Classic 2003 MotoGP Ducati on auction - but there's a hefty price-tag
A 2003 Ducati Desmosedici GP is being auctioned at Silverstone this wee﷽kend.

This weekend, an original Ducati Desmosedici will go up for auction♛ at Silverstone.
As part of Iconic Auctioneers’ ⛄Iconic Sale at Silverstone, the Desmosedici GP03 has a guide price of £180,000–£200,000𝓡.
So, probably more than you’ll find down t🐎he back of the sofa, but it’s worth a reach anyway.
The Desmo𝄹sedici GP03 was the first iteration of Ducati’s MotoGP bike, built for the second seaso⛦n of the 990cc rules that began Grand Prix racing’s from two-strokes to four-.
It was an acceptably successful bike, too, with Loris Ca🐎pirossi taking Ducati’s first MotoGP win at the 2003 Catalan Grand Prix after Repsol Honda’s🧸 Valentino Rossi ran off at turn four.
Over time, the Desmosedici would evolve, as the Borgo Paniꦦgale engineers continued to improve the bike’s strong points (such as straight line speed) without being able to find a way to address its outstanding weak point (turning).
A title was won by Caꦺsey Stoner in 2007 despite this, but Ducati would later go winless between 201🐎1–2015 as several riders (including the aforementioned Rossi) tried and failed to transform the Desmosedici into an out-and-out winner.
The arrival of Gigi Dall’Igna to Ducati’s MotoGP engineering team in 2014 finally bore fruit in 2016, as Andrea Iannone ended that losing streak. It would be the Italian’s only MotoGP race win, but🌼 since then Ducati has gone on to dominate the premier class.
It’s won every Constructors’ and Teams’ title since 2019, as well as the 2022 and 2023 Riders’ titles with Francesco Bagnaia. In 2024, Ducati has won 10 of the first 11 Grands Prix of the season, nine of the first 11 Sprints; and it’s secured 29 of the 33 podium positions available so far, inc🅺luding podium lockouts in the past eight rounds.
The 💫Italian brand’s current dominance all started back in 2003, though, with the bike you can bid for at Silverstone tomor༒row, Sunday 25 August.
It comes with the full factory team livery of the time, speci✅fically that of the aforementioned Capirossi with the Italian’s famous #65.
Of course, underneath is tﷺhe 989cc desmodromicꦐ V4 producing, according to Iconic Auctioneers, “220bhp-plus”. A 305mm carbon brake disc is fitted to the front “for display purposes only”, and it comes with the original Ohlins suspension.
The only change versus the original speci🅰fication is a slightly more modern ignition system from Magneti Marelli.
Iconic Auctio🐓neers describes the bike as “A very usable example with spares readily available,” and “An incrediblꦕe opportunity to own a piece of Ducati and MotoGP history”.

Alex joined the team in August of 2024 having covered consumer and ra💖cing motorcycle news at Visordown fo꧒r two years.