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Author: INDIAinF1 Desk
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Stoffel Vandoorne claims first win of the season
Monte Carlo, 30 April 2022: Stoffel Vandoorne mastered the unforgiving streets of Monte-Carlo today (30 April) to claim his first victory of the 2021/22 ABB FIA Formula E World Championship campaign with Mercedes-EQ – storming to the summit of the drivers’ standings in the process.
Vandoorne began the Monaco E-Prix from fourth on the grid and maintained that position throughout the opening half of the race in the glamorous Principality, behind pole-sitter Mitch Evans (Jaguar TCS Racing), TAG Heuer Porsche’s Pascal Wehrlein and two-time champion Jean-Éric Vergne (DS TECHEETAH), before the leading quartet began trading places as Attack Mode activations came into play.
The Belgian’s first move was to sweep around the outside of Evans for third at the chicane approaching mid-distance, going on to gain another spot when Wehrlein suddenly slowed. After boxing clever and biding his time early on, the German looked to have pulled off a masterstroke as he catapulted himself to the head of the order following the initial round of Attack Modes, only for misfortune to strike.
Vandoorne then seized the lead when Vergne became the first of the front-runners to deploy his second Attack Mode, the DS TECHEETAH driver dropping to third and losing much of the benefit of his extra power to a Full Course Yellow, prompted by Wehrlein’s car stopping on-track.
When the action resumed, Mercedes man Vandoorne had a 3.5-second advantage over closest rival Evans. Whilst, like Vergne, he was unable to fully exploit his second Attack Mode – due to a safety car intervention for a collision between Mahindra Racing’s Oliver Rowland and André Lotterer that left the Porsche buried in the Ste Dévote barriers – he would not subsequently be challenged.
A new fastest lap enabled Vandoorne to put some breathing space between himself and his pursuers, and the Monaco resident went on to take the chequered flag just over a second to the good to cement a popular ‘home’ triumph – a result that made him the first driver ever to win the race from lower than pole position, and which leaves him six points clear at the top of the title table.
After rebuffing Wehrlein’s advances to lead the opening stages of the race, Evans – Formula E’s form driver following his double top in Rome three weeks ago – subsequently struggled with energy management but ultimately rallied to clinch the runner-up spoils as he fought his way grittily back past Envision Racing’s Robin Frijns and Vergne.
The Frenchman – who had arrived in Monte-Carlo leading the championship – adopted an aggressive strategy that at one point looked like reaping rewards, but the unfortunate timing of his second Attack Mode would prove costly and in the end, he was powerless to defend against a resurgent Evans in Attack Mode and was forced to settle for third.
Right on Vergne’s heels at the flag was Frijns, who lost ground early on but drove an intelligent race to climb to fourth position and keep his own title aspirations very much alive. The Dutchman wound up sandwiched between the DS TECHEETAHs, with practice pace-setter and last year’s Monaco winner António Félix da Costa hauling himself into contention as he charged through to fifth from down in ninth on the grid.
Sixth-placed Lucas Di Grassi was in the front-running group throughout for ROKiT Venturi Racing, on a day when his team-mate – erstwhile championship leader Edoardo Mortara – failed to score.
Nick Cassidy crossed the line seventh for Envision Racing – an improvement of 11 positions on his starting position – with double title-winner Sébastien Buemi recreating some of the magic that saw him win the first two editions of the Monaco E-Prix as he scythed through from the very back of the pack to finish eighth.
Jake Dennis made up significant early ground for Avalanche Andretti on his way to ninth, with Vandoorne’s Mercedes stablemate, defending champion Nyck de Vries, a subdued tenth.
The 2021/22 Formula E season will continue with rounds seven and eight on Berlin’s Tempelhof Airport Street Circuit in a fortnight’s time (14/15 May).
STOFFEL VANDOORNE, MERCEDES-EQ FORMULA E TEAM, #5 said:
“It is an amazing feeling, I mean Monaco is always a special race to win as a driver. Last year we had a tough time here, this year we managed to turn it around. The target was to qualify at the front and then I knew we would be in the mix, and that is exactly how the race panned out. We were flying today, massive well done to the team for giving me a strong car. It has not been an easy start to the season, but it shows the consistency we have. I am extremely happy.
“I feel like I have been fighting at the front all season already, I have had a few pole positions and have not quite been able to convert them into victories. This weekend I decided not to qualify on pole and get the victory instead.”
MITCH EVANS, JAGUAR TCS RACING, #9 said:
“It was a confusing race because I felt we were looking really good on the energy, obviously off the back of Rome but also approaching the race. We thought we were pretty conservative, so were not expecting to use much energy, but it was the complete opposite. This is something to look into, maybe we just got things a bit wrong today – but we were quite lucky to get second, so I will take that. I really wanted to win today off the back of pole and the wins for us at the last race, but Stoffel and the other guys were really quick. So I will take these good points and move on for the next race.”
JEAN-ÉRIC VERGNE, DS TECHEETAH, #25 said:
“It was a good race but I was unlucky on the second attack mode, I had a struggle with full course yellow so it was a waste. Obviously I would rather fight for the win today but I am going to take those points. I’ll keep pushing hard, I’ll keep hard working and move forward.”
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Target acquired: Quartararo singled out as the man to beat
Jerez de la Frontera (Spain), 28 April, 2022: There’s one man on everybody’s lips at the Red Bull Grand Prix of Spain: Fabio Quartararo. And it’s easy to see why. Fresh from a first MotoGP™ win of the season in spectacular fashion, Monster Energy Yamaha’s reigning World Champion arrives at a circuit he’s dominated at in the past two years. With back-to-back wins in 2020, before his hopes of a hat-trick were dashed in 2021 by arm pump, on his Jerez resume, there’s no doubting he’s the man to beat. His nearest title rivals though, whilst speaking at Thursday’s Press Conference, said they’re expecting a close fight.
Indian fans can tune in to EUROSPORT and EUROSPORT HD to catch all the live action from the 2022 MotoGP championship, with the MotoGP 2022 – Red Bull Grand Prix of Spain Qualifying Race scheduled from 16:00 Hrs (04:00 pm IST) onwards on Saturday, April 30, 2022.
THE CHAMPION
Quartararo was untouchable in Jerez in 2020 and 2021. He won both races two years ago by a combined margin of 10.1 seconds, and he was already edging towards being two seconds clear of Jack Miller before arm pump struck last season. So does he feel he has some unfinished business to deliver this weekend?
