Safety for the Riders:
the number one priority!
We all know that in motorcycle races safety depends on both passive and active factors. Active safety features prevent accidents from happening, while passive safety features lessen the chance of death and serious injury in instances where an accident is unavoidable.
Among passive safety factors are the design of racing circuits, for example, and the protective clothing worn by Riders.
Active safety factors include the motorcycle itself with all the technological advances we have seen, and, most important of all, the Rider’s own behaviour.
All the advances we see today are the fruit of tremendous efforts made over the last seventy years to avoid and ideally totally eliminate fatal accidents. We can identify two key dates in this connection: 1949, when the era of modern motorcycling began, and the end of 2018.
The work done on the configuration of racing circuits alone has had extraordinary results. Let us look at a few statistics. Between 1949 and 1988 the number of serious accidents was high. We had one serious accident in every eighth Grand Prix. From the data we have collected, we know that from 1989 until 2018, roughly the last thirty years, the number of fatalities fell by 95%, to just one serious accident for every 70 Grand Prix.
As regards clothing, one of the most important advances was the introduction of the full-face helmet and the back protector. Only very recently, we have seen the advent of the rider’s air bag and it would be a good thing if its use could be extended to all riders in all classes.