Adrenaline, earplugs, and apexes: My first time on track at TVS ARE GP

Apr 21, 2026

By Himank Tripathi
New Delhi [India], April 21 : I have spent years writing about tech and wheels, but nothing, absolutely nothing, prepares you for the moment you step onto a live racing circuit. Standing at the Madras International Circuit for the finale of the TVS ARE GP International, I realised I wasn't just there to report on a global milestone; I was there to finally see the 'Racing DNA' I'd heard so much about actually come to life.
The Sound and the Fury:
The moment the race started, my internal 'volume knob' was shattered. I remember standing there as the pack thundered past, and for a split second, I forgot I was at a bike race. It sounded like a squadron of fighter jets had just banked a meter above my head. It's a visceral, bone-shaking roar that you don't just hear but you feel it in your teeth.

Image courtesy: TVS Motor
Lessons from the Asphalt:
Watching the riders lean into corners, I saw the stakes firsthand. There were a few crashes, heart-in-mouth moments where the limit was pushed just a fraction too far. Thankfully, everyone walked away fine, but seeing those spills made the whole 'democratizing motorsports' idea feel very real. This wasn't a sterilised corporate demo; this was true racing.
I spent a good chunk of time hovering around the pit stops. Watching the chaos and coordination happen right in front of me was where the 'vibe' really clicked. It's one thing to see a pit crew on TV; it's another to be close enough to smell the heat coming off the engines and feel the frantic energy of a team working to shave milliseconds off a lap.

Image courtesy: TVS Motor
More Than Just a Race:
Listening to Vimal Sumbly talk about taking this ecosystem from India to the world (Mexico, Colombia, Nepal, the scale is massive), it hit me that this platform is doing something rare. They aren't just selling an Apache 310cc or a 200cc; they're giving people like us a chance to evolve from 'guy who likes bikes' to 'proper racer'. Seeing the first-ever Women's media category and the finalists fighting for a spot at MotoGP Asia made it clear: the culture is shifting.
In The End:
I went to Chennai expecting to see a bike race. I left with my ears ringing, my heart racing, and a completely new respect for what 'Track to Road' actually means. It was loud, it was intense, and it was, quite frankly, unbelievable. If this were just the first international season, the next one is going to be a riot.
(Disclaimer: The author is an expert in the fields of auto, lifestyle and consumer technology. Views shared here are personal.)

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