“Payback? I will say no,” started the defending World Champion. “Because basically, it was not an issue with the bike, it was an issue from my side. I would say that I am arriving much more prepared. The surgery I had last year was perfect, so, of course, I feel we can go super-fast but we need to work on a normal weekend. I feel we have the potential to fight for the victory but we need to do it step-by-step, first Friday and then we will see our speed.
“It was an important moment,” replied Quartararo when asked about his first premier class victory since Silverstone last year. “Straight away I was able to be fast. In the race to make a 39.4 on Lap 3 was quite important. Of course, to fight for the victory after the tough start to the season is always great, and it’s even greater when you have back-to-back races, and I am at one of my favourite tracks.”
THE CHALLENGERS
Arguably the two men most likely to stop the factory Yamaha rider from going back-to-back are Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) and Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing). The pair are breathing down Quartararo’s neck in the title chase and are hoping to sneak clear of the Frenchman at what they believe will be an incredibly close and competitive Spanish Grand Prix.
“We are at a track that I really like,” said Rins, now tied on points with Quartararo in the World Championship. “Last year, we had a small crash at Turn 6, so I did the race with just one wing. The pace was not that bad, so let’s see. Let’s see what awaits us this weekend and let’s try to do the same as last weekend. This is one of the tracks that a lot of riders will be fast at. It’s the first Spanish GP, so it will be difficult. Also, the level that we have in MotoGP is high this year.”
Espargaro is equally determined, especially as we arrive at a circuit where he was able to finish just five seconds away from the eventual race winner in 2021. At that time, it was the closest Aprilia have ever been to a MotoGP™ race winner meaning, given the increased performance from this year’s RS-GP, the 32-year-old is brimming with confidence.
“Last season here was very good for us, we were quite close to the podium and the victory, so I hope with this year’s bike, that’s improved quite a lot, we can be even more competitive. This year things have changed a lot for us, but also for the rest of the riders on the grid. The level is very high, and we know how tough this category is.
“I remember that in FP3 here last season, there were just three or four tenths covering 15 riders, so it’s going to be difficult, and it’s going to be very important to be focused from FP1. With the system of having the first three sessions to be in the top 10, we know it’s very important, and every session will count.”
THE CHANGE?
Following what seemed like a positive pre-season, many predictions ahead of Qatar pointed toward Honda finding some of their former glory. However, the Repsol Honda Team has struggled in the opening five rounds of the year with Marc Marquez stating the need for change. The new RC213V was aimed at giving HRC’s riders the rear grip it has badly lacked over recent years. But that design change has, as a result, taken away Marquez’s biggest strength: braking. Now unable to attack corners in a ‘V’ shape, Marquez is missing some magic.
The Spaniard opened up about Honda’s issues in Thursday’s Press Conference: “It’s true that it’s a bike that in big circuits it’s working really well like we saw in pre-season in Malaysia and then in Qatar. But as soon as we arrive at a small circuit and you need to turn in a short time, that is where we struggle a lot. That’s where we need to understand some more. The solution is close or far? We don’t know, we don’t know. The potential is there. I believe the potential is there. But we need to find a way how to take profit from that potential.”
Will we see the eight-time World Champion back at his best this weekend? Or will it require Monday’s crucial Official Test to find the breakthrough they so desperately need to ignite the number 93’s title tilt? We’ll find out this weekend at the Red Bull Spanish Grand Prix.
About Eurosport India:
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Rovanpera wins WRC Croatia Rally ahead of Hyundai duo
Toyota’s Kalle Rovanpera did enough to win WRC Croatia Rally from Hyundai pair of Ott Tanak and Thierry Neuville.
Friday:
Kalle Rovanpera demolished his opponents in Friday’s treacherous opening leg of the WRC Croatia Rally to build a convincing lead of more than a minute. Despite rain, mud and mist in the hills west of capital Zagreb, he won six of the eight asphalt speed tests in a Toyota GR Yaris to head a resilient Thierry Neuville by 1min 04.0sec.
FIA World Rally Championship leader Rovanpera thrived in the tricky conditions. He won three of the morning’s four special stages to lead by 47.5sec and stretched it during an equally dominant afternoon. Having missed valuable experience when he crashed in the opening kilometres of Croatia’s WRC debut 12 months ago, the Finn expected to be at a disadvantage.
But first in the start order helped as conditions progressively worsened as each car dragged mud onto the road. Neuville endured a topsy-turvy day. The Belgian completed the opening quartet of tests 12.5sec adrift, but a broken alternator belt in his Hyundai i20 N’s engine twice stopped the car en route to service. Neuville and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe pushed the car the final 800m.
The exhausted pair fell to the floor as they arrived four minutes late and a 40sec penalty demoted them to fourth. A spirited afternoon, including fastest time in the final stage, propelled them back to second. They had 19.3sec in hand over team-mate Ott Tanak. The Estonian’s low start position hindered him, along with a penultimate stage puncture, but Tanak was content with third.
Despite overshooting a corner and narrowly missing a water hydrant, Craig Breen was fourth on his first time aboard a Ford Puma in the wet. The Irishman overnighted 11.9sec back. Oliver Solberg was delayed by a spin and was fortunate to survive an impact in a water-filled corner en route to fifth in his i20 N. He was more than a minute adrift of Breen and 10.6sec clear of Evans, who denied Rovanperä a clean sweep of morning stage wins.
That was the Welshman’s only joy as two punctures on his GR Yaris cost valuable time. He was almost 40sec clear of the similar car of a low-on-confidence Takamoto Katsuta. In worse trouble was Esapekka Lappi who retired his GR Yaris in the first stage after clipping a boulder and wrecking the front right corner.
Aside from Breen’s efforts it was a disappointing day for M-Sport Ford. Adrien Fourmaux went out after sliding his Puma through a hedge into a roadside garden, while both Pierre-Louis Loubet and Gus Greensmith exited when three punctures left them with no more usuable tyres onboard. WRC2 leader Yohan Rossel was eighth with Nikolay Gryazin and Eric Camilli completing the leaderboard.
Saturday:
Kalle Rovanpera’s commanding WRC Croatia Rally lead came under threat from Ott Tanak during Saturday’s absorbing second leg. FIA World Rally Championship leader Rovanpera began the second day of three in the hills near Zagreb with a seemingly impregnable lead of almost 90sec over the Estonian in his Toyota GR Yaris.
