RANDY DE PUNIET
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PERSONAL DETAILS

NAME: RANDY DE PUNIET
TEAM:
NATIONALITY: FRENCH
DATE OF BIRTH: 14 FEBRUARY 1981
MARRIED: SINGLE
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RECORD TO END 2011

WINS: 5 (250CC)
POLES: 9 (250CC)
FASTEST LAPS: 4 (250CC)
DEBUT: SPAIN 2006 (MOTOGP) / JPN 2001 (250CC) / FRA 1998 (125CC)
DRIVEN FOR: ASPAR APRILIA (2012), PRAMAC DUCATI (2011), HONDA LCR (2008-2010), KAWASAKI RACING TEAM (2007 - 2006)
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MOTOGP » RANDY DE PUNIET

CAREER
Randy de Puniet has been involved with motorcycles since he was old enough to walk. At three-years-of-age the young Frenchman first threw his leg over a motorcycle, with his race debut coming just three years later at the tender age of six years.

After winning back-to-back titles in the French National 125cc Championship in 1997 and 1998, de Puniet made his Grand Prix debut as a wild-card entry at the 1998 Grand Prix.

His performance in his first world championship race was enough to secure the young Frenchman a full time ride in the championship the following year.

In 2001 de Puniet moved up to the quarter-litre class aboard a customer specification Aprilia 250cc machine. Two podiums on a non-factory bike the following season were enough to convince Aprilia to give Randy a factory bike for 2003, and he repaid them with his debut grand prix win in that season's Catalunya Grand Prix.

Having secured 5 wins, 22 podiums and 9 pole positions during his time in the 250cc World Championship, de Puniet was signed by Kawasaki at the end of the 2005 season to step up to the MotoGP class, where he rode a Ninja ZX-RR alongside Shinya Nakano in 2006.

The 25-year-old Frenchman showed flashes of speed during his debut season, in which he qualified fourth for his home race at Le Mans and took a best finish of 10th.

With Nakano moving on for 2007, and replaced by test rider Olivier Jacque (himself later replaced by Anthony West) de Puniet found himself in the role of team leader. Kawasaki's first 800cc motorcycle was also drawing compliments from throughout the field, and the pressure began to mount for de Puniet to produce.

Randy undoubtedly had the raw speed to succeed - he qualified in the top six on nine occasions - but was he also crashed frequently, failing to reach the finish seven times from 18 races. de Puniet finally scored his debut MotoGP podium at round 15, the Japanese Grand Prix, but by then he had already surprised Kawasaki by signing for the satellite Honda LCR outfit, for whom he had previously ridden in 250.

Some highly promising pre-season testing pace had pundits predicting a podium appearance for de Puniet in 2008, but it turned out to be a disappointing year for the #14. Randy’s continued one lap pace saw him qualify in the top six on ten occasions, but his best race finish was a sixth at Laguna Seca and he failed to reach the flag on five occasions, leaving him just 16th in the final championship standings and the lowest ranked RC212V rider.

Nevertheless, LCR kept their belief in de Puniet and he returned in 2009 a far more consistent rider. The Frenchman failed to score points just twice and claimed his first RCV podium with third place at a damp Donington Park on his way to eleventh in the championship.

Staying with LCR Honda, de Puniet began 2010 as something of a revelation in the opening rounds as his performances, particularly in qualifying, saw him dicing with the factory teams. However, his season was detrimentally interrupted by a nasty leg injury sustained in the German Grand Prix and while he returned to action swiftly, it took time for him to find his best form again, consigning him to ninth.

Even so, this remained his best overall finish in MotoGP, so it was a surprise that de Puniet ventured to pastures new in 2011 as LCR placed its faith in newly-crowned Moto2 champion Toni Elias. As such, de Puniet found a home at Pramac Ducati, where he showed respectable testing pace alongside fellow Desmosedici debutant Valentino Rossi.

However, the season would become a career nadir for de Puniet as a mixture of poor luck, uncompetitive machinery and frustrating accidents consigned him to the lower reaches of the points. Leaving him 16th, ahead of only his team-mate Loris Capirossi, it was an unhappy year for de Puniet.

Though linked with a return to LCR, itself looking to regain its reputation after a poor year with Elias at the helm, de Puniet has landed at Aspar for 2012, spearheading its foray into the CRT ranks. Though a step into the unknown, de Puniet, along with Colin Edwards are set to be the gauge at which the CRT machines will be measured.

Achievements:
  • 2009 11th in the MotoGP World Championship for Honda LCR, 106 points.
    • 2008 16th in MotoGP World Championship for Honda LCR, 61 points.
    • 2007 Stays with the factory Kawasaki team in MotoGP. 11th in championship. 108 points.
    • 2006 Signs to ride for the Kawasaki Racing Team in MotoGP. 16th in championship. 37 points.
    • 2005 8th in the 250cc World Championship on a Repsol Aprilia. 138 points.
    • 2004 3rd in the 250cc World Championship on an LCR Aprilia. 214 points.
    • 2003 4th in the 250cc World Championship on an LCR Aprilia. 208 points.
    • 2002 9th in the 250cc World Championship on a Campetella Racing Aprilia. 119 points.
    • 2001 13th in the 250cc World Championship with Equipe de France - Scrab GP. Scored 50 points.
    • 2000 17th in the 125cc World Championship with 50 points.
    • 1999 18th in the 125cc World Championship.
    • 1998 Ninth in the European Championship. French 125cc Open Championship winner. Made 125cc World Championship debut (FRA).
    • 1997 Won Cagiva Cup. Won the French National Championship 125cc. Second in the French 125cc Open Championship. Stock-Motorbikes winner.
    • 1996 Fourth in the Cagiva Cup. Fifth in Stock-Motorbikes
    • 1995 Won the Typhoon Cup.