Joan Mir turns down #1 plate for MotoGP title defence
Reigning MotoGP wo✤rld champion Joan Mir has officially confirmed that he will continue to race with the #36 on his Suzuki GSX-RR this season and not use the #1 plate.
"The number will be the same as always,𓃲 the loyal one, #36!" Mir explained. "I think it would have been really awesome to use the #1, a unique experience and a dream.
"But I believe that 36 is the number with which I've worked hard and it has taken me to where I a🦹m now, winning two world championship🌄s [MotoGP and Moto3].

Reigning MotoGP world champion Joan Mir has officially confirmed that he will𝓀 continu𒁃e to race with the #36 on his Suzuki GSX-RR this season and not use the #1 plate.
"The number will bওe the same as always, the loyal one, #36!" Mir explained. "I think it would have been really awesome to use the #1, a unique experience and a dream.
"But I believe that 36 is the number with which I've worked hard and it has taken me to where I am now, winning two world c🧜hampionships [MotoGP and Moto3].
"…this doesn't🔴 mean if I happens agai🧸n, I won't chose #1. But for now, it's the #36. The number that represents hard work and suits me best."
JOAN MIR: THE DECISION
— Team Suzuki Ecstar (@suzukimotogp)
1 or 36?
A difficult choice for ou🌟r champion, watch as he reveals and explains his race number!
With the likes of Marc Marquez [93) and Valentino Rossi (🍌46) always keeping their usual racꦚe numbers during a title defence, the #1 was last seen in MotoGP with Casey Stoner at Repsol Honda in 2012.
It hasn't been on a Suzuki since Kenny Roberts Jr in 2🐼001.
Despite the marketing benefits for the manufacturer and sponsors in having t𒀰he #1, speaking earlier this week Suzuki M𝐆otoGP project manager Shinichi Sahara insisted he wouldn't mind which number Mir chose.
"I was happy to see the #1 plate in Valencia last year [when Mir won the title]. For me that's en🉐ough. But if Joan choses the #1 plate this year, of course I'm also happy," Sahara said.
"It's not easy, but we will try to have another #1 plate this year, so whatever number we have during the 𒐪season doesn't matter to me."
No rider in the MotoꦚGP era has successfully defended a title while using the #1 plate, something that last happened in the premier-class with Mick Doohan in 1998.

Pet🃏er 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.