He ended with that advantage slashed to just 19.9sec after a puncture and Tanak’s persistence set up an exciting Sunday finale. Tanak had already trimmed Rovanperä’s lead when the Finn punctured his front left tyre on the morning’s penultimate speed test amid heavy rain and thick fog at the Platak ski resort above the Adriatic coast.
The pair were the only frontrunners who had the advantage of Pirelli’s wet weather tyres on all four corners of their cars. While Tanak pushed on through the gloom to win the stage in his Hyundai i20 N, Rovanpera conceded nearly 55sec. Tanak sniffed the opportunity of a first victory for more than a year and nibbled back more time, despite an afternoon gearchange problem. But Rovanpera sent a clear message in the final test, setting fastest time to regain 5.1sec.
Tanak admitted the Platak test was an eye opener. While conditions on the other stages were drier than yesterday, the weather deteriorated in Platak and the afternoon’s repeat pass was cancelled. Craig Breen and Thierry Neuville were blanketed by 4.9sec for the final podium place, almost a minute behind Tänak. Breen overshot a hairpin in his Ford Puma while Neuville’s torrid weekend took yet more twists.
He received a one-minute penalty overnight for speeding on Friday which relegated him from second to fourth. His i20 N had to be pushed into service this morning and another 10sec penalty came for leaving a minute late. Neuville clawed back almost 40sec from Breen to end hot on the Irishman’s heels and 49.9sec clear of Elfyn Evans. The Welshman won the opening test in a GR Yaris but was reluctant to take risks when on course for his first points finish of the year.
Takamoto Katsuta rounded off the top six. The Japanese pilot dropped time with a puncture and an overshoot and was almost 3min 40sec adrift of Evans. WRC2 leader Yohan Rossel was seventh, with fellow support category contenders Nikolay Gryazin, Kajetan Kajetanowicz and Emil Lindholm completing the top 10.
Oliver Solberg crashed his i20 N out of fifth in the opening stage, which was cancelled as rescue vehicles attended a fire at the rear of the car. Esapekka Lappi returned after hitting a rock and retiring his GR Yaris yesterday. The Finn benefited from opening the roads and scored three fastest times.
Sunday:
Kalle Rovanpera snatched an extraordinary WRC Croatia Rally victory on Sunday afternoon as a downpour turned the event on its head in the final kilometres. The Finn led from the start of the three-day rally in the hills around Zagreb in his Toyota GR Yaris, only for a storm in the penultimate speed test to wipe out his hard-earned advantage.
A resurgent Ott Tanak, whose gamble on softer Pirelli tyres gave his Hyundai i20 N a performance edge on the streaming asphalt, grabbed a 1.4sec lead. The pendulum swung back towards Rovanpera as drier roads in the closing Wolf Power Stage offered hope, but the odds remained firmly in Tanak’s favour as mud and dirt littered the final 14.09km.
Rovanpera threw caution to the wind and remarkably overturned the deficit to claim back-to-back FIA World Rally Championship wins by 4.3sec. Victory extended his points lead to 29 after three rounds of the 13-event season. He had dominated the early stages of the event and was almost 90sec clear until falling into Tanak’s clutches following a puncture on Saturday morning. He rebuilt his lead to half a minute until the deluge set up a breathtaking finale.
It was a disappointing outcome for Tanak, whose victory drought dates back to February 2021. The Estonian finished 2min 16.7sec clear of team-mate Thierry Neuville. The Belgian overhauled Craig Breen on the final morning to claim a podium despite a torrid weekend which would have forced many to give up.
He and co-driver Martijn Wydaeghe were on the point of collapse after pushing their car for 800 metres into service on Friday after stopping with alternator problems. Time penalties and speeding fines knocked them further back and they almost gave up a podium with sight of the finish after hitting a bank and almost rolling.
Breen survived an overshoot and a spin to take fourth in a Ford Puma. The Irishman fended off a closing Elfyn Evans, whose fifth place marked a first points finish of the year for the GR Yaris driver. Japan’s Takamoto Katsuta was a distant sixth in another Yaris.
The tricky asphalt, allied with heavy rain and fog, proved highly attritional and the remainder of the leaderboard was filled by drivers from the WRC2 support category. Yohan Rossel secured seventh ahead of Kajetan Kajetanowicz and Emil Lindholm. A poor tyre choice cost Nikolay Gryazin valuable time across the closing stages and he dropped two places to 10th.
Here’s WRC Croatia Rally: https://www.wrc.com/en/wrcplus/live-timing/
[Note: The above is per press release with no edits made]
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To SIR with love – Vicky Chandhok’s 50-year love affair with South India Rally
By David Bodapati
Irungattukottai, 22 April 2022: Flamboyant, arrogant and aggressively fast, both on the track and off it, you can love him or hate him but you cannot ignore him. He has a presence, he has the charm and he has the skill and talent that won him many a heart, and the rest he used to take care of, with his captivating gift of the gab. The searing Chennai heat and the burning rubber are two variables that invariably used to bring the best out of him. He is a favourite of the media, not just the crowd, anytime, any day. He is none other than the one who brought Formula 1 to India! Vivek Bharath Chandhok, fondly known as Vicky!

Vicky Chandhok. INDIAinF1 photo I first met him in 1997, if I remember correctly, or was it 1998… I remember Jaidas Menon, taking me for a spin on the dirt tracks in and around the tarmac, before the recce of that South India Rally. Then we had the darshan of the big man who regaled all of us with great motorsport stories. One line I can never forget. “You can make millions in motorsports but the tragedy is you have to spend billions before you make the millions.” That was just one gem from the motorsports addict, who over the years has given me many motorsports stories. It was my first experience at the Madras Motor Sports Club, indulging in the hospitality at the overflowing third floor of Tower C. We had a bevy of reporters, all having a nice time, all in ‘high spirits’, while a sincere couple of photographers went out to shoot on the track side.
A flood of memories come back when we talk about SIR (South India Rally) and year 1997. The canal stages, the track stories and the colourful fights, reds and yellows. We started the journey that day from Mount Road, opposite the Spencers at 6 am, where the old Indian Express office was located. It was a mini-van, carrying about 12 journalists to the track. Later, one more group started from Chandhok Centre off Anna Salai, and joined us at the C Tower at the track. I was with Express at that time and we had photographer George Francis in the van, who warmed us up with his tales, all through.

