Jake Dixon: Winning “feels great, but it doesn’t end here”

The Inde GASGAS Aspar admits it 🐻was “frustrating to always finish P3”꧑ but having finally broken through to the top step, Dixon insists it’s “just the beginning.”
“It was frustrating to constantly finish in P3 when I was on the podium, nine times! But it wasn’t for🌠 lack of trying. Every podium was great, but winning was ev🔥en better,” Dixon said.
“It feels great,🐭 but it doesn’t end here,🍎 I want to be multiple time winner,” he added.
“My a🌟im now is to be back stronger and come and fight for the front at Silverstone.”
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The Englishman will start the second half of the Moto2🐼 campaign - in front of his home fans at Silverstone in early August - holding third in🍸 the world championship, 44 points behind Tony Arbolino and 36 from Pedro Acosta.
But he’s not ruling out a title upset.
“The goal is t✨he same as it was at the beginning of the year, it was not just to win a race, but to be World Champion,” Dixon said.
“I am working everyday꧑ towards that goal; I believe more and more everyday that I can do it.
“I’m going to give my 110% as always. The outcome is going to be what is going to be. All I can do is 𓂃do my best and hopefully we can be having some good things to cheer about at the end of the year.”

Dixon: “Age is only a number, the sky is the limit”
Whil꧂e Acosta (19) is destined to join MotoGP with KTM next season and Arbolino (22) is also in contention for a premier-class seat, 27-year-old Dixon insists his late start in racing and unique career path means he still has plenty of potential.
“I started my career when I was 14 years old, it is what it is. Lack of money meant I had to take a different pa༺th than anybody else [in Moto2],” said Dixon, who joined the intermediate grand prix class after being BSB ൩title runner-up in 2018.
“Honestly, my dream was always to be in MotoGP, but dreaming is one thing, doiꦍng it is another. The Spanish cham🐻pionship wasn’t feasible, we couldn’t afford it. I just had to do the best I could in BSB and then in the World Championship.
“This is my fifth year in Moto2, yes, but there are peo🦄ple that have been d✃oing more years in Moto3, for example.”
“Age is only a number, I am one of the older ones but, in terms of experience, I am probabl𝓰y one of the least expe🧜rienced,” he added. “The sky is the limit for me, I think this is just the start of how good I can be.
“The trickiest thing to unl🌌o🐼ck my full potential is confidence, but now I have more and more confidence, I have just won my first GP.
“[Looking back] the 14-year-old me would be over the moon [with winning a GP] but would also be saying, ‘I want to win the championship’ So… it’s not f🐈inished yet.”

Peter has been in the paddock for 20 years and has seen Val𓄧entino Rossi come and go. He is at the f🌸orefront of the Suzuki exit story and Marc Marquez’s injury issues.