| Andrea Iannone | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Iannone atDonington Park,World Superbike, 2024 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Nationality | Italian | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Born | (1989-08-09)9 August 1989 (age 36)[1] Vasto, Italy | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Current team | Team GoEleven | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Bike number | 29 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Andrea Iannone (born 9 August 1989) is an Italian professionalmotorcycle racer who competes in theSuperbike World Championship since 2024 and competed in theMotoGP World Championship from 2013 to 2019.
After winning four races in 125 cc World Championship and finishing 7th overall in2009 Iannone made the move to Moto2 World Championship in2010. A further eight race wins and three consecutive third-place finishes followed in Moto2. And then Iannone made the move up toMotoGP in 2013 withPramac Racing on a satelliteDucati.
After spending two seasons with Pramac, Iannone was moved up to theFactory Ducati Team in2015, managing to get three podiums, a Pole Position and what proved to be his best ever championship position and points tally of 5th and 188. A further four podiums and a pole position followed in2016 including a maiden MotoGP win inAustria. After the arrival of triple MotoGP World ChampionJorge Lorenzo to Ducati Iannone made the move toSuzuki for 2017. After a difficult first season without a podium Iannone managed to get further four podium finishes withSuzuki in2018.
In 2019, Iannone was given an 18-month ban byFIM andWADA for doping, which, after a failed appeal, was extended to four years by theCourt of Arbitration for Sport, from 17 December 2019.[2] He returned to racing in 2024,[3][4] and was contracted by Ducati to race inWorld Superbikes for its satellite organisation Team GoEleven.[5]
Iannone was born in theAdriatic coastal town of Vasto, on 9 August 1989. His interest in bikes came at a very early age with mini motos. Iannone has one older brother.

Born inVasto,Province of Chieti, Iannone started his career onpocket bikes and soon became a championship front runner. He participated in both the Italian and Spanish championships before moving toWorld Championship in2005. On 4 May 2008, Iannone claimed his first win at theChinese Grand Prix in Shanghai, in wet conditions. Prior to the victory, he had never finished higher than ninth, at theTurkish andFrench Grands Prix in 2007, although he had previously qualified as high as seventh. In the 2009 125 cc season he won the first two races of the season, establishing himself as a championship contender, however he faded to seventh overall, with only one more win. During the race atMisano, Iannone provoked an accident withPol Espargaró. After the incident, images showed the riders arguing in the gravel and Iannone headbutted Espargaró. This was heavily criticised by the media and lost Iannone some sponsorship; Iannone then apologised to Espargaró at the next race atEstoril.[6]
In 2010, Iannone moved up to the new Moto2 series, his first time riding anything other than an Aprilia. After a slow start he took victories at Mugello and Assen – both from pole – making him the first rider to take two poles in the class,[7] to move up to fourth overall in the standings.[8] He was also competitive in Barcelona, but received a ride-through penalty for overtakingYuki Takahashi under yellow flag conditions.[9] He then went on to win again atMotorland Aragón, a track which was new to the MotoGP calendar in2010.

2011 proved to be a very up and down season for Iannone, with inconsistency being his major downfall. Whilst being the only other rider besidesStefan Bradl andMarc Márquez to win more than one race, he would often find himself qualifying well outside the top 10, but finished the season in third place after beatingAlex de Angelis in the final race of the season inValencia. On the Tuesday following the race, Iannone tested a MotoGP bike forGresini Racing in Valencia.[10]
Iannone remained in the class for the2012 season, finishing second in the season-openingQatar Grand Prix, having led the race out of the final corner and losing out to the straight line speed ofMarc Márquez's bike.[11] He finished fourteenth, fifth and fourth over the next three races, before taking his first victory of the season in theCatalan Grand Prix.[12] He went on to get another podium at Assen. After this, he won his home race atMugello wearing the colours of a nearby fire station.

In 2013, after another third place in theMoto2 championship, Iannone moved up intoMotoGP on aDucati Desmosedici withPramac Racing. He finished the season in twelfth place with five top-ten finishes. His best result was an eighth place at theAustralian Grand Prix atPhillip Island, but the second part of his season was affected by a shoulder injury suffered during free practice at theGerman Grand Prix. The injury also forced him to miss theUnited States Grand Prix at Laguna Seca.[13]
In 2014, Iannone continued to race with Pramac Racing, with teammateYonny Hernández.
