Mike Leitner: KTM achieved two MotoGP wins, it's not a horrible season

It's not clear exactly when Mike Leitner found o𒁏ut he would be replaced as KTM's factory MotoGP team manager🤪 for 2022.
But during what proved to be his final official appearance in front of the media at Valencia he reflected on a 'roller-coaster' season for the Austrian factory, winning two races but fal꧒ling well short of the title challenge predicted after last year's opening three victories in the premier-class.
"We started the new season not in the way we wanted, but after some races we found quite a good way to fix it and fro📖m Mugello were very competitive: Miguel [Oliveira] won in Barcelona, second positions in Sachsenring and Mugello. Brad [Binder] also did good results at that time," Leitner sa⭕id.
"After the summer break we expected to continue in that way, but thi🌞ngs turn🐎ed [again]. Racing is racing, you have what you have, and things sometimes change quite fast.
"But for us also a big change in the whole racing operation was losing concessions, forcing you in a different way to deve𒉰lop the bike. Especially𓆉 also from the company the way you get the new parts and all these things.
"We learned a lot about that and the 🦩target is clear, we want to do better in 202🍌2."
The 59-year-old, a former 125GP racer and then Dani Pedrosa's long-time crew chief before helping assemble KTM's new premier-class team for 2016, underlined that the small margin between success and failure means none of the bikes ඣon the current MotoGP grid have any single glaring fault.
"The class is so competitive, it's not that you have a bike with one big bad point," Leitner said. "Everything is so balanced and 0.15 of a second b🧜rings you in a completely different area. Just to put alꦺl the points together in line with the riders, the team and everything is not that easy always.
"We achieved tﷺwo victories, I mean to be fair it's not a horrible season and Brad [finished] sixth in the championship. I think we will take the most positives out, learn 🌊from this season and take the next step.
"I think we've made a quite good analysis of where our weak and strong points are and the target is clear, keep the strong and work on the weak. But it will not be a tot🐓ally new evolution of the bike [in 2022], we will work on the same aspects; aerodynamic, engine, chassis.
"We have a big field where we can still make steps and we are all focused𒈔 to make a step over winter for the first race of 2022 in Doha."
But instead of head🐼ing the race team in Qatar next year, Leitner will 'transition to a consultancy role༒' with KTM.
Meanwhile, Pramac Ducati's Francesco Guidotti is set to appointed as Leitner's successor, joining another senior figure from the Ducati MotoGP programme, Fabiano Sterlacchini, who took up a senior KTM✤ technical role earlier this year.
"We hired Fabiano [Sterlacchini]. He is a very expeඣrienced guy in the racing world, many years working for Ducati and actually he was looking for a job," Leitner explained.
"Mai𒆙nly he will be the technical leader in the house of KTM, so he will coordinate all our operations, the test team and also development direction with all the en෴gineers there.
"We think we did a good move and let's see the𓃲 outcome."

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has 🌠seen Valentino Rossi come and go. He is at the forefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s ♛injury issues.