David Alonso - the first ever world champion from Chinese constructor
In the Japanese Grand Prix, David Alonso reaches a new milestone with the Moto3 World Championship title. He is also the first ever world champion from a Chinese constructor.

In the beginning of season 2024, David Alonso led four of the five days of preseason and already left written the script that the category would follow this year. The victory in Qatar did not come as a surprise; the win in America was a positive point. The victories in France, Barcelona and Italy were a message to the outside world: he was not going to give options. To anyone.
With three rivals evenly matched, three riders who were taking points from each other, Alonso's advantage was increasing little by little. The blow on the table in Germany, after hitting the ground on Friday, was another important step on that path. The feeling of superiority that the Colombian conveyed, with six victories in nine races, began to arouse rumours about whether he would be able to surpass Joan Mir's 10 Moto3 victories in 2017 or Valentino Rossi's 11 lightweight class wins in 1997.The long faces after finishing second in Great Britain gave way again to joy with the triumph in Austria. A new victory in Misano put an end to the doubts of Aragon and San Marino and allowed him to once again distance himself from his three rivals, already shooting towards the title and forcing them to start to rethink their objectives until the end of the year. In Indonesia he went from the ground, on Friday, to the sky, on Sunday. And now in Japan, where he arrived depending on himself to close the title with four races to go, he has achieved the title as champions like to do it, with a win. 

It has been a long road to reach the Moto3 title, and he has shared it with many people. Many of them have even been on the podium with him: Jorge, Nico, Mauri, Barabba, Óscar, Roger, Majo, Giagi, Paolo and Vicente. Without them, and many others, you would not be reading this text, and he would not have celebrated in Japan the seventh world title in the lightweight category for a master 125 / Moto3 team, the CFMOTO Aspar Team.