Vicky Chandhok (left), Karun Chandhok (2nd from left) and Vijay Mallya (right) at the British GP. File photo by Adrenna Communications. Trying to dig out the history of motorsports as a Chronicler, 1997 was a milestone for me. It was 25 years after Vicky Chandhok made his debut in 1972. And now another 25 years passed by, and as an eye witness, have recorded many a motorsport event for posterity. For the 34 years of INRC history, search for INRC Hall of Fame. Today on the eve of the 45th South India Rally, let us recall the exploits of Vicky Chandhok, a stalwart who carried forward the legacy of his father Indhu Chandhok, the founder member of both fmsci and MMSC, and grandfather Indersain Chandhok.
In an interview to the good old story-teller, RV Rajan, who wrote those popular Madras Musings decades ago, Vicky once said: “Motor sport is an expensive sport! Only people with deep pockets can indulge in it.” But Vicky was born in a family that successful ran an automobile spare parts business and with over 70 mechanics in the garage at that time, he only had to invest his time and energy and he did it with religious fervor. He took up the sport as a hobby and soon it turned into a passion. With discipline and focus, he devoted his time to motorsports.
He made his rally debut in 1972 as a swashbuckling teenager full of enthusiasm, as he just turned 15. Credit should go to Indu Chandhok, who included in his rally team for SIR. Those days, rallies used to have a four-member crew as they used to traverse thousands of kilometres for over two or three days.
It was the age of FIATs and Ambassadors. But Ambys had an upperhand and both were already fighting their own wars in the rallies at Bangalore and in Calcutta.
At just 14 years, Vicky made his debut at Sholavaram in February 1972 in an Ambassador which was tuned, in his own garage and modified for his first outing, the racing debut. And four months later, in June 1972 he made his debut in the South India Rally. It was the same Amby but was heavily modified. He used to take a lot of interest in the cars and was said to have spent much of his leisure time in the family garage. That experience helped him to build his own racing car along with the team, three years later. It was the CAREX SPECIAL.
Apart from his father, Gopal Madhavan and Flakes, who later worked with MRF for many years, were in the team. “It was a Fomantene and the South India Rally ran for about 3500km through Kerala, TN and back to Madras. It was a three-city start from Bangalore, Coimbatore and Madras and used to converge in Tiruchi. And then going back again. We finished third in my debut,” the stalwart of Indian motorsports recalled.
Madras Motor Sports Club (MMSC) started the Formula India race in 1975 and as a driver just eligible to have his road license at 18, Vicky finished a creditable second in the inaugural race. “The race was won by late Suresh Naik and his chassis was built by Adi Malcolm. My car was built in my own workshop,’’ Vicky once told this reporter. He was a contemporary of the late Karivardhan, considered as a great motorsport mind and both worked relentlessly to grow the sport.
The year 1975, the emergency days, also brings to mind the rallies in the valleys and the ‘Big Fall’. In 2010, I saw a rally car overshoot a flowing right fall into the valley in Nashik. After about 200 feet, the car got stuck in the trees and another 200 feet below there was water. Last month, we were just talking about it at the 44th SIR, where Anoop, the co-driver, who survived that Big Fall in a miraculous way. But modern rally cars have the roll cage. In 1975, Vicky Chandhok rolled off the Kodaikanal hills, at Manekadu in an ambassador car. “We went down over 350 feet and landed on a tree. Luckily, all four of us survived. Nagaraj was the regional manager of the then Burma Shell. Ravi Thalem was based in England and my Chidappa, Bandhu Chandhok, and myself,” Vicky laughed it off, but must have been a scary baptism in rallying.

Manoj Gaur, Executive Chairman, Jaypee Group, talking to Karun and Vicky Chandhok in the pitlane 26 Oct 2011. In the next few years, he dilly-dallied in domestic motorsports taking part in several rallies and races and fell in love too. He married Chitra, a Tamilian in 1982 and celebrated by flying down a Formula Ford machine to India to race at Sholavaram. It was the first time that he convinced MRF Tyres to partly sponsor his venture. That maiden indulgence with motorsports, continued as love affair for many decades to come, as MRF became one of the biggest sponsors of motorsports in India and the credit to hook them on to the sport should surely go to Vicky Chandhok.
Richer by the experience, Vicky flew in a better racing machine, the Chevron Formula II, the next year for his exploits in Sholavaram. Then with the Himalayan Rally coming up, his true love for rallying began. He took part in several rallies, many with Manoj Dalal as his long-time co-driver. Mr Dalal is the current Clerk of the Course for the 45th SIR, who meticulously conducts the rallies and races at the Madras Race Track and many are not aware that the duo ruled the roost in Indian rallying in their hey days. But in 2000 when INRC saw the debut of Mitsubishi Lancer, it was Vicky Chandhok, who introduced it by winning the rally with Sandeep Lal as co-driver and Manoj Dalal is at the helm as Clerk of the Course. Hari Singh who gave a tough fight came second, 17 seconds behind. For Vicky, it was a great way to sign off his chequered career after 28 years of racing and rallying.
Vicky’s earliest navigators were his brother Vibu and Yashwant Jhabakh of Hyderabad. Later, he did the Himalayan Rally three years with Shreekant Jha as the navigator. There on, Rajiv Rai and Manoj Dalal too ably assisted him the pace notes and gave the calls and jelled well as a team.
But Vicky, despite all his pot belly, and advancing age, lost weight and had one last hurrah, taking a podium with Chandramouli as co-driver in a one-off INRC in 2018 in his class, a good 61 years ripe. That same year also saw Akbar Ebrahim rally in another Polo.
In between, Vicky was also instrumental in Ebrahim’s first success on the racing track, as the Team Principal and coach at the Wallace sports. It was in 1989 that he started Wallace Sports and Research Foundation, and one of its first students, Ebrahim drove his first race at MMRT.
Until then Vicky was busy racing or rallying and did not take up administration. But the turn of the century saw the rise of another association and fmsci lost it power as the ASN of FIA. However, with the Government of India still recognizing fmsci, Vicky led the federation during the difficult times from 2003 till 2005 in his first stint as the President. Vicky name also popped up for the FIA President’s post briefly when Jean Todt had a wavering mind.

Vicky Chandhok with Akbar Ebrahim (right) at the FMSCI awards function 2014. An FMSCI image Later, he was not only instrumental in getting the Federation back into the saddle as the governing body of sport for the country and recognized by FIA in 2009. Then his international connections and hardwork, besides encouraging a private builder in Delhi, the Jaypee group, resulted in the construction of the Formula 1 track. He and Karun Chandhok, who by then became the second Indian Formula 1 driver, supervised the construction of the track and worked hard as representatives of FIA and Bernie Ecclestone, the then promoter of F1, and brought the Indian Grand Prix F1 races to India.
