Tag Archives: Motorcycling Australia

Australian Motocross Championship rebranded as ProMX

MA announce revitalised Australian Motocross Championship – ProMX


Motorcycling Australia have announced ProMX, the new name of the Australian Motocross Championship and the premier motocross championship in the nation, bringing together new initiatives, opportunities and aiming to revitalise motocross in Australia.

ProMX announced by Motorcycling Australia
ProMX announced by Motorcycling Australia

ProMX aims to raise the profile of the Australian Motocross Championship and its riders, delivering exposure for sponsors and partners, while bringing MX fans to the trackside, creating new audiences and using dynamic media as well as TV platforms for 2021.

Under direct leadership of Motorcycling Australia, the ProMX Management Team has also been announced. Featuring a vast range of experiences in the sport and industry will drive the management and promotion of this international quality championship under the leadership of MA CEO, Peter Doyle.

The championship management team structure has served MA extremely well over many years with positive growth and development in the ASBK and AORC championships, raising the level of professionalism in both championships.

The ProMX Management Team will consist of
  • Peter Doyle – MA CEO
  • Martin Port – MA Operations Director
  • Matthew Falvo – MA Events Manager
  • Pip Harrison – MA National Technical Manager
  • Mark Hancock – ProMX Race Director and Chair MA Motocross Commission
  • Simon Maas – RACESAFE Director and FIM Oceania Representative
  • Mark Luksich – AMG Representative and MA Motocross Commission member

ProMX will enhance the professional development of our young Australian talent through the recent announcement of the MX3 class, while the MX2 will showcase our future champions. The MX1 class will see Australia’s best riders batting it out for the ProMX crown of MX1 Champion.

Australian Motocross Championship
Peter Doyle – MA CEO

“Planning for the 2021 ProMX is well under way and we know teams, riders and fans are extremely keen to go racing after the interruption of this year. ProMX will showcase an international standard championship not only for our Australian riders and teams, but also our MX fans in Australia and throughout the world. We now see many people watching the talent coming out of Australia to take on the world in MXGP and USA, and ProMX will continue to be a crucial breeding ground towards other international championships. We have developed the ProMX Management Team to ensure we have representatives with a wealth of experience from racing, industry, teams, technical, safety, event management and promotion to ensure we can grow the sport of motocross in Australia into the future. With the right support from industry, partners and sponsors we hope to be able to showcase a scintillating championship via television broadcast next year that will be an exciting addition to the 2021 ProMX championship.”

Further announcements will be released in the coming weeks and months as all eyes are now focussed on 2021.

Source: MCNews.com.au

MA release statement on COVID-19

Motorcycling Australia COVID-10 statement


Following the announcement to postpone Rounds 1 & 2 of the MX Nationals Championship at Horsham, as well as the Oceania Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup (MXN opener & Junior MX Tri-Nations Cup Postponed – Link), Motorcycling Australia has released the following formal statement regarding coronavirus and motorcycling events.

No further announcements have been made regarding changes to MA National events or FIM Oceania events held in Australia at this time, with MA inviting members and stakeholders to refer to official government guidelines relating to coronavirus at the health.gov.au website.

Motorcycling Australia has however acknowledged how quickly the situation may change going forward, with some sporting events around the world not to allow spectators, with Carmelo Ezpeleta even suggesting MotoGP rounds being held without spectators is a possibility (link) they have considered on the global stage. See full MA release below:


Motorcycling Australia Statement on COVID-19

Motorcycling Australia is aware of the ever-changing, fluid nature of the situation regarding COVID-19 (commonly known as Coronavirus).

MA will continue to monitor and continually update our key stakeholders and MA members with the latest information, in line with advice from both the State and Federal Government departments.

Whilst the FIM Superbike World Championship event went ahead with no issues, the situation is changing rapidly, and specifically international events are coming under closer scrutiny.

We are monitoring the government updates constantly and receiving daily communications from the FIM.

With a number of officials working at events, we are also in regular communication with our highly dedicated officials to ensure any queries or concerns they have, are being responded too.

We will work closely with all MA permitted event organisers to ensure they understand and are fully aware of the precautions that should be put in place at their events.

