Dani Pedrosa
Date of birth: 29/09/1985
Birthplace: Castellar del Valles – Catalonia – Spain
Hometown: Switzerland
Weight: 48 kg
Height: 159 cm
Hobbies: Cycling, supermotard, motocross, trial, cinema, video games
Nacionality: Spanish
Years as Repsol rider: 15 (including 2016)
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Honours
First race: 1997 Spanish Minibike Championship
First Grand Prix: 2001 Japanese Grand Prix (125cc)
First pole position: 2002 Japanese Grand Prix (125cc)
First fastest lap: 2002 Pacific Grand Prix (125cc)
First podium finish: 2001 Comunitat Valenciana Grand Prix (125cc)
First victory: 2002 Dutch Grand Prix (125cc)
World Championships: 3 (125cc. in 2003 and 250cc. in 2004 and 2005)
Total Grand Prix starts: 259 (46 in 125cc, 32 in 250cc and 181 in MotoGP)
Fastest lap: 62 (5 in 125cc., 15 in 250cc. and 42 in MotoGP)
Poles: 46 (9 in 125cc., 9 en 250cc. and 28 in MotoGP)
Podiums: 144 (17 in 125cc., 24 in 250cc. and 103 in MotoGP)
Wins: 52 (8 in 125cc., 15 in 250cc. and 29 in MotoGP)
Sporting career
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Biography
1996 – 1998
The first time Dani Pedrosa got on a motorbike was at the age of four and his machine, a motocross Italjet 50, had side-wheels. At the age of six, Dani began racing on minibikes. His first pocket bike was a miniature copy of a street Kawasaki. Other bikes followed, circuits and races with friends, always for fun and not even imagining what was yet to come.
It was in 1996 when the ten-year-old Dani entered the Spanish Minibike Championship. Dani began to race on kart circuits all over Spain, always joined by his parents and with the bike in the car trunk. That same year, Dani finished his first race in sixth position, due to a problem with the exhaust pipe of his bike. With the second race came his first podium finish. He liked the experience and decided to enter the same Championship the next year, after finishing second overall in his first season.
But he had bad luck and a few days before the 1997 season Dani got chicken pox. The result was that he wasn’t even able to put on the helmet. It was the beginning of the season and given the problem, Pedrosa finished that season eight points behind the leader, in the third overall position.
Although Pedrosa managed to get the title in 1998 he still enjoyed racing as a mere hobby. The Aprilia 50 Cup and the Open RACC were popular promotion cups in those days and Pedrosa considered the possibility to enter one of them. But due to the lack of means and support and despite his good results, Dani decided to leave motorbikes aside and to change over to mountain bikes. When he was just about to get the licence to start racing on bicycles, the family heard from a friend that the Movistar Activa Cup, a promotion cup with competition bikes, was being organised.
1999 – 2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2015
2016
A season of growth
Dani Pedrosa had a great 2015, finishing fourth in the overall standings -36 points off teammate Marquez. It was, however, another season in which surgery affected his performance. After the first race of the year, the Repsol Honda Team rider decided to undergo his third operation for treatment of compartmental syndrome, forcing him to miss four rounds. He reappeared in France, where he finished 16th after a crash on the opening lap, and took fourth at Mugello. At the Circuit de Barcelona – Catalunya, he received the reward for all his efforts with a first podium since his return.
Fourth in qualifying for the Dutch TT, Pedrosa had a crash in the warmup that affected his race –in which he eventually finished eighth. Before the summer break, he battled for the win at Sachsenring, placing second. At Indianapolis he finished fourth, one week before going to the Czech Republic, where a further warm-up lap crash preceded a fifth place in the race. He would repeat the result in the rain in Great Britain, before coming ninth in a flag-to-flag contest at Misano.
The Aragon Grand Prix saw Pedrosa back to his best, as he was a key player in one of the most spectacular races of 2015 alongside Valentino Rossi –whom he managed to beat to second place. He followed that up with a dominant first victory of the season at a wet Japanese Grand Prix, and then battled at the front of the Australian GP before placing fifth.
In Malaysia the Spaniard took his first pole of the year, and claimed win number two with an imperious performance. At the season finale in Valencia he was third, rounding off the year with six podiums – four of them in the last five races – and a meritorious fourth place overall.