'Àlex Crivillé' (born
March 4,
1970 in
Barcelona,
Spain) is a former
Grand Prix motorcycle road racer. In 1999, he became the first Spaniard to win the
500cc World Championship.
Pre 500 cc
Crivillé falsified his age in order to start racing at 14 in 1985, the minimum age for a license being 15 in Spain. In that year he won the Criterium Solo Moto, a national series for 75 cc
Honda streetbikes.
[1]
Crivillé started his international career in the now-defunct 80cc World Championship in the team Derbi, taking a 2nd place in his very first race in
1987. He was second overall in
1988, also dabbling in the 125cc series, which he raced fulltime in
1989. He won the 125cc World Championship in his first attempt riding for the JJ Cobas team, claiming 5 victories.
In
1990 he stepped up to the 250 cc class for
Giacomo Agostini's team, before returning to the Cobas team a year later. He never did win a 250 cc race.
500 cc
Nonetheless, Crivillé joined the
Sito Pons team in 500cc for
1992, taking 8th overall, and his first win at
Assen in a race missed by
Mick Doohan,
Wayne Rainey and
Wayne Gardner due to injuries. In
1993, he again finished 8th in the championship.
1994 was his first year as a full factory
Honda rider, as
Mick Doohan's team-mate on the
Repsol-backed Hondas which would dominate 500cc and
MotoGP racing in years to come. Crivillé was 4th in
1995 and
1997, runner-up in
1996 with 11 podium finishes, and 3rd in
1998.
Doohan's career-ending crash in
1999 opened the door for Crivillé, and he took six wins, including his 100th 500 cc start at
Donington Park [2], clinching the championship with a race to spare. However, he finished 9th in
2000 and 8th in
2001 (with a third place at
Jerez). Fired by Repsol Honda, he planned to spend the
2002 MotoGP season with the
D'Antin Yamaha team, but was forced to retire due to undetermined health problems, the main symptom being fainting spells that started during the 2000 pre-season
[3], and had continued over the following 2 years.
[4]
Notes
1. Noyes, D. "Dreams Come True", pages 37-38. ''Motocourse 1999-2000'', Scott, M. (ed.) Richmond: Hazleton Publishing Ltd, 1999.
2. Jennings, B.: '' Injured Criville takes the race and the championship lead,'' May 7 1999.
3. ''Motocourse 2000-2001'', Scott, M. (ed.) Page 36. Richmond: Hazleton Publishing Ltd, 2000.
4. ''Motorcycling: Criville not forced out by epilepsy'' The Independent, February 21, 2002.
External links
★
Crash.net profile
★
Interview following his 500cc championship victory