Former Yamaha and Suzuki team boss Davide Brivio will return to the MotoGP paddock as a team boss in 2024.

Brivio will take charge of Aprilia’s new satellite team Trackhouse as team principal, replacing previously announced boss PJ Rashidi only days after the latter had unveiled the new team’s colours at their Los Angeles launch last week.

“It all happened very quickly in the last days,” Brivio said in a team statement, “with [team owner] Justin [Marks] asking me to help Trackhouse in the MotoGP challenge.

“It’s so exciting to be a part of this new project since the beginning and I’m really looking forward to get to know Trackhouse more and see what we can bring in MotoGP from the successful vision and experience that this company has in other sports and environments. It could be a great combination of the two worlds.

“Now, it’s just one more test to go, almost time to go racing and we will try to support as much as we can our two talented riders Miguel [Oliveira] and Raul [Fernandez] and have fun. In the last few days everything has happened very quickly and before I could not say where I was going but hey, it’s great news and we will start working quickly!”

Brivio’s return to the MotoGP paddock with a satellite team follows his exit from the Formula 1 paddock – where he had joined Alpine for 2021 but became increasingly distanced from the French manufacturer’s day-to-day racing operations.

Raul Fernandez onboard the Trackhouse MotoGP Aprillia

Paddock talk had tipped him strongly for a role at Honda, as the man to replace current team boss Alberto Puig – which makes Trackhouse swooping in to secure Brivio’s services all the more surprising.

Brivio started out working in the World Superbike championship, rising through the ranks to soon head up Yamaha’s team there before transferring to the premier class in 2002 as MotoGP switched to four strokes. During his time at Yamaha’s MotoGP outfit, he was instrumental in signing Valentino Rossi away from Honda, establishing a lifelong friendship with his fellow Italian as well as winning four titles together.

He then stepped down from Yamaha in 2010 when Rossi left for Ducati, becoming a consultant to Rossi’s then-burgeoning VR46 business interests.

Brivio subsequently joined Suzuki’s restarted MotoGP project and built up a successful team from scratch to world champions, only to announce his move to F1 days after lifting the 2020 crown with Joan Mir.

The Trackhouse team he is joining in 2024 is expected to help Aprilia in the development and evolution of the RS-GP. The team has requested two 2024-spec bikes for Miguel Oliveira and Raul Fernandez, who have both retained their places at the satellite outfit amid the transition from RNF to Trackhouse.