Ducati Snaps Up More Silverware at 2025 BSB Season Finale

Ducati ended its 2025 British Superbike Championship campaign with a flourish as Scott Redding notched up a pair of victories during the final round at Brands Hatch.
The 2019 BSB Champion only rejoined the BSB ranks mid-way through the season after more than five years competing on the international stage in WorldSBK.
While starting his campaign with the Hager PBM Ducati team from Round 4 onwards meant he wouldn’t have the opportunity to get into the BSB title fight, Redding has nonetheless been the form man on the Ducati Panigale V4 R during the second half of the year.
With victory during the final round worth a higher value of points – 35 for a win – Redding’s two success from three races would therefore catapult him up the final overall classification to fourth overall
Despite starting only 25 of the season’s 33 races, Redding would conclude his 2025 BSB campaign with seven wins and 12 podiums to his name.
An ex-MotoGP rider and runner-up in the WorldSBK Championship in 2020, the former BSB champion has confirmed he will be back for PBM and Ducati in 2026 for a full season.
Leon Haslam Lands BSB Bronze for Ducati
While Redding’s wins would steal the headlines for Ducati during the latter portion of the season, it was Leon Haslam on the Moto Rapido entry that would end the season as the best placed Ducati Panigale V4 R rider.
Marking a welcome return to form for the esteemed veteran, Haslam – who made his BSB debut back in 2003 and won the championship in 2018 – would go on to score his first win in since that title-winning campaign in what was his first year campaigning the Ducati.
A model of consistency all season, Haslam would go into the final round with a shot at the title but would ultimately settle for third overall as the best-placed Ducati rider.
As with Redding, Haslam has confirmed he will remain with Moto Rapido Ducati for the 2026 BSB season.
Rory Skinner Toasts Race-Winning 2025 BSB Season
Though it was a disappointing end to the season for Rory Skinner as injury and crashes nixed his hopes in the final two events, the Scotsman was nonetheless a race winner in his first season aboard Ducati machinery.
The youngster took the Cheshire Mouldings TAS Racing Panigale V4 to a popular victory on home soil at Knockhill, while nine podiums in total kept him in the hunt for an overall top three finish until the final stages.
In the end, Skinner would conclude his year in seventh overall, ensuring a strong overall showing for the Ducati contingent.