WorldSBK: Jonathan Rea reveals social media abuse after ‘Dorna threw me under the bus’

Six-time WorldSBK champion Jonathan Rea has become the latest rider to reveal shocking social media abuse after recalling an incident at Magny-Cours in 2021 where he believes ‘Dorna threw me under the bus, they painted me as a real villain’. 
Jonathan Rea, Kawasaki WorldSBK Estoril
Jonathan Rea, Kawasaki WorldSBK Estoril

In what was a truly brilliaᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ⁤⁤⁤⁤ᩚ𒀱ᩚᩚᩚnt title fight with eventual champion Toprak Razgatlioglu, a battle that was built on hard but fair racing, the six-time world champion lost his crown for the first time since 2015.

After years of success with Kawasaki which has continued on to 2022, Rea has now discussed an incident that left him in a ‘really 🦹bad place’ mentally.

Magny-Cour༺s, host to one of the most thrilling rounds last season, was also the venue where Razgatl🥂ioglu had appeared to clinch his first-ever clean sweep - winning all three races on the same weekend. 

Remote video URL

However, that was 🎐not to be the case as a video was later captured by a Dorna cameraman, showing Rea and crew chief Pere Riba discussing an apparent track limits infringement made by Razgatlioglu in the Superpole race.

Razgatliogluꦫ, who indeed did cross the green paint on the final lap while leading, had initially taken victory by the naꦯrrowest of margins. But this was later overturned. 

calls Pere Riba over to chat about 's track limits on the final lap of the Superpole Race...

— WorldSBK (@WorldSBK)

The🍨 video released by Dorna [the exclusive commercial and TV rights holder for WorldSBK] proved to beꦅ the catalyst for overturning the result, however, damage was already done as it opened the floor for heavy criticism, or in this case awful social media abuse towards Rea, which the Northern Irishman claimed could have been avoided by Dorna. 

Speaking on the BBC Bike Podcast, Rea recalled the incident saying: “I could see he was on the gree⭕n, it was clear, and I was fighting for points. It's a world championship on the line, I don't train hard, make sacrifices regarding my family time and risk my life, everything, just to accept somebody taking advantage of a situation.

"My team and manufacturer do🧜n't put millions of euros a year into ಌthe sport for me to accept that. 

"Dorna threw me u𓆉nder the bus a bit, putting words in my mouth in a video. If that hadn't gone out it would have been ok. They painted me as a real villain and weren't very 𒁏apologetic about it either.

Jonathan Rea, Pere Riba and Fabien Foret, Misano WorldSBK race1, 11 June
Jonathan Rea, Pere Riba and Fabien Foret, Misano WorldSBK race1, 11 June

Rea becomes the latest WorldSBK rider to receive death threats…

"I♏ was on my way home on my own and checked my Instagram. My mate had put up a generic race quote and there were 500 comments within an hour of the post...one was like 'you're going to die', 'we know where you live', 'you're𒉰 this and you're that'. I felt terrible.

"I got sucked into reading all these terrible comments. I'm so lucky with my fans, I generally get 95% love an🥂d 5% hate but this time was the opposiꦑte, so I wasn't in a great place."

All too commo🧔n nowadays, social media has become a platform that’s home to extreme criticism൩, abuse and finger-pointing.

Yes, it’s a great🍎 tool for some and one where reputations and careers can grow, however, the negatives can be just as poignant.

Garrett Gerloff, who recently spoke to 168澳洲5最新开奖结果🥀:wuqian0821.com in an exclusive interview, also revealed how social media abuse affected him last season after a co♔ming-together with Razgatlioglu 𓆏in Assen.

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