India ultimately hosted the big circus for three years from 2011 to 2013 where MMSC played a huge role in training and deploying the marshals for the F1 races. Prabha Shankar was the man to look up to. All marshals in India join in offering a big salute to Shankar, whose tall personality, managed every motorsport incident efficiently, effectively, and in a jiffy. That proved that Indian Marshals are no less than any other experienced F1 venue. Vicky’s second stint as the fmsci* president lasted from 2010 to 2014. After F1 left India, Vicky also served as the FIA Truck Commission chairman and brought the great truck races to Budhdh International Circuit and they became a grand success.
South India rally misses him at MMRT as Vicky is on his annual pilgrimage to England and will be with the fifth-generation Chandhok, Vihaan, the son of Karun Chandhok. Meanwhile, his other son, Suhail Chandhok, with whom I had the pleasure of working with his communication team for two South India rallies, is currently commentating with Star Sports while Karun is the Formula 1 commentator for Sky Sports.
“And on this historic day I’d like to say to all the competitors ‘give it your entire commitment, it’s the only way to succeed,’ is the advice from Vicky Chandhok to all rally drivers.
*fmsci likes to use it in all small letters – branding.
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WorldSBK, the Superbikes Worlds return to Assen
The heavy-hitting names speak about the upcoming Assen clash, with rivalries, debates about upgrades and hoping to bounce back all on the agenda.
Assen, 21 April 2022: The 2022 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship arrives in the Netherlands for the Motul Dutch Round at the TT Circuit Assen. Celebrating 30 years since the first time WorldSBK visited the hallowed turf of the Dutch venue, it promises to be a spectacular weekend
Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati): “I hope to have the same battle as Aragon!”
“It’s not easy to beat Jonny here. He has won everything here apart from three years ago against me. More than motivated, I am confident; I felt very strong during the first round so why can’t I be strong here? It will be more difficult to beat him here as he is the ‘King of Assen’ but it will be a good challenge for everyone to beat him. Jonny, Toprak and I are three very different riders, and we have three very different bikes, so each one has its own style. It’s good to have three contenders for victory but also my teammate Michael Ruben Rinaldi; he can battle with the other guys but also achieve a podium which he deserves. I hope to have the same battle as Aragon!”
Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK): “To win 100 races for Kawasaki would be incredible”
“Let’s say Alvaro’s replaced the missing Scott Redding at the front. It’s always cool to have more guys fighting at the front. We didn’t mention Rinaldi, he was very strong at Aragon, a good circuit for him. Nice to be in the battle, nice that I had a bike that let me fight as well. Look forward to more of that here. To win 100 races with Kawasaki would be incredible! No one’s mentioned that inside the team. To win two races in WorldSBK is tough. I will do my best, that’s the target, but nothing is for sure right now. It would be nice come Sunday. I hope they have this in mind, maybe they can prepare a cake or something, that would be nice!”
Toprak Razgatlioglu (Pata Yamaha with Brixx WorldSBK): “We’ll use the 2022 electronics”
“In Aragon, we had a problem with the braking, and I didn’t feel good in this area, but for Assen, it’s important to improve this problem. Every race weekend we try 2021 and 2022 electronics, and now we are improving the new one. The new one we will improve each weekend and this weekend, we will use the 2022 electronics. The other Yamaha riders are improving, because I’m not working alone and they’re also working for the new electronics. We are coming to ‘my tracks’ now. Last year at Assen, it wasn’t a great result for me and in one race, I crashed. I know my problem at this track but this year we have improved it, so I think we’re fighting for the win this weekend.”
Iker Lecuona (Team HRC): “Didn’t expect to start in this position… best for Honda in many years”
“We didn’t expect to start in this position. We expected to stay tenth, ninth, maybe eighth in the World Championship. But we’re P5, we’re very happy. This is the best start in the World Championship for Honda in a lot of years. The objective is to keep on this path, keep this performance, try to develop the bike and to fight more for a podium.”
Michael van der Mark (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team): “I’m really happy to be in the paddock”
“I’m really happy to be back in the paddock! It was already a very long winter, but unfortunately due to the injury, I made the winter even longer. Things are going well. I’m getting better every day. I’m really happy to be here at Assen. It would’ve been really disappointing to miss my home round. On the other side, it’s my first time on the bike this year. It’s a nice place to be on the bike. We have a good bike, but it’s not a winning bike. The only advice is to stay calm. We know what we have to develop. It’s tough, especially with such a close Championship. A couple of tenths and we’ll gain a lot of places but it’s not easy to find these couple of tenths.”
Michael Ruben Rinaldi (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati): “I want a podium really, really bad!”
“At the moment, we have done just the Aragon Round, so I only have the feeling from that circuit. I think that turning the bike, I need to use a lot of rear grip in the entry of the corner. When the rear tyre goes down, I lose a little bit of confidence and I can control the bike less. I think we have to focus on that. Just make the bike turn a little bit better. Here we are at a different track, I think it has fewer long corners, so maybe the tyres can last a little bit longer. The goal is to be able to fight for the podium in all three races. After we have missed the Aragon podium, I want this one really, really bad. Every track is a different story. This is our goal.”
Scott Redding (BMW Motorrad WorldSBK Team): “We were just too far away…”
We kind of know the issue but we’re kind of locked with what we can do in this situation at the moment. For me, it’s more working on the electronics side of things, trying to help our problem. I think the track layout is what’s probably going to help us the most. Let’s see what we can do and see if this weekend brings us a step and see in the future. It’s not going to be a nice, clean improvement; it’s going to be rocky on the way. As long as we’re going forward, I’m happy with that. I always said we were too far away; I didn’t want to blow smoke up my ass about it. We were just too far away, so coming into a race weekend, it isn’t going to be any better. I think we’ve just got to keep working in the line that we’re following and see if we can build up.”
Xavi Vierge (Team HRC): “It was really good with two rookies… nobody expected it!”
“To go from the first round sixth in the Championship but with the same points as my teammate in fifth position was really good. Also, for the team, I think it was really good with two rookies to start the season like that. Nobody expected it. We need to have the feet on the ground because the gap between us and the top guys is quite big, so we need to work to be closer to them.”FIM MiniGp World Series
The FIM MiniGP World Series began in 2021, culminating in an incredible first FIM MiniGP World Series Final at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia, just ahead of the MotoGP™ season finale.
