SBK: “The EURO MOTO is an awesome series full of close battles”

Markus Reiterberger is a four-time IDM Superbike champion. He moved up to the World Championship, dominated the competition in Asia, and is now returning to his roots after all. The 31-year-old Bavarian from Obing, whom everyone calls “Reiti,” will race for Werner Daemen’s BMW team in the EURO MOTO Superbike class, the upgraded European successor to the IDM. In this interview, he explains his motivation and what drives him off the track as well.

You’ve won four Superbike titles in the International German Motorcycle Championship. What still drives you? Do you have something to prove?
In addition to my endurance races in the EWC, I was also a Superbike World Championship test rider for BMW last year, working with Toprak Razgatlioglu and Michael van der Mark. That was a very exciting and challenging job. But I have to be honest and say that I, too, can and want to race. As for the EURO MOTO, team boss Werner Daemen approached me. I’d been following the series and saw how dominant Lukas Tulovic was on the Ducati and how the BMWs had fallen a bit behind. So I thought to myself, it’s my job to get things back on track.

Reiti and BMW are like a pot and its lid. Why have you never considered switching brands to prove yourself anew?
I get asked that question quite often. The answer is relatively simple. I’ve had the opportunity to switch several times and was even on the verge of doing so on more than one occasion. But what kept me at BMW time and again was the factory itself, as well as everything that goes along with it. My entire circle, my entire racing career, has always revolved around BMW, Alpha Racing, and my collaboration with Werner Daemen. I would have lost all of that if I’d switched brands. I realize that I’m only as strong as I am because I have these people around me. I’ve always enjoyed working with them, and in my opinion, racing is a team sport. I’ve switched teams twice. That was in the Superbike World Championship, and I had some really bad experiences. That’s when I vowed to myself that I wouldn’t leave Werner’s team for anywhere else unless I really felt like I had to. I was faced with that decision again just recently, because I had a pretty good offer to be a Superbike test rider for another manufacturer. But then BMW, Werner Daemen, and I put together a package for both the Endurance World Championship and the EURO MOTO.

Lukas Tulovic will be looking to defend his Superbike title in the EURO MOTO on a Ducati. Have you been watching to see where you can beat him?
Wow, that’s hard to say. I was never there in person; I just followed it online. I noticed that he was incredibly fast, and I’ve also heard what his competitors have said. The bike was very well-rounded, and the rules favored Ducati a bit more than they did the other manufacturers.

What do you think of how the series has developed in recent years?
The IDM—now known as EURO MOTO—is really on the rise. If we look at who’s competing, there are some absolute top-tier riders on the list. It’s not like in 2017 or 2022, when I had just one or two rivals. Now it’s back to being comparable to 2014 and 2015, when we were racing at World Championship level against the 3C-Carbon team with Xavier Forés, Lorenzo Lanzi, and Max Neukirchner. It’s a really exciting championship again now, where you can really battle it out. A lot of people think I’m taking a step backward by competing in EURO MOTO, but I don’t see it that way. It’s a European championship that’s in extremely good shape.

"I was recently considering switching brands, but then BMW and Werner Daemen put together a great deal for me."

You had mixed success in the Superbike World Championship. Have you put those results behind you?
It comes up every now and then. 2016 was the peak of my career, after I’d been stronger, faster, and fitter than ever before in 2015. But I didn’t stand a chance in the World Championship. In 2017, I tried again with a larger team and hit a mental wall. Riding wasn’t fun anymore. After three races, I quit and went back to the IDM. Honestly: You spend your whole life trying to make it to the World Championship, and then it’s not at all what you thought it would be. You’re just a number and have to make do with whatever you’re given. It wasn’t like in the IDM or in my previous teams, where every detail was worked on or the bike was tailored exactly to you. There, it was just: take it or leave it. Those were the circumstances back then. It was also just a small team with little factory support. That just wasn’t enough.

