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Aprilia Founder Ivano Beggio Passes Away

We have received news that Ivano Beggio, founder of Aprilia, has passed away at the age of 73. Beggio led the Italian manufacturer into racing success, in addition to a successful line of motorcycles and scooters.

The following press release from Piaggio Group, owners of the Aprilia Brand, recalls the life and career of Beggio and includes comments from multi-time World champion Max Biaggi:

PIAGGIO GROUP AND APRILIA REMEMBER IVANO BEGGIO, FOUNDER OF THE MANUFACTURER FROM NOALE, WHO PASSED AWAY TODAY

Roberto Colaninno (Piaggio Group Chairman and CEO):
Beggio was a great entrepreneur, a visionary, capable of making a dream come true”

Romano Albesiano (Aprilia Racing Manager):
Starting from nothing, he made Aprilia a world class manufacturer”

Max Biaggi: “He placed passion at the service of his skills, he was like a father in racing to me”

Piaggio Group and Aprilia affectionately and respectfully remember Ivano Beggio, founder of Aprilia, who passed away during the night at the age of 73.

For Roberto Colaninno, Chairman and CEO of the Piaggio Group (of which Aprilia has been a part since 2004): “Ivano Beggio succeeded in combining the skills and courage of an entrepreneur with creativity and a genuine passion for motorcycles. He was a visionary ahead of his time and the extraordinary combination of these factors allowed him to create, practically from nothing, one of the most brilliant stories in the Italian motorcycle industry, making a dream come true. Continuing to race and improve the Aprilia brand around the world is the best way to honour his memory.

Romano Albesiano, Aprilia Racing Manager: “You need to think about the champions that Aprilia has groomed and the victories it has collected to understand the importance of Ivano Beggio’s project. Thinking about challenging the Japanese on the track, going up against the largest manufacturers in the world starting from zero and in the end winning means putting mind and soul together. Great management skills and a lot of love for our world.”

He is also remembered by world champion Max Biaggi, who began his brilliant career with Ivano Beggio and Aprilia in 1992: “Ivano Beggio was part of my life as an athlete – a sort of father in racing to me. He gave me his trust and a competitive bike when, after winning the European championship, also on Aprilia, I was little more than a boy. His was a brave choice, but also intelligent. And these are the two aspects that I remember most clearly about Ivano Beggio – knowing how to place a lot of passion at the service of his skills in order to always find the strength and energy for an extra step. This was also instrumental in achieving my many wins with Aprilia.”

Ivano Beggio, born in 1944, began his passion for two wheels in his father’s Aprilia handmade bicycle factory, innovating and diversifying production, with the introduction of motorcycles and scooters.

In 1975, he established a small team for the production of racing motorcycles which, thanks to technical-productive innovation, soon made a name for itself, so much that it won the Italian motocross championship in the 125 and 250 cc classes in 1977. From 1980, Aprilia began to mass produce small engine motorcycles (50 and 125 cc), then launching highly successful, aesthetically and technologically innovative models on the market for urban mobility: in 1991, the Scarabeo, the first high-wheel scooter on the European market; in 1992, the first two-stroke scooter and motorcycle with a catalytic muffler; in 1993, the first scooter with a registration plate; in 1998 it entered the large engine capacity motorcycle sector with the RSV Mille.

In World Championship GP Motorcycle Racing, where it made its début in 1985 in the 250 class, Aprilia took world class champions to success the likes of Max Biaggi, Marco Simoncelli, Valentino Rossi, Casey Stoner, Alvaro Bautista, Loris Capirossi, Marco Melandri, Manuel Poggiali and Alessandro Gramigni.

With 294 Grand Prix races won in World Championship GP Motorcycle Racing from 1987 to the present, Aprilia holds the record for the most wins of any European manufacturer in the history of maximum motorcycle competition. These race wins are joined by no less than 54 world titles: 38 in the World Motorcycle Championship (20 in the 125 class and 18 in the 250 class), 7 in Superbike (double Rider/Manufacturer title in 2010, 2012 and 2014, Manufacturer in 2013) and 9 in the Off Road disciplines (7 in Supermoto and 2 in Trial). The Aprilia trophy case also includes the 2005 Superstock 1000 FIM Cup, won with the RSV4 RF ridden by Lorenzo Savadori, currently riding an Aprilia in World Superbike alongside Eugene Laverty.


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11 Comments

  1. Jason putris says:

    Thank you Beggio for the business opertunity and trip to Italy of a lifetime. Beggio brought great pleasure to my life. Thank you, thank you!
    Moto italiano

  2. Mick says:

    There’s a guy who had one heck of a life. He didn’t get a whole lot of it. But his was densely packed. Looking at it that way. He got an uncommon amount. I just hope the above photo is fairly current and he that left a decent looking corpse. Get born, live life to the fullest, die unexpectedly. Sign me up.

    • TimC says:

      What do you mean by “he didn’t get a whole lot out of it”? E.g. as you note, “densely packed.” He achieved tons and I doubt he died poor, so just wondering the angle here.

      • mickey says:

        uh Tim he didn’t say “out” of it. He meant he died too young if I am reading him correctly

        • TimC says:

          OH. My bad indeed. I misread that most drastically for omitting one word!

          (That said, I wouldn’t say 73 is particularly short by any stretch.)

          • mickey says:

            well if you are like me (which you probably aren’t) staring into the face of 70 in 2 years, 73 seems not that far off lol. I hope to live (and ride) a lot more than that.

    • TimC says:

      Now that I haven been corrected on my misreading of the post, agree wholeheartedly, very nicely put.

  3. ApriliaRST says:

    My screen name and the motorcycle it represents is my tribute. RIP

  4. mickey says:

    73… such a shame to go out so early. All of the owners of these small European manufacturers were visionaries who clawed their way up and made successes of their visions. Got to admire that in a man.

    RIP senior Beggio

  5. Paige says:

    I’ve owned an RS250, Tuono and Caponord. All great, unique bikes. May this man rest in peace. I only wish I had the opportunity to thank him for all of the pleasure he has brought to my life. RIP.

  6. falcodoug says:

    A man with a vision and actions to prove it.

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