In 2022, the series expands to include even more National Series . The top two riders from each will be invited to join the 2022 FIM MiniGP World Series Final and, as in the inaugural year of the FIM MiniGP World Series, the winner of the World Final will, subject to minimum age and location/nationality, secure a spot in one of the Road To MotoGP™ programs on the next rung of their career ladder.The Assen TT Junior Track hosted the first round of the FIM MiniGP Netherlands Series and WorldSBK riders visited the FIM MiniGP Paddock to share their experience with young riders
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Suhail Ahmed excels with six gold; Uday Ganguli displays glimpses of old magic
Kolkota, 17 April 2022: Eight-time National champion Suhail Ahmed dominated the proceedings winning six out of ten gold on offer in the SR Dirt Track two-wheeler motorsports event held at Singur about 60-km from here on Sunday.
The 34-year from Bengaluru, also became the fastest rider of the event clocking 5minutes, 08.773 seconds in the feature event, the Group B Expert 4-stroke upto 165cc class as he edged out Manmeet Singh Dhanjal who finished ahead of other senior riders Sisir Raha and veteran Uday Ganguli in that order.
On his part, experienced Uday Ganguli, not the one to sit quiet, turned the tables in the Expert 2 stroke class and clinched the gold with a time of 5:34.823 to push aside the challenge from Sisir Raha and another national rider Barno Barman, who recently hogged limelight, beating Yuva Kumar’s time in the Sprint Nationals last year. Barman had to be content with a third place.
Also Uday Ganguli notched up another first in his chequered career as he won the gold in the Electric Vehicle class, one of the first such events being held in the country. In the EV Group invitation class he claimed the overall honours with Dwairath Manna and Sayanthan Seth finishing second and third behind him.
Indrasheesh Roy, a novice rider is the one who caught all the eyes with his riding skills. Amidst other podiums in higher classes, he won the Novice class defeating Hiranmoy Nandan while clocking 5min, 22.363sec. Sudeep Bhattacherjee and Rameez Mullick finished third and fourth respectively. “It is only my second time in such a thrilling event. This is dryland unused and unkempt and the organisers turned it into a beautiful dirt track and I hope this dedicated track will encourage many others to join the sport. I truly enjoyed riding here,” said Indrasheesh to a local paper.
In the Expert Group D upto 165 class, it was Manmeeth Singh Dhanjal who claimed the gold winning by a mile ahead of Uday Ganguli in second and Indrasheesh Roy in third. Vishal Das took fourth place, still showing glimpses of his form, which used to thrill the crowds decades back.
Provisional Results:
Class 1: Expert M1 & M2 upto 165cc (2/4 Stroke) Group D: 1. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 5:17.665; 2. Uday Ganguli 5:26.207; 3. Indrasheesh Roy (Novice) 5:31.139; 4. Vishal Das 5:37.064.
Class 2: Expert M1 & M2 upto 165cc (2 stroke) Group B: 1. Uday Ganguli 5:34.823; 2. Sisir Raha 5:35.603; 3. Barna Barman 5:36.455; 4. Indrasheesh Roy 5:38.619;
Class 3: Expert M1 & M2 upto 165cc (4 stroke) Group B: 1. Suhail Ahmed 5:08.773; 2. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 5:09.057; 3. Sisir Raha 5:16.408; 4. Uday Ganguli 5:17.685.
Class 4: Expert M3 & M4 165cc to 260cc (2/4 stroke) Group D: 1. Suhail Ahmed 5:14.708; 2. Indrasheesh Roy (novice) 5:17.310; 3. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 5:18.482; 4. Uday Ganguli 5:22.499.
Class 5: Expert M3 & M4 165cc to 260cc (2/4 stroke) Group B: 1. Suhail Ahmed 5:10.435; 2. Sisir Raha 5:13.663; 3. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 5:15.901; 4. Subhodeep Ghosh 5:26.940.
Class 6: Open Royal Enfield (2/4 Stroke) Group B: 1. Suhail Ahmed 5:31.014; 2. Kaustab Choudhury 5:36.480; 3. Rameez Mullick (novice) 5:54.014; 4. Koustav Kumar Kolay (novice) 6:34.386.
Class 7: Open Scooter (2/4 stroke) Group B: 1. Suhail Ahmed 6:21.040; 2. Vishal Das 6:27.470; 3. Sumantra Aich (Novice) 6:47.960; 4. Debasish Dutta 6:50.934.
Class 8: Novice Open (2/4 stroke) Group B: 1. Indrasheesh Roy 5:22.363; 2. Hiranmoy Nandan 5:34.936; 3. Sudeep Bhattacherjee 5:43.886; 4. Rameez Mullick 5:45.698.
Class 9: Open Group Invitation: 1. Suhail Ahmed 7:11.544; 2. Uday Ganguli 7:14.908; 3. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 7:21.111; 4. Kaustab Choudhury 7:46.349.
Class 10: EV Group invitation: 1. Uday Ganguli 5:32.230; 2. Dwairath Manna 5:33.256; 3. Sayantan Seth 5:58.090; 4. Manmeet Singh Dhanjal 6:00.320.
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Fervent Motorsports on Hemanth Muddappa, the 9-time National ‘Hero’
19 April 2022: Currently for anything on motorsports in India, all roads lead to Fervent Motorsports. It is the in-thing for all news, talk-shows, interviews, inside stuff, and what not. Think Motorsports, think Fervent…
Here is a video on Hemanth Muddappa.
“We are delighted to welcome Hemanth (Muddappa) as a new edition to our team. We heartily congratulate him for his recent wins. Muddappa’s presence bolsters our commitment to the advancement of drag racing culture in India which has’nt been explored so far. Drag Racing is the shortest and quickest form of motorsports and the Hero Xtreme 160R, the fastest to 0-60kmph in its segment, is a perfect fit for this racing format,” Ranjivjit Singh, Chief Growth Officer, Hero MotoCorp.
Hero MotoCorp, the world’s largest manufacturer of motorcycles and scooters, has signed nine-time national drag racing champion Hemanth Muddappa as a Brand Ambassador for the Hero Xtreme 160R on 8th March 2022.
Hemanth will promote the drag racing culture in India with Hero MotoCorp’s on-going XDrags, a pan India drag racing experiential event organised on the Hero Xtreme 160R.
Hero MotoCorp and Hemanth have already hosted 16 XDrags events so far.