In the Asia Road Racing Championship, you completely outclassed your opponents and were paid based on your performance. How did you invest that money?
I haven’t received any money to this day. What I haven’t told anyone until now is that the whole thing escalated into a legal dispute, which we won. I raced there back then because Alpha Racing was involved with that Asian team. They were looking for a strong driver who spoke German best. I got a good contract—based on prize money, so heavily performance-based, with a small base salary. With the support of BMW and Alpha Racing, things always worked out, but the team boss kept putting me off with the prize money. At times he went missing, but he was found and is now supposed to pay up. Still, I’m not yet confident that this will actually happen.

When did you race your last Superbike race?
In September 2024 with the ROKiT BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team as a replacement for the injured Toprak Razgatlioglu. I finished 14th and 15th in Cremona.

Is it true that you took over Ralf Waldmann’s tuning business?
As neighbors, we used to work on Kreidler motorcycles together at his place and at ours. When he passed away, I added his inventory to mine and used it to build a second source of income alongside racing. For me, it was clear that the whole thing had to live on. Since then, I’ve been doing moped tuning, restorations, and tuning—mainly for two-stroke engines, Kreidlers, and whatever else is out there. Or racing exhausts that are tested on the dynamometer and are officially TÜV-approved for street use. Together with my father, I renovated our old farm and built a workshop. My third source of income is CNC milling. I bought the machine for that a few years ago. That’s what I do besides racing.



Could you make a living doing that?

That keeps me so busy that I can hardly manage it on my own. Yeah, I could make a living off of it. That financial security for the future was important to me, too. I’m not dependent on racing. Because my parents always said, “You’re going to finish high school. You’re going to do an apprenticeship.” I did all that and became a motorcycle mechanic. I didn’t want to be the kind of racer who ends up screwed over at some point and is left with nothing.

You started a small family two years ago. How has your life changed since Valentina was born?
I had to reorganize my schedule. Because I was already pretty busy with two—or rather, three—jobs. Then the farm renovation and building our house came on top of that. I try to structure my day so that I work either the early or late shift—or both. Since I’m self-employed, it’s pretty easy to manage. But I find it hard to be away from my two girls at home, so I do everything I can to spend a few hours with them every day. I want to be home for dinner, and Sunday has become a day dedicated entirely to the family.

Does Valentina have a rocking horse or a rocking motorcycle?
Both. I also have a little paddock moped. I built a tank pad on the tank and a set of footrests underneath it. So we ride the 50cc moped out to see the donkeys and sheep by our lake—which she loves so much—buy ourselves a chocolate ice cream, and ride back home.

EURO MOTO 2026: SECURE YOUR TICKETS NOW

Silvester-Kracher: Mega-Trips, viel Essen, kaum Böller

Guten Rutsch, aber wie feiern unsere EURO MOTO-Fahrer eigentlich wirklich ins neue Jahr? Wir haben uns beim Countdown in Richtung 2026 spontan umgehört und nicht schlecht gestaunt.

Markus „Reiti“ Reiterberger ist am letzten Tag des Jahres voll beschäftigt. „Wir Kumpels machen traditionell unseren Kreidler-Fahrer-Obing-Ausflug. Ziel ist ein Freund von mir. Der hat eine Schreinerei und da setzen wir uns rein und trinken das bayrische Grundnahrungsmittel und essen „Weisswürscht“. Am Nachmittag fahren wir noch eine weitere kleine Runde mit dem Moped – ganz egal bei welchem Wetter. Abends feiere ich Silvester mit meiner kleinen Familie. Es gibt ein Kinderfeuerwerk. Zum Essen machen wir Raclette. Was man da alles reinschieben kann, weiß ich jetzt nicht wirklich, aber es ist viel.“ Reiterberger und seine Lebensgefährtin sind seit zwei Jahren Eltern der kleinen Valentina.

Für Daniel Rubin ging es richtig weit weg, nämlich nach Chile, wo ein Teil der Familie seiner Freundin zu Hause ist. „In der Silvesternacht sind wir in Viña del Mar, da gibt es ein riesiges Feuerwerk auf dem Meer. Die Familie hat ein Apartment, in dem gemeinsam gefeiert, gegessen und getrunken wird. Zum Beispiel Pastel de Choclo und Pisco Sour.“ Das eine ist ein Maisauflauf, das andere ein Cocktail auf der Basis von Traubenschnaps.

