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Moto2 World Championship riders: Gábor Talmácsi, Mika Kallio, Toni Elías, Anthony West, Mike Di Meglio, Alex de Angelis, Roger Lee Hayden

Author Source: Wikipedia
Publisher Books LLC, Wiki Series
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Book Details
ISBN / ASIN1233102737
ISBN-139781233102730
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: Gábor Talmácsi, Mika Kallio, Toni Elías, Anthony West, Mike Di Meglio, Alex de Angelis, Roger Lee Hayden, Thomas Lüthi, Yuki Takahashi, Kenan Sofuoğlu, Fonsi Nieto, Mattia Pasini, Bradley Smith, Shoya Tomizawa, Andrea Iannone, Aleix Espargaró, Lukáš Pešek, Scott Redding, Karel Abraham, Stefan Bradl, Pol Espargaró, Marc Márquez, Randy Krummenacher, Simone Corsi, Héctor Faubel, Alex Debón, Roberto Rolfo, Julián Simón, Sergio Gadea, Raffaele de Rosa, Michele Pirro, Max Neukirchner, Claudio Corti, Niccolò Canepa, Jules Cluzel, Esteve Rabat, Kenny Noyes, Dominique Aegerter, Ratthapark Wilairot, Yonny Hernández, Joan Olivé, Yusuke Teshima, Alex Baldolini, Michael Ranseder. Excerpt: Gábor Talmácsi (born May 28, 1981) in Budapest, Hungary) is a professional motorcycle racer. He was the 2007 Grand Prix motorcycle racing 125cc World Champion, and he is thus the first Hungarian to win a road racing World Championship. He has a younger brother, Gergő, who is also a motorcycle racer. Gábor competed in boxing, but started racing on minibikes made by his father at the age of 4. After successful seasons in the Hungarian and the European championship, he had his first full season in the World Championship in 2001, with the Racing Service team, on a private Honda bike. That year he scored 34 points, what earned him a place next year in the Italjet team, but the change wasn't a real success, and during the season he had to switch for the PEV ADAC Sachsen team, where he could ride a Honda again. This change worked a bit better, and in Brazil, he scored his best result that far with a fourth place. In 2003 he signed for the reigning world champion Exalt Cycle Aprilia team, but did not reach the success he expected, and often felt he was given not the same bike and treatment by the team as his German teammate, Steve Jenkner. Gábor wanted...