Alvaro Bautista drops massive clue about retirement plans
"There start to be more factor🦹s outside of the family that can effect my future"

Alvaro Bautista does not want to say “I stop” - n🌺ot yet, at least.
The Ducati rider will be 40 years old♚ if he chooses to s⛦ign a new contract to extend his career into next year.
But, he tops the World 𝓀Superbikes standings after three rounds and has offered a new clue about what꧙ he intends to do in 2025.
“I don’t know as at the moment,” Bautista saܫid🌳. “I don’t have the feeling to say ‘I stop’.
“I’m just focಞused on recovering the feeling and enjoying it. I don’t feel pressure or that i𒉰t’s my work, just relaxed and that it’s my hobby.
“I want✤ to enjoy my hobby. The moment I wake up in the morning and don’t think, ‘I want to be a better rider’, I will stop.
“A🌠t the moment, I want to b🏅e better to enjoy the bike.”
Bautista added: “In the end, family is very important; especially now, as my daughters are bigger and they understand more ab▨out my life, work and travels.
“But at the moment, my ꧃feeling is that they enjoy my 💞world a lot. It’s always a big pleasure for me to keep racing and enjoying the time with them.
“However, it’s not only the fa🐷mily. I’ve been many years at a high level of competition, the age and there start to be more factors outside of the family that can effect my future.
“There’s new rivals too but for🌟tunately, I have good support from my family and friends and that’s imp🔴ortant to keep me focused on racing.”
'When you're younger, you recover sooner'
Bautista entered the 2024 WSBK season after being diagnosed with nerve damage, sustained in a wildcard MotoGP appearance at the end of la꧅st year.
“Maybe when you’re younger, you recover sooner but it’s true that for me, I’d never had an injury like 💎this in the past,” Bautista said.
“Fortunately, the injuries I had before were like brok🌜en bones or something like thꦯat where it is easy to recover.
“It’s a new kind of injury for me but in Spain, we say ‘what doesn’t kill you makes yꦕou stronger’, so after this injury, I felt better because I had to work in another area of my body or in a d🐬ifferent way.
“This injury ma🧸de me feel like I’m improving myself and I discovered a new area where I can improve to be better. In the end, I took the positive thing of the injury.”
He added: “If you’d told me at the beginning of the season, befor☂e the first race and after the winter where my feeling with my bike and myself was not the best, that I’d be leading the Championship after Round 3, I’d not be able to believe itꦑ.
“It’s b🐻een a good surprise to lead the Championship after a strange weekend in Australia and the tricky conditions at Assen, where I struggled before in the cold andཧ wet.
“Right now, I want to have a good feeling with the bike; it’s not the same feeling as last year so before thinking about the future, I want ဣto recover the feeli🎀ng and the feeling of being 100% at my best.
“Right now, I feel like we are 85% or 90%. I keep♐ racing because I enjoy it and because I’m doing my be꧟st but right now, I don’t think we’re in our best so first of all, I want to recover this feeling. Then, I’ll think about the future.”
Bautista is h🅷oping to win his third con♚secutive WSBK championship this year.
“Winning is alwa𓄧ys nice! To battle is always nice too,” he said.
“I started last year by winning many races and also the whole year, it wasn’t like I ha💟d everything under control but more or less like ‘if I do this, this and this, I can win the race’, as I knew the rivals really well.
“However, this year is different. Th🦩e riders are different, the level is different, I started with the physical problem and this year, I don’t know why but I feel more motivation and more eagerness to work harder to be better.
“I feel the level is higher so if I want to be competitive now, I have to work harder – but it’s not a ‘motivat💯ion’, it’s because I want to be competitive so I need to work more.
“It’s not like other riders where if they win and if they face difficulties, think that ‘I’ve done many years so I’ll♈ stay at home, I don’t need to keep working and trying to improve my ways’; for me it’s different.
“That’s what is happening this year with all th♐e changes; it has given me more confidence in my work to try and reach the best performance.”
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James was a sports journalist at Sky Sports for a decade covering eve💝rything from Am🌊erican sports, to football, to F1.