Bengaluru-based Hemanth has been breaking records, including his own, in the drag racing circuit. Earlier this month, he bagged his fifth consecutive title at the MMSC FMSCI Indian National Drag Racing Championship 2021.
Hemanth won two golds in the above 1050cc (Super Sport) and 851-1050cc (Super Sport) categories and races across three classes – 851-1050cc, 1050cc and above, and foreign open unrestricted. He is the only Indian Drag Racer to win in two classes and holds the record for the fastest time across drag strips in India.
From being told by doctors that he will hardly be able to walk after meeting with a lifethreatening accident to clinching the title of India’s Fastest Racer, Muddappa’s race with his life has been inspirational and thrilling as well._A Hero release
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WRC resumes for Round 3 on the Croation tar
Zagreb, 17 April 2022: The battle to win the 2022 FIA World Rally Championship continues in Croatia next week (April 21-24) with the first asphalt event of the season free of ice and snow following on from Rallye Monte-Carlo in January.
A newcomer to the WRC in 2021, Croatia Rally proved a huge challenge for the drivers and teams when it took place last April with ever-changing grip levels and surface conditions characterising the first world-level rally in Europe’s eastern region since Rally Bulgaria in 2010.
The Zagreb-based event also delivered a truly memorable finale as Sébastien Ogier beat Elfyn Evans, his Toyota Gazoo Racing team-mate, to victory by 0.6s following the winner-takes-all Wolf Power Stage.
Teams prepared for the second Croatia Rally to count for the WRC – and the first for the Rally1 era – during a series of tests on closed-public roads similar in character and challenge to what they’ll experience on the event. However, the unseasonal cold temperatures experienced at the start of the month are likely to contrast to the warm weather expected during rally week.
Nevertheless, the early starts, particularly on legs two and three, coupled with the use of stages in the hills around the city will make for colder and potentially damp conditions in the mornings and could therefore result in tyre strategy becoming a factor in the outcome of the rally.
Official WRC tyre supplier Pirelli will provide the P Zero HA (hard) and SA (soft) tyres for Croatia Rally. The first-choice hard compound tyre is designed for warm and dry conditions. The soft-option tyre is better suited to colder temperatures and damp road surfaces. In the event of heavy rain, the Cinturato wet tyre can be used. A maximum of 28 tyres are available to teams running Rally1 cars during the event including four for Shakedown.
Croatia Rally is the third event of the 2022 WRC season and marks the resumption of action following the lengthy break after Rally Sweden, which concluded on February 27 with a third career victory for Finns Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen, who top the provisional title standings as result.
FIA WRC2 and WRC3 points are also up for grabs in Croatia, while the event is round two of the FIA Junior WRC Championship.
THE 2022 ENTRY
A season best-equalling 11 Rally1 cars are entered for Croatia Rally, including a Ford Puma Rally1 for Pierre-Louis Loubet/Vincent Landais, winners of the WRC2 title in 2019. They are joined in the M-Sport Ford World Rally Team line-up by Irishmen Craig Breen/Paul Nagle, fellow French pair Adrien Fourmaux/Alexandre Coria and Briton Gus Greensmith, who is co-driven by Swede Jonas Andersson. Breen completed the Rallye Monte-Carlo podium in January, while Fourmaux returns to the scene of his debut in the WRC’s top-level category last season. Fourmaux was also in action when Mexico hosted Rally of Nations Guanajuato, a round of the FIA NACAM Championship earlier this month.
Four Toyota GR Yaris Rally1 challengers appear on the entry list. In addition to Kalle Rovanperä/Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT is represented by British duo Elfyn Evans/Scott Martin, Japan’s Takamoto Katsuta and his Irish co-driver Aaron Johnston, plus Finns Esapekka Lappi/Janne Ferm. While Evans and Katsuta completed the entire Croatia Rally distance in 2021, Rovanperä crashed into retirement on the opening stage, while the event wasn’t part of Lappi’s limited event schedule last season.
Hyundai Shell Mobis World Rally Team starts Croatia Rally boosted by Thierry Neuville/Martijn Wydaeghe’s Rally Sweden podium and mindful of the Belgians’ performance on the event last season, which they led after leg one before finishing third overall on the back of six stage wins. Estonian pairing Ott Tänak/Martin Järveoja drive a second Hyundai i20 N Rally1 and finished fourth in Croatia last year. Swede Oliver Solberg and Briton Elliott Edmondson’s fledgling partnership netted sixth overall on Rally Sweden although Croatia Rally is unchartered territory for the duo.
THE SUPPORTING CATEGORIES
As well as the chase for overall success, Croatia Rally also hosts the latest round of both the FIA WRC2 Championship, for Rally2 cars, and FIA WRC3 Championship, for Rally3 cars.
Yacco ACCR Team’s Erik Cais in a Ford Fiesta Mk II is the best-placed driver in the provisional WRC2 rankings where his opposition will include Frenchmen Eric Camilli (Sainteloc Junior Team), Stéphane Lefebvre, Yohan Rossel in Citroën C3s, Toksport WRT2’s Nikolay Gryazin and Emil Lindholm as well as Kajetan Kajetanowicz or Chris Ingram in Škoda Fabia Evos, M-Sport Ford’s Jari Huttunen, Georg Linnamäe in an ALM Motorsport-entered Volkswagen Polo GTI, Grégoire Munster in a Hyundai i20 N and WRC2 newcomer Miko Marczyk, a double Polish championship who finished third in last season’s FIA European Rally Championship.
In WRC3, 2021 Junior WRC champion Sami Pajari heads the current WRC3 Open order over Lauri Joona and Jan Černý. In the FIA Junior WRC class, seven young talents are taking part to the second event following the opening round in Sweden in identical Pirelli-equipped Ford Fiesta Rally3s from M-Sport Poland. They include title leader Jon Armstrong, William Creighton, McRae Kimathi, Robert Virves and Jean-Baptiste Franceschi, who has recovered from serious injury to take up his prize drive for winning the FIA Junior ERC3 crown in 2021.
Meanwhile, Niko Pulić and Ivica Siladic will fly the flag for Croatia in WRC2 and WRC3 respectively.
