consistent due to several crashes.



2005


Di Meglio stayed with the same team for 2005, but his team joined forces with Team Scot which runs on Honda machinery, the same team that helped Andrea Dovizioso win the 2004 125cc World Championship. Di Meglio was their official rider on board on a factory Honda RS125RW along with Fabrizio Lai but it was under the Kopron Racing World name. His performance improved, scoring points regularly. He performed heroically at the French Grand Prix by fighting for a podium position, finishing fourth and making his home fans happy and entertained. However, it was his podium finish in the wet British Grand Prix by finishing second place behind Julián Simón, which gave him a reputation as a wet weather expert. He also finished a credible fourth place in the hot Qatar Grand Prix ahead of future 125cc champion Thomas Luthi. The high point of the season for the Frenchman was his controversial win at the Turkish Grand Prix, when Mika Kallio crashed and race leader Luthi had run wide to avoid him.



2006


He joined the Fédération Française de Motocyclisme's world championship team run by Alain Bronec for 2006. The FFM Honda GP 125 team also provided him with a factory bike just like the previous season, but despite his big ambitions and a factory bike, he suffered an injury, and scored in only four races that resulted in eight points. He left the team immediately for Team Scot the following year after Portugal as the result of his performance with the team.



2007


For 2007, Di Meglio returned to Team Scot, the team that had helped him win his first Grand Prix in 2005. He was teamed with the young Italian Stefano Musco. In the first few races, he managed to score championship points. He had a very bad crash during the qualifying session of the Spanish Grand Prix, breaking his collarbone and was forced to miss the Turkish Grand Prix as a result. He returned in China to a fourteenth-place finish and followed that with a ninth place at Le Mans. A front row start at Mugello did not come to much either as he crashed out on the third lap of the race. After this, several disappointing race results followed except in the wet race at Donington, where he finished in sixth place and in Japan, where he finished fourth despite crashing out of second place while chasing race leader Mattia Pasini.



2008


For 2008, he was offered to ride with the Finnish Ajo Motorsport, teamed with Dominique Aegerter. He returned to Aprilia machines, but officially rides for Aprilia's sister Piaggio company, Derbi. He is riding the Derbi RSA 125 factory bike. His campaign started slowly within Qatar finishing in fourth, beaten to the podium at the line by Stefan Bradl. In Spain and Portugal, Di Meglio picked up minor points and trailed title contender Simone Corsi, but starting in China, Corsi's pace started to slip away including a crash from a minor incident with Lorenzo Zanetti and reigning world champion Gábor Talmácsi struggling that allow Di Meglio to take full advantage. A win in the shortened French Grand Prix started a consistent run lasting until at San Marino where he crashed out while fighting for third place with Corsi. At the Australian Grand Prix, Di Meglio became the only second Frenchman to win the world championship after Arnaud Vincent.



250cc and Moto2 World Championships



2009


For 2009, he moved up to the 250cc class with the Aspar Racing Team, alongside Álvaro Bautista. In his debut race in Qatar he qualified third but dropped to 11th on lap 1, before fighting back. He ran fifth in the later stages, but aggressively passed Bautista on the final lap before passing Raffaele de Rosa for third. He did not take another top five finish until round ten at Donington, but hit form from this point on. He took pole at Indianapolis, and claimed second place at Estoril in a photo-finish with Héctor Barberá. He was fighting for top rookie honours with de Rosa but lost out to him as a result of crashing out in Valencia while de Rosa finished third.



2010


The 2010 saw the debut of the Moto2 class as the new intermediate class of Grand Prix racing, replacing the 250cc class. Di Meglio failed to take full advantage of it, with several poor race finishes in the first three races of the season and a crash at Mugello. Di Meglio took his first points-scoring finishes at British and Dutch rounds with seventh and eighth respectively. Despite his good results at those rounds, he failed to be competitive again until Australia where he finished in sixth place, having started on the front row.



