Adelaide MotoGP Poaches Supercars Event Manager in Staff Shake-Up
The Adelaide MotoGP has recruited an event manager from Supercars, signalling the growing organisational muscle behind the South Australian street circuit race.

Supercars Loses Key Staff Member to Adelaide MotoGP
The Adelaide MotoGP event has secured an event manager from Supercars, according to reporting by V8 Sleuth. The move highlights the scale of planning already underway for the street circuit MotoGP round in South Australia, and represents a tangible personnel cost for the Australian touring car series.
The defection of an experienced event manager is a notable development. Supercars events are operationally complex, involving temporary infrastructure, broadcast logistics, and large crowds across multiple days. Someone with that background brings directly transferable skills to a MotoGP street circuit project, which faces similar challenges.
V8 Sleuth, a respected Australian motorsport news outlet, broke the story, though further details about the individual involved were not disclosed in the report.
What the Move Says About the Adelaide MotoGP Project
Adelaide has a deep motorsport history. The city hosted the Australian Formula 1 Grand Prix from 1985 to 1995, and the memory of those street races still carries weight locally. Bringing MotoGP back to a street circuit in South Australia is an ambitious undertaking, and the organisers appear to be building out their team with people who have hands-on experience running major motorsport events in Australia.
Hiring from within the domestic motorsport industry rather than relying entirely on overseas expertise suggests the local organising team is taking shape with genuine intent. An event manager who has worked inside Supercars understands Australian venue logistics, local government coordination, and the specific demands of running a temporary race facility, all of which are directly relevant to a street circuit MotoGP event.
For Supercars, losing experienced staff to a rival motorsport property is not ideal, particularly as the series manages its own packed calendar and the continued growth of its events program. The Adelaide MotoGP represents a competing draw not just for fan attention but, evidently, for industry talent.
Adelaide MotoGP Builds Momentum
The Adelaide MotoGP has been building momentum as an addition to the MotoGP world championship calendar. Street circuit races carry a particular prestige in motorsport, and the prospect of MotoGP machinery running through city streets in South Australia has generated genuine excitement among fans and within the industry.
Organising a MotoGP round from scratch requires a significant team. Venue preparation, ticketing, hospitality, safety planning, and broadcast infrastructure all need experienced hands. Recruiting from Supercars, a series with decades of event management knowledge inside Australian motorsport, is a logical place to start.
The competition for skilled event personnel across Australian motorsport is real. With Formula 1 in Melbourne, MotoGP expanding its Australian footprint, and Supercars running a full national calendar, the pool of people who know how to execute at the highest level is finite. Moves like this one are unlikely to be the last as the Adelaide event continues staffing up.
How Supercars responds, whether by promoting from within or recruiting externally, remains to be seen. The series has navigated staff changes before, but the timing and the destination of this particular departure will draw attention from those watching both the MotoGP expansion and the health of domestic Australian motorsport.
MotoGP Correspondent
Luca Moretti is 21.fun's MotoGP correspondent, following the championship from free practice to the podium with an eye for race strategy and tech.










