Lucas Coenen struck again, winning the round for a second time in a row in this, his rookie season on the 450. The flying Belgian teen, once again reading the conditions to perfection in variable conditions, looked comfortable and close the gap to Romain Febvre’ s lead in the championship standings to a slim ten points after 14 of the 20 rounds. Interesting in itself was Coenen winning on a KTM, Febvre second on a Kawasaki, Coldenhoff third on a Fantic, Fernandez coming home in fourth on a Honda and fifth place going to Isak Gifting on a Yamaha. 2025 is fantastic not just for the riders but also the manufacturers as they all have machinery capable of winning and the battle between the young gun Coenen and the veteran Febvre is the type of generational battle that crowds love, as seen in the Czech round that was standing room only in many vantage points, even with the weather not playing ball all of the time. MX2 saw Simon Laengenfelder emulate Coenen and hand KTM the round win, his fourth this season so far. While Laengenfelder won the first race with a decent margin, Andrea Adamo pretty much owned the second race but his slightly disappointing 5th in the first race meant he had to concede the round to fellow KTM rider, Laengenfelder, who has now built a 47-point buffer over Adamo in the season standings. In the overall MX2 championship, KTM riders place 1st, 2nd and 4th, while 3rd and 5th places are taken by Husqvarna riders, shutting the Japanese manufacturers out of the current top five.