For the 2015 season, Iannone replacedCal Crutchlow atDucati Corse, and partneredAndrea Dovizioso. Iannone achieved his first MotoGP podium on his Ducati début, finishing third inQatar.[14] AtAustin, he finished in fifth place behindJorge Lorenzo, and also recorded the first fastest lap of his MotoGP career. Iannone was on course for a second podium inArgentina, but was passed for third on the final lap, by Crutchlow.[15] AtPhillip Island, Iannone was involved in a lengthy four-way battle for first with three former world champions, Lorenzo,Marc Márquez, andValentino Rossi. He finished third after overtaking Rossi on the final lap with three corners remaining.
Ducati kept their line up for 2016 and he began the season well, leading atLosail for 6 laps before low-siding, allowing his teammate to overtake. The following Grand Prix in Argentina saw Iannone in 3rd before attempting a last lap overtake of his teammate Dovizioso, resulting in both riders falling. Iannone was penalised by Race Direction with a penalty point and three grid places at the next round inAustin.[16] Despite these punishments, Iannone finished his first race of the season on the podium with 3rd place, behind winner Marc Márquez and Jorge Lorenzo, ending his run of four consecutive race retirements starting at the previous yearsMalaysian Grand Prix. He scored points in Spain, retired in France before scoring the fastest lap en route to 3rd at his home race atMugello. He raced aggressively at Catalunya, and eliminated Lorenzo who was running in 5th place, giving winner Marquez a 10-point championship lead.
Iannone scored points at the Dutch TT and Germany, before his best race weekend of the season and of his career so far in Austria. His pace was evident throughout the weekend as he finished in the top two of every session apart from the first practice session, in which he was third. He started the race from pole position and although he briefly lost the lead at the end of lap one, he regained it before his teammate took it from him and led between laps 10 and 20. Iannone took the lead again and led until the finish winning from his teammate by 0.938 seconds whilst also claiming another fastest lap. It was Ducati's first MotoGP win since 2010 and Iannone's first MotoGP win, and to date is his only win. He finished 8th in Brno and then came the British round of the championship. At Silverstone, he qualified on the third row in 8th place and fought his way through the field. Around the halfway mark of the race, he began to have fatigue in his right forearm which made the bike difficult to control. He arrived at turn 17 on lap 14, turned late, hit a bump, and crashed out.[17]
At theSan Marino Grand Prix, Iannone had a low-side crash at the fast turn 15, he appeared unharmed but checks revealed he had fractured hisT3 vertebrae which ruled him out of the rest of the weekend.[18][19] He took part in practice 1 at the following race two weeks later in Aragon after being cleared to race, but was still having pain so decided to withdraw from the race weekend. He still wasn't 100% fit to race in both Japan and Australia. In total he missed four races and returned in Malaysia where he crashed out from 3rd on lap 12. It was the fourth time he had retired from a podium position in 2016. He finished the year strongly with a podium in his final race for Ducati. He showed pace throughout the season but lacked consistency and even with missing four races, he finished 9th in standings with 112 points.
On 19 May 2016,Team Suzuki Ecstar announced that Iannone had signed with the outfit for 2 seasons as a factory rider.[20] Iannone paired at Suzuki with MotoGP rookieÁlex Rins. Iannone finished the season with 70 points, 13th in the championship and ahead of his teammate. In2018, Iannone nearly doubled his points tally to 133 with 4 podium finishes, however it was only sufficient for 10th place in the championship in a tight mid-field battle.
In 2018, ahead of his homeItalian Grand Prix, Iannone announced that he and Suzuki would part ways at the end of the season.[21]
During the 2018 season, Iannone signed with theAprilia factory-supportedAprilia Racing Team Gresini on a 2-year deal partnering incumbent riderAleix Espargaró.[22] Iannone finished his debut season with Aprilia with 43 points in 16th place in the riders' championship, outscored by teammate Espargaró.