Superbike-Vize Forian Alt stößt genauso etwa 12.000 Kilometer Luftlinie von zu Hause entfernt aufs neue Jahr an, aber treffen wird er Daniel Rubin nicht. Denn der Honda-Star ist statt ins südamerikanischen Chile ins asiatische Indonesien abgehoben. Auf dem größten Inselstaat der Welt hat er bereits im Dschungel übernachtet. Mit Ehefrau Kimberly wird er das neue Jahr in Medan begrüßen. Die Stadt befindet sich auf der Insel Sumatra, genauer gesagt im Nordosten der Insel. Wenn wir hier in Deutschland das neue Jahr begrüßen, ist das in Indonesien schon längst passiert. Die Zeitverschiebung beträgt sieben Stunden im Voraus.

Ganz in Familie bleibt der zweifache Supersport-Champion Andreas Kofler. „Wir feiern im kleinsten Kreis mit den Eltern. Und die Freundin meines Bruders ist dabei. Es gibt Raclette und vielleicht ein paar gemeinsame Gesellschaftsspiele. Nichts besonderes, aber schön.“

Christof „Fifty“ Höfer sendet Grüße aus dem Süden Europas. Er ist in Spanien, genau genommen in Andalusien, unweit der Tabernas-Wüste. Er residiert mit seinen Race-Camp-Teilnehmern an einem traumhaften Sandstrand und feiert im Rahmen der Bike Promotion Events im Irish Pub des Hotels. „Es ist eine Mischung aus Menschen, die man zum Teil vorher gar nicht kannte oder eben auch seit einer gefühlten Ewigkeit. Man kann sich eigentlich nur wohlfühlen.“

Bei der Familie Orgis mit dem Brüderpaar Leon und Kevin geht der Jahreswechsel ruhig über die Bühne. „Edgar“ ist nämlich der Chef im Ring. Der Familienhund kann Böllern und Raketen gar nicht leiden. Also bleibt es eher ruhig. Traditionell wird sich die Zeit bis Mitternacht mit Raclette vertrieben, bis alle satt sind.

Fleisch und Gemüse in den kleinen Pfännchen kommt auch auch in Dresden bei Supersportler Lennox Lehmann auf den Tisch. Wer den sächsischen Wirbelwind kennt, vermutet danach eine wilde, zumindest quirlige Party. Aber falsch gedacht. Lehmann junior bleibt ganz entspannt zu Hause.

Superbiker Marco Fetz und seine Freundin sind seit diesem Jahr stolze Besitzer eines Eigenheims. Und das wird jetzt mit acht Freunden noch einmal eingeweiht. Was es zum Essen gibt? Einmal darf geraten werden: Raclette.

Unter spanischer Sonne lässt es Patrick „Pax“ Hobelsberger krachen. Aber nur im erweiterten Sinne. „In Almeria gibt es ziemlich viele Hunde und da wird wenig Lärm gemacht. Wir haben unseren auch dabei. Niemals ohne! Special Effects wird es deshalb keine großen geben. Was es zu essen gibt, weiß ich noch nicht, aber es sollte Kraft geben, denn am 1. Januar 2026 steht für mich das erste Rennradtraining an.“

Pro Superstock-Fahrer Paul Fröde ist ein Wiederholungstäter, wenn er den Jahreswechsel mit Freundin und Freunden in einer kleinen Location in Chemnitz in Angriff nimmt. „Wir sind etwa 15 Leute. Für die Stimmung gibt es ein bisschen Musik. Viel Böllern werde ich nicht. Das ist nicht so meins.“

Richard Irmscher feiert ganz gemütlich mit seiner Familie ins neue Jahr hinein. „Ich werde essen, was auf den Tisch kommt. Vom Böllern halte ich nichts. Ich finde das einfach nicht nötig. Ich sehe den anderen Leuten zu, dann passt das.“ Irmscher ist sechzehn Jahr jung und hat 2025 das erste Jahr in seiner Supersport-Karriere absolviert.

Das EURO MOTO-TEAM wünscht den Fahrern, Teams und Freunden der Meisterschaft alles Gute für das neue Jahr und einen megastarken Start in die neue Rennsaison.