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Joan Olivé


 

Date of Birth: November 22nd, 1984
Place of Birth: Tarragona, Spain
Age: 20

   
 

Complete of wins

First race: 1995 Spanish Minibike Championship
First podium finish: 1996 Spanish 50cc Scooter Championship
First Grand Prix: 2001 Japanese Grand Prix (125cc, Honda)
Total Grand Prix: 64 (32 in 125cc and 32 in 250cc)
Best Grand Prix result: 3rd (Dutch Grand Prix, 2002, 125cc)
Podium finishes: 1 (Dutch Grand Prix, 2002, 125cc)
Fastest laps: 1 (Dutch Grand Prix, 2002, 125cc)

 

Sporting career

1998

Open RACC 50cc Champion
Runner-up Aprilia 50cc Cup

1999

Movistar Activa Joven Cup Champion (Honda RS 125)

2000

Spanish 125 GP Champion (Honda RS 125)

2001

19th 125 GP World Championship (Honda RS 125)

2002

12th 125 GP World Championship (Honda RS 125)

2003

12th 250 GP World Championship (Aprilia)

2004

19th 250 GP World Championship (Aprilia)

Biography

Since he was a child, Joan Olivé used to take a ride through the mountains every week on his Mecatecno 50, with his father, who had taken part in motocross and road racing events. Thus, the love for the sport was already present in the youngsters home when, at the age of seven, he went to a karting track to try his cousins minibike and decided that all he wanted to do was to race on two wheels. 1992 was the year of his first race, in the Pocket Bike Open within the Catalan Championship. Joan won the four first rounds out of six and was second in the other two races, becoming champion in his first racing year.

Olivé went on taking part in the Catalan Pocket Bike Championship the following years until 1995, when he took part in the Spanish Championship as well. Joan proved to have a good style ever since he began and sometimes joined the track with Dani Pedrosa, Toni Elias, Héctor Faubel, Pablo and Fonsi Nieto.

Keeping the same bike, Olivé took part in the Spanish Pocket Bike Championship in 1996. He also entered the Spanish Scooter Championship on a Honda 50, a stock Scooter provided by Honda Tarragona, getting one podium finish and finishing fourth overall. Through the Catalan Motorcycle Federation, Joan and his dad decided to take part in the first Open RACC 50, with a 50cc Honda. With only two races left for the end of the season, Joan was already third behind Luis Costa and Toni Elias, but two ill-timed crashes set him back to the seventh overall position that year.

In 1998, the 13-year-old Joan was crowned Open RACC 50cc Champion, his first official title. In the same year he took part in the Aprilia Cup finishing second, behind Jorge Lorenzo: That same season, Joan managed to finish third in the Catalan Enduro Championship on a Honda CR 80cc.

In 1999 Joan decided to take part in the selection trials for the new promotion cup, the Movistar Activa Cup, held at the Jarama circuit: He decided to try luck and he was one of the chosen, making the second fastest time of the trials. His regularity and good style allowed him to finally take the victory of the Championship, thus earning his credentials for a place in the team Alberto Puig created one year later for the 125cc Spanish Championship.

He took part in the 125cc Spanish Road Racing Championship in 2000, and again had a great performance. He took the 125cc Spanish Championship in his first participation and became the youngest rider in the Spanish motorcycling history to get that award.

Joan showed that he had a great future ahead of him, so when in 2001, Alberto Puig decided that the young rider was ready, Joan Olivé made the jump to the World Championship within the Telefónica Movistar Junior Team.

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