Modena rider won titles in 125cc and 250cc categories
Luca Cadalora in action in 1993 |
Currently working as coach to Italy’s seven-times world
champion Valentino Rossi, Cadalora began his professional motorcycle racing
career in 1984, riding an MBA in the 125cc world championship.
He picked up a respectable 27 points to finish eighth in his
debut season, his best performance a second place in the German Grand Prix at
the Nurburgring, but had a very disappointing second season, finishing only
three races to collect a meagre four points.
His switch to the Garelli team, the dominant force at the time in
the 125cc class, catapulted him to fame.
Cadalora and team-mate Fausto Gresini, his fellow Italian, battled it out for the
title through the season, each finishing with four wins. Cadalora took the upper
hand by winning four of the first seven races and it was his consistency over
the campaign that clinched the title. He failed to complete only one of 11
races and finished in the top four in the other 10, finishing runner-up in his
last three to pip Gresini by 114 points to 109.
Cadalora is now coach to Valentino Rossi |
But again it was a switch of team that made the
difference. With five GP wins under his
belt, he switched to the Rothmans Honda factory racing team in 1991.
Winning an impressive eight races, he roared to his first
250cc world championship aboard an Erv Kanemoto-tuned Honda NSR250, collecting
237 points. This time his closest rival
was the German Helmut Bradl, who won five races, but fell 17 points short of
his rival.
Cadalora successfully defended his title with Honda in 1992,
claiming his third world championship.
Bradl failed to win a single GP this time and Cadalora won by a much
wider margin, beating the Italian Loris Reggiani, riding for Aprilia, by 44
points.
In 1993 he graduated to the blue riband 500cc division as
Wayne Rainey's team mate in the Kenny Roberts-Yamaha team.
Seven-times world MotoGP champion Valentino Rossi teamed up with Cadalora in 2016 |
Cadalora rejoined Kanemoto for the 1996 season racing a
Honda NSR500. Despite lacking any major sponsors, he still managed to finish
the season in third place aboard the Kanemoto-Honda.
For the 1997 season, he was contracted as official Yamaha
rider in the new Promotor Racing team backed by an Austrian businessman. After only a handful of races, however, the
team collapsed due to financial problems. WCM rescued the team with the help of a
Red Bull sponsorship and Cadalora ended the season in sixth place.
At the beginning of the 1998 season, WCM and Cadalora lost
Yamaha official support. He returned to the Rainey-Yamaha works team for a few
races to replace an injured Jean-Michel Bayle, then helped develop the new MuZ
race bike.
Cadalora finished his career with Kenny Roberts' Modenas
team in 2000, retiring with 34 Grand Prix victories in his three classes.
In 2016, Cadalora returned to the top level of motorcycle
racing as trackside coach to Valentino Rossi, the all-time great among Italian
riders, helping him finish second in the MotoGP class for the third year
running as he strives to equal his compatriot, Giacomo Agostini’s record of
eight world titles in the 500cc/Moto GP category.
He has signed on for a second year, with Rossi leading the
field after the first four races.
Cadalora’s home city of Modena is one of Italy’s most pedestrian-friendly
cities, its historic centre off limits to traffic except for residents, commercial
operators and tourists staying at city centre hotels with special permits. The
centre is walkable, with most of the main sights enclosed within the former
city walls. The cobbled Piazza Grande is
the heart of the city and is where visitors can find the city’s cathedral, dedicated
to Santa Maria Assunta and consecrated in 1184, and the 86-metre tall Ghirlandia
Tower.
Travel tip:
During his two 250cc world title seasons, Cadalora won the Italian GP both years, the
second time at the Mugello circuit in Tuscany. The Mugello is a historic region
in northern Tuscany, which takes its name from the Mugello river. Located north
of Florence, the region was occupied by the Etruscans, who have left many
archeological traces, and subsequently colonised by the Romans. The towns of
Borgo San Lorenzo, Scarperia and San Piero a Sieve are part of the Mugello.
The 15 world titles of Giacomo Agostini
How Valentino Rossi joined the all-time greats
More reading:
The 15 world titles of Giacomo Agostini
How Valentino Rossi joined the all-time greats