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Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win Emilia Romagna GP’s sprint race
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen came back on Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc to win F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint Race with Sergio Perez in third.
It was dry start to F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint race as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc got the lead at Turn 1 from pole-sitter Red Bull’s Max Verstappen who initially got away well but it wasn’t enough which allowed McLaren’s Lando Norris to be on par with him too.
But Verstappen kept second from Norris as Haas’ Kevin Magnussen remained fourth despite a small hit from McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo who lost out to Red Bull’s Sergio Perez for fifth. The Mexican tried an inside move but had to change line and go on the outside.
Alpine’s Fernando Alonso did not have a good start to drop to seventh from Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in the points position, as Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas rounded out the Top 10. His teammate Guanyu Zhou did not last long.
In his fight against AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, the Frenchman’s front right tangled with the left rear of Zhou which send him into a spin onto the barrier. The safety car was deployed as the stewards noted no further action on either drivers for the incident.
Magnussen, meanwhile, was shown the black and white flag for weaving. The re-start worked well for Leclerc who continued to lead from Verstappen and Norris, as Perez passed Magnussen to fourth and Sainz passed Alonso for seventh.
The moves started to come through as Perez passed Norris for third as Sainz cleared both Magnussen and Ricciardo to be fifth. The Dane dropped to seventh from Bottas who had a drag race fight against Alonso to take eighth from the Spaniard.
Behind, Haas’ Mick Schumacher passed Vettel for 10th as the German came under pressure from Mercedes’ George Russell, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton. Amid all of this, Verstappen closed in on Leclerc out of nowhere.
He waited for couple of laps to eventually get through Leclerc to lead the F1 Emilia Romagna GP and win the first sprint event of 2022 at Imola. The Monegasque ended up second, nearly three seconds behind as Perez rounded out the Top 3.
Verstappen will start Sunday’s F1 Emilia Romagna GP from pole with Leclerc beside him and their teammates Perez and Sainz behind in third and fourth. McLaren’s Norris did well in fifth from Ricciardo, as Bottas and Magnussen got the last of the points in Top 8.
Alonso started fifth but ended up ninth from Schumacher in the Top 10 as Russell could only manage 11th from Tsunoda, Vettel and Hamilton with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll rounding the Top 15 runners and starting order for Sunday’s race.
Much like those around him, Alpine’s Esteban Ocon couldn’t do much to be 16th from AlphaTauri’s Gasly who recovered to pass Williams pair of Alexander Albon and Nicholas Latifi.
DNF: Zhou.
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Russell ends on top in dry FP2 of Emilia Romagna GP
Mercedes’ George Russell was fastest in dry FP2 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.
It was mostly dry in FP2 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP after the wet running on Friday. Rain, though, is predicted for Saturday’s sprint race and also Sunday’s grand prix which makes the dry running less valuable from the weekend point of view.
Still, F1 teams and drivers got good amount of track time apart from McLaren duo Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo, with both facing separate issues during the course of FP2. While the Brit could do couple of laps before he was hit by brake problems.
Teammate Ricciardo didn’t run at all after McLaren found some issue with his power unit ahead of the session. It was same for Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas who sat out after his side found out engine issue as well before the session.
On track, it was mixed strategy as Mercedes’ George Russell led the way with a 1m19.457s lap on the soft compound, with Red Bull’s Sergio Perez (1m19.538s) in second and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc (1m19.740s) third – where the Mexican set his best time on medium tyre.
Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (1m19.992s) slotted in fourth from Alpine’s Fernando Alonso (1m20.174s), with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz (1m20.258s) in sixth, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m20.371s) seventh where the latter duo set their best time on the medium compound.
AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m20.381s) and Pierre Gasly (1m20.439s) slotted in eighth and ninth, with Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou (1m20.498s) rounding the Top 10 where the Frenchman set his best time on the medium compound.
Williams had a better session with Alexander Albon in 11th from Haas pair of Kevin Magnussen and Mick Schumacher, with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