THE 2022 ROUTE
The second WRC-counting Croatia Rally is based in Zagreb from April 21-24 and consists of 20 stages over a competitive distance of 291.84 kilometres. Crews head first to the hills of Samoborsko Gorje, Žumberak and Karlovac west and southwest of host city Zagreb for four stages each run twice either side of service in the capital on Friday April 22. Mali Lipovec – Grdanjci is up first from 08:33 hrs local time, while the 20.77 kilometres of Stojdraga – Gornja Vas is packed full of corners. Saturday’s route, again to the west of Zagreb and featuring four double-use stages, begins with Kostanjevac – Petruš Vrh, the longest of the rally at 23.76 kilometres. The day also includes the new Platak test to the far southwest close to the Adriatic Sea. It’s an early start on Sunday with Trakošćan – Vrbno, another untried stage – and the rally’s most northerly – getting underway at 07:18. The second pass of Zagorska Sela – Kumrovec forms the event-deciding Wolf Power Stage. As well as the new Platak and Trakošćan – Vrbno stages, the 3.65-kilometre shakedown stage, scheduled for 09:01 hrs on Thursday April 21, is also new for 2022 and is located near the ancient town of Okić.
RALLY DATA
Total distance: 1642.18 km
Stage distance: 291.84 km
Number of stages: 20
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Gian Carlo Minardi is new FIA single-seater commission chief
Paris, 15 April 2022: The Italian has been elected after an e-voting process by members of the World Motor Sport Council.
Starting out as a competitor in Hill Climb and Rallying in the late 60s, Mr Minardi switched to management by running teams in Formula Italia. He eventually took his successful Formula Two operation into Formula 1 in 1985 where an engine supply partnership with Ferrari followed.
The Minardi name featured in Formula 1 until it was acquired by Paul Stoddart in 2001. The team eventually morphed into Scuderia Toro Rosso and has been known as Alpha Tauri since 2020. It still operates from the original Minardi team base in Faenza, Italy.
At the Minardi team, Gian Carlo Minardi shaped the careers of a number of Formula One drivers including Gian Carlo Fisichella, Jarno Trulli, Mark Webber and current BWT Alpine F1 Team pilot Fernando Alonso.
He is President of the Automobile Club d’Italia (ACI) Land Speed Records Commission since 2004.
In 2020, Mr Minardi was elected President of the Autdodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, better known as Imola, the site of Formula 1’s Emilia Romagna Grand Prix to be staged on April 24.
Mr Minardi will oversee a Single-Seater Commission which has been instrumental in reshaping the FIA’s junior racing portfolio while introducing innovative technologies and improved safety measures in recent years.
FIA President, Mohammed Ben Sulayem, said: “I warmly welcome the election of Gian Carlo Minardi as FIA Single-Seater Commission President. He is a major figure in motor sport. I look forward to working with him to further develop the Single-Seater pyramid around the world.”
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Masia back on top after classic Moto3 finish at COTA
The Spaniard takes his first win of the year ahead of Foggia and Migno as Garcia crashes out
Austin, 10 April 2022: For the first time since the 2021 Qatar GP, Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo) is a race-winner after coming out on top of a classic Moto3 battle at the Red Bull Grand Prix of the Americas, the fourth round of the Moto3 World Championship. Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) takes the World Championship lead and with some margin after a second place finish, the Italian beating compatriot Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) to the second step on the podium. Former points leader Sergio Garcia (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team) suffered a DNF, with his place in the standings taking a dent.
Polesitter Migno was able to hold onto P1 as the lightweight class field piled into Turn 1, but Deniz Öncü (Red Bull KTM Tech3) was soon the race leader, the Turk through with an aggressive move at Turn 7. Diogo Moreira (MT Helmets – MSI), after contact on the home straight with Öncü, took over in the lead on Lap 2 though, and there was big progress for Garcia as he picked his way through to P8 from P15 on the grid. Foggia was going in the wrong direction early doors, meanwhile, the Italian had been shuffled down to P10.
Xavier Artigas (CFMoto Racing PrüstelGP) took his turn leading for a couple of laps, but then came the drama for Garcia. On Lap 6 at the exit of Turn 13, there was contact between the Spaniard and compatriot Daniel Holgado (Red Bull KTM Ajo). Garcia was down and out of the running for points, as Holgado himself then tucked the front at Turn 20. Izan Guevara (Gaviota GASGAS Aspar Team), after jumping the start, had to take two Long Lap penalties.
A lead group of seven had formed at the front: Masia now led from Ayumu Sasaki (Sterilgarda Husqvarna Max), Öncü, Moreira, Artigas, Foggia and Migno with nine laps to go. With seven to go, Foggia hit the front for the first time, but a lap later, Masia was back through.
With five to go though it was a costly Turn 12 for Foggia, the Italian shuffled down to P4 behind Masia, Migno and Sasaki after running slightly wide. It was all to play for with two laps to go in Austin, the top seven all locked together.
Heading onto the last lap, Moreira highsided out – unhurt – at the final corner, as Masia and Migno scrapped for the lead. Foggia was P3, Sasaki P4, Öncü P5 – it was between these five riders for victory. Migno led onto the back straight but Masia grabbed a nice slipstream and made a move stick into Turn 12.
It was advantage Masia heading into the final sector, and Migno dived up the inside at the penultimate corner but went wide, allowing both Masia and Foggia through. The Red Bull KTM Ajo rider made no mistake at the final corner and took victory ahead of Foggia and Migno, with Sasaki missing out on a podium by 0.096s in P4.
Öncü was in the fight for victory throughout but just lost touch on the last lap and the Turkish rider came home in P5. Artigas also lost touch in the closing stages, the Spaniard finished P6 ahead of Guevara, who did well to recover to P7 from his two Long Lap penalties. Carlos Tatay (CFMoto Racing PrüstelGP), Riccardo Rossi (SIC58 Squadra Corse) and Tatsuki Suzuki (Leopard Racing) rounded out the top 10.
Rookies Ivan Ortola (Angeluss MTA Team) and Scott Ogden (VisionTrack Racing Team) produced great rides to pick up P11 and P12 on their first visits to COTA, the duo finished ahead of Stefano Nepa (Angeluss MTA Team), Adrian Fernandez (Red Bull KTM Tech3) and the final point scorer Lorenzo Fellon (SIC58 Squadra Corse) – that’s the Frenchman’s first World Championship point.
With Garcia eventually retiring after his crash, Foggia takes a 16-point lead to Portimão as the European leg of the season now appears on the horizon. And the Portuguese venue is one we’ve seen the Italian master. Will he extend his lead next time out?
Moto3 Podium:
1 Jaume Masia (Red Bull KTM Ajo)– KTM – 38’58.286
2 Dennis Foggia (Leopard Racing) – Honda – +0.172
3 Andrea Migno (Rivacold Snipers Team) – Honda – +0.394