Grand Prix motorcycle racing career



By class










































































Class
Seasons
1st GP
1st Pod
1st Win
Race
Win
Podiums

Pole
FLap
Pts
WChmp
125 cc
2003–2008

2003 Japan

2005 Great Britain

2005 Turkey
91
5
11
2
4
464
1
250 cc
2009

2009 Qatar

2009 Qatar

16
0
2
1
0
107
0
Moto2
2010–2013

2010 Qatar


59
0
0
0
0
100
0
MotoGP
2014–2015

2014 Qatar


36
0
0
0
0
17
0
Total
2003–2015




202

5

13

3

4

688


By seasons and teams













































































































































































Season
Class
Team
Motorcycle
Races
Wins
Podiums

Poles
Fastest Laps
Pts
Position

2003
125cc

Italy Freesoul Racing Team

Aprilia
15
0
0
0
0
5
28th

Italy MetaSystem Rg Service

Honda

2004
125cc

Italy Globet.com Racing

Aprilia
14
0
0
0
0
41
18th

2005
125cc

Italy Kopron Racing World

Honda
16
1
2
0
0
104
11th

2006
125cc

France FFM Honda GP 125

Honda
14
0
0
0
0
8
25th

2007
125cc

Italy Kopron Team Scot

Honda
15
0
0
0
0
42
17th

2008
125cc

Finland Ajo Motorsport

Derbi
17
4
9
2
4
264
1st

2009
250cc

Spain Mapfre Aspar Team 250cc

Aprilia
16
0
2
1
0
107
8th

2010
Moto2

Spain Mapfre Aspar Team Moto2

RSV
16
0
0
0
0
34
20th

Suter

2011
Moto2

France Tech 3

Tech 3
17
0
0
0
0
30
23rd

2012
Moto2

Italy Speed Master Speed Up

Speed Up
16
0
0
0
0
17
22nd

Germany Cresto Guide MZ Racing Team

MZ-RE Honda

Germany Kiefer Racing

Kalex

2013
Moto2

Monaco JiR

Motobi
10
0
0
0
0
19
20th

2014
MotoGP

Spain Avintia Racing

Avintia
18
0
0
0
0
9
25th

2015
MotoGP

Spain Avintia Racing

Ducati
18
0
0
0
0
8
24th
Total




202

5

13

3

4

688


Races by year


(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position, races in italics indicate fastest lap)
















































































































































































































































































































































































































Year
Class
Bike
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18

Pos.
Pts

2003
125cc

Aprilia

JPN
22

RSA
22

SPA
28

FRA
17

ITA
Ret

CAT
13

NED
19

GBR
15

GER
Ret

CZE
15

POR







28th
5

Honda












BRA
Ret

PAC
Ret

MAL
22

AUS
Ret

VAL
Ret



2004
125cc

Aprilia

RSA
5

SPA
Ret

FRA
Ret

ITA
Ret

CAT
8

NED
12

BRA
12

GER
Ret

GBR
15

CZE
24

POR
11

JPN
Ret

QAT

MAL
17

AUS
8

VAL


18th
41

2005
125cc

Honda

SPA
11

POR
11

CHN
20

FRA
4

ITA
Ret

CAT
16

NED
14

GBR
2

GER
Ret

CZE
7

JPN
11

MAL
11

QAT
4

AUS
14

TUR
1

VAL
Ret


11th
104

2006
125cc

Honda

SPA
21

QAT
Ret

TUR
Ret

CHN
15

FRA
27

ITA
Ret

CAT
18

NED
13

GBR
16

GER

CZE
13

MAL
Ret

AUS
15

JPN
Ret

POR
Ret

VAL


25th
8

2007
125cc

Honda

QAT
14

SPA

TUR

CHN
14

FRA
9

ITA
Ret

CAT
19

GBR
6

NED
Ret

GER
15

CZE
20

RSM
13

POR
16

JPN
4

AUS
14

MAL
14

VAL
23

17th
42

2008
125cc

Derbi

QAT
4

SPA
9

POR
7

CHN
2

FRA
1

ITA
4

CAT
1

GBR
2

NED
7

GER
1

CZE
2

RSM
Ret

IND
10

JPN
2

AUS
1

MAL
5

VAL
3


1st

264

2009
250cc

Aprilia

QAT
3

JPN
Ret

SPA
11

FRA
Ret

ITA
12

CAT
14

NED
11

GER
Ret

GBR
5

CZE
9

IND
4

RSM
5

POR
2

AUS
5

MAL
Ret

VAL
14


8th
107

2010
Moto2

RSV

QAT
16

SPA
22
















20th
34

Suter



FRA
20

ITA
Ret

GBR
7

NED
8

CAT
Ret

GER
Ret

CZE
20

IND
12

RSM
Ret

ARA
13

JPN
18

MAL
26

AUS
6

POR
DNQ

VAL
26


2011
Moto2

Tech 3

QAT
19

SPA
26

POR
9

FRA
Ret

CAT
Ret

GBR
17

NED
Ret

ITA
24

GER
16

CZE
15

IND
27

RSM
16

ARA
12

JPN
27

AUS
9

MAL
14

VAL
7

23rd
30

2012
Moto2

Speed Up

QAT
7

SPA
Ret

POR
Ret

FRA
Ret

CAT
Ret

GBR
18

NED
15

GER










22nd
17

MZ-RE Honda









ITA
22

IND
24

CZE
16








Kalex












RSM
18

ARA
13

JPN
14

MAL
Ret

AUS
14

VAL
28


2013
Moto2

Motobi

QAT
16

AME
10

SPA
19

FRA
7

ITA
18

CAT
12

NED
Ret

GER
24

IND
20

CZE
Ret

GBR

RSM

ARA

MAL

AUS

JPN

VAL

20th
19

2014
MotoGP

Avintia

QAT
17

AME
18

ARG
19

SPA
Ret

FRA
19

ITA
18

CAT
Ret

NED
20

GER
22

IND
12

CZE
18

GBR
20

RSM
Ret

ARA
17

JPN
19

AUS
14

MAL
13

VAL
21
25th
9

2015
MotoGP

Ducati

QAT
19

AME
Ret

ARG
18

SPA
22

FRA
Ret

ITA
16

CAT
14

NED
18

GER
Ret

IND
17

CZE
18

GBR
14

RSM
13

ARA
20

JPN
15

AUS
20

MAL
18

VAL
Ret
24th
8


References




  1. ^ Official MotoGP profile Archived 2007-06-25 at the Wayback Machine


  2. ^ afp.google.com, France's Di Meglio wins motorcycle 125cc world championship Archived 2011-05-20 at the Wayback Machine




External links



  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

  • Team Aspar web site (archived from 2010)





Preceded by
Gábor Talmácsi

125 cc Motorcycle World Champion
2008
Succeeded by
Julián Simón





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