Iannone returned to MotoGP as a temporary racer for thePertamina Enduro VR46 Racing Team in theMalaysian round, after 5 seasons away from the MotoGP event. He will replaceFabio Di Giannantonio who is sidelined due to undergoing surgery on an injured left shoulder. The owner of the team,Valentino Rossi, decided to hire him as a replacement for 'Diggia', and Rossi's decision received approval from Ducati Corse.[23]
In December 2019, Iannone was provisionally suspended from motorcycle racing after a positive drug test.[24] He was later retroactively disqualified from the final two rounds of the 2019 season and handed a retroactive 18-month ban in March 2020.[25] He was initially replaced byBradley Smith as he awaited his appeal,[26] and later byLorenzo Savadori.[27]
On 10 November 2020 Iannone was sentenced a four-year ban after losing his appeal. TheCourt of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) handed the Italian a four-year suspension after being found guilty of violatingWorld Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) regulations on the prohibited substanceDrostanolone. Iannone claimed an unintentional violation as result of unknowingly eating contaminated meat in Malaysia and a "lack of incentive to dope", but the CAS found his arguments "were insufficient to establish, on a balance of probability that [his violation] was not intentional". The CAS decision superseded the 18-month ban initially applied by theFIM International Disciplinary Court with the four-year ban appealed by WADA.[28][2]
Iannone has officially joined Team GoEleven to compete in the2024 Superbike World Championship, riding aDucati Panigale V4 R. He will return to competition after a four-year absence, following a ban dating from 2019, due to a doping violation.[29] He completed his first official test, allowed whilst still technically under the ban, atJerez in late October/early November, stating that his arms wereout-of-condition.[30][31]
The first notable nickname Iannone had was during the 2010 Misano CircuitMoto2 race where he wore a helmet inspired bythe Incredible Hulk. The writing on the back of the helmet read "The Incredible Iannhulk". In 2011, Iannone sported the nickname "Crazy Joe" on the back of his leathers, a nickname his friends had given him - he is called this because of his aggressive racing manoeuvres. In 2012, "Crazy Joe" had changed to "The Maniac Joe" to emphasize the first nickname even further. At Mugello, Iannone used the colour scheme of a nearby fire station and for that race alone gained the nickname "Joe the Firefighter".
During his latter years of motorcycle racing he was known as "The Maniac".[32][33][34]
| Class | Seasons | 1st GP | 1st Pod | 1st Win | Race | Win | Podiums | Pole | FLap | Pts | WChmp |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 125cc | 2005–2009 | 2005 Spain | 2008 China | 2008 China | 77 | 4 | 5 | 3 | 1 | 292.5 | 0 |
| Moto2 | 2010–2012 | 2010 Qatar | 2010 Italy | 2010 Italy | 51 | 8 | 19 | 5 | 13 | 570 | 0 |
| MotoGP | 2013–2019, 2024 | 2013 Qatar | 2015 Qatar | 2016 Austria | 119 | 1 | 11 | 2 | 3 | 705 | 0 |
| Total | 2005–2019, 2024 | 247 | 13 | 35 | 10 | 17 | 1567.5 | 0 | |||
(key) (Races inbold indicate pole position, races initalics indicate fastest lap)
| Season | Motorcycle | Team | Race | Win | Podium | Pole | FLap | Pts | Plcd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Ducati Panigale V4 R | Team GoEleven | 36 | 1 | 5 | 0 | 2 | 231 | 8th |
| 2025 | Ducati Panigale V4 R | Team GoEleven | 31 | 0 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 166 | 9th |
| Total | 67 | 1 | 8 | 0 | 2 | 397 | |||
(key) (Races inbold indicate pole position) (Races initalics indicate fastest lap)
| Year | Bike | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | Pos | Pts | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | R1 | SR | R2 | ||||
| 2024 | Ducati | AUS 3 | AUS 14 | AUS 4 | BAR 4 | BAR 2 | BAR Ret | NED Ret | NED 15 | NED 4 | MIS 7 | MIS 5 | MIS 11 | GBR 11 | GBR 7 | GBR Ret | CZE 3 | CZE 7 | CZE 8 | POR Ret | POR 9 | POR 4 | FRA 5 | FRA 11 | FRA 12 | ITA Ret | ITA 3 | ITA Ret | ARA 1 | ARA 4 | ARA 4 | EST 9 | EST 9 | EST 8 | SPA 12 | SPA 7 | SPA 4 | 8th | 231 |
| 2025 | Ducati | AUS 6 | AUS 2 | AUS 3 | POR 7 | POR 12 | POR Ret | NED Ret | NED Ret | NED 9 | ITA 4 | ITA 8 | ITA 14 | CZE WD | CZE WD | CZE WD | EMI Ret | EMI 17 | EMI Ret | GBR 10 | GBR 9 | GBR 7 | HUN 13 | HUN DNS | HUN DNS | FRA Ret | FRA 6 | FRA 16 | ARA 6 | ARA 4 | ARA 4 | POR 8 | POR 5 | POR 12 | SPA 4 | SPA 3 | SPA 7 | 9th | 166 |