All MA members, officials and spectators are urged to follow the Government’s advice on how best to protect themselves from the virus and practice good hygiene methods, whether at the track, at home or anywhere else in public.

Further information can be found at;
https://www.health.gov.au/news/health-alerts/novel-coronavirus-2019-ncov-health-alert

MA will continue to provide further updates on any impacts for MA National events or FIM Oceania events held in Australia.

For updates on any State Championship or Club events please contact the State Controlling Body (SCB) in that area.

Source: MCNews.com.au

Motorcycling Australia exploring avenues for change

Motorcycling Australia Alliance Update

The Motorcycling Australia (MA) Alliance has been fully operational under the MA Alliance Agreement since August 2018 when 6 State Controlling Bodies (SCB) (excluding Motorcycling Victoria) and MA signed the agreement.

The Alliance Leadership Team, consisting of a representative of each Alliance participant and two from MA, have been meeting fortnightly by teleconference since November 2018 to ensure a number of critical alliance projects are progressed as quickly as possible.  These projects include the following:

  1. Strategic review if what the MA federation should look like in the future.
  2. Designing a completely new financial model for the MA federation.
  3. Getting all our affiliated clubs operating on RiderNet before the end of 2019 – membership, events, on-line entries and ensuring all services to riders and participants are exclusively delivered online through RiderNet.

What should the MA federation look like in the future?

In this bulletin, we deal with the first of these projects, largely by putting to you the range of options.


What is the optimum insurance structure for the future?

Those of you who have participated in MA for a long time will recall that in 2001 the public liability insurer, HIH, went into liquidation, making it almost impossible for sporting clubs to obtain suitable public liability and other insurance. At the time, MA and the SCBs took the historic decision to establish a captive insurer, MA Insurance Limited (MAIL). That visionary and courageous decision has served this organisation very well since 2002. But will the current insurance structure serve us as well into the future? Some of the critical strategic questions we need to address are the following:

  • How should MAIL recover the costs of $1.8 million per year for public liability insurance that covers every club, every committee member, every official, every volunteer and every rider or participant from legal liability? Part of that cost must be recovered through, variously, affiliation fees, event permit costs and fees to participate in events. And what should the mix be?
  • Should personal accident insurance that costs the organisation $1.1 million per year (ie the insurance that covers riders for the cost of injury) continue to be compulsory? Or is there a case for making that insurance optional?
  • Should MAIL offer income protection insurance and on what terms? Should that be mandatory or optional?
  • Should MAIL insurance products be offered to non-members as a way of attracting those outsiders onto the MA community as members.

What should membership look like?

Currently, clubs are the primary members of the SCBs, SCBs are the primary members of MA and all club members are MA members by virtue of those primary memberships. A MA licence of any sort also confers membership on the licensee. But should we create an opportunity for any individual to acquire direct membership of an SCB and/or of MA for a modest membership fee in exchange for individual membership benefits (eg industry discounts, discounted major event tickets etc.).


Should MA remain a dominantly racing organisation?

Or should we also expand our operations into recreational riding in which the family can participate together. As an organisation, we have a very great advantage in that we, mostly though our clubs, have many and varied venues for motorcycling, albeit at the moment focussed on competition. How can we facilitate wider commercial opportunities for our clubs to accommodate purely recreational activities under rules and insurance that are very different from what applies to competition? How can we create more and varied opportunities for our riders, and the non-member public to ride at many more venues?


What are the mutually beneficial opportunities for MA and SCBs to better cooperate with the motorcycle industry?

Whilst we are all familiar with the way in which we currently interact with industry through sponsorship, industry-supported teams etc, what other ways can MA provide benefits to the industry in exchange for more revenue into clubs, SCBs and MA?


All ideas are welcome

There are a lot of questions here and these are only the main questions with which the MA Alliance is wrestling. In the course of the ALT’s considerations of these important strategic issues, we invite any member anywhere to submit to the Alliance via MA any ideas you have about MA’s future in writing. We assure you that the ALT will fully consider any sensible ideas, even radical ideas you wish to put.

Please email through your ideas to [email protected]

Motorcycling Australia
Motorcycling Australia

Source: MCNews.com.au