Lin Jarvis has definitively parted ways with Yamaha after completing a year in the role of external advisor.
As Motorsport.com has learned, Jarvis informed several key figures in the paddock a few days ago of his intention to go independent and make his extensive experience in racing in general —and MotoGP in particular— available to whoever may see fit. In doing so, the British executive brings to a close a career spanning more than 30 years, which began in the communications and marketing department in 1993 before progressing to general management.
Jarvis was replaced by Paolo Pavesio as Yamaha’s managing director ahead of this season, but he maintained his link with the Iwata manufacturer as a senior advisor. That role led him to reduce his attendance at races, while also allowing him to take on other responsibilities. One of the most significant tasks, given the current state of the championship, was acting as the manufacturers’ representative in negotiations over the new contract to be signed next year between the MotoGP teams and promoter Dorna, which will define the financial returns the teams will receive.
Fabio Quartararo, Yamaha Factory Racing
Photo by: Gold and Goose Photography / LAT Images / via Getty Images
Despite the intense back-and-forth between Jarvis and Dorna in the various meetings that have taken place, the championship’s sporting director Carlos Ezpeleta acknowledged a few days ago in a conversation with Motorsport.com that the five-year renewal (2027–2031) is progressing very well. “We are in the final stage of the negotiation. I’m very optimistic; I think we are aligned,” the Spaniard said earlier this week.
Motorsport.com understands that Jarvis’s role as a link between the manufacturers and Dorna will still require him to attend some meetings over the coming months, although his duties will be completed once the new agreement is signed.
During his time as Yamaha’s managing director, the decisions taken by the Briton contributed directly to the resurgence experienced by the Iwata-based team from the middle of the 2000s. Above all else, his tenure is defined by the signing of Valentino Rossi in 2004, at the time the benchmark rider on the grid and the spearhead of Honda, Yamaha’s direct rival. With the #46 as its lead rider and Jarvis in the boardroom, the Japanese brand dominated in 2004, 2005, 2008 and 2009, before entering the Jorge Lorenzo era, which delivered titles in 2010, 2012 and 2015.
In total, Yamaha celebrated eight world championships under Jarvis’s stewardship; the most recent being Fabio Quartararo’s in 2021, a rider whose latest contract renewal was also handled by Jarvis. As an executive, one of his final contributions was the return of a satellite team, with Pramac joining its roster ahead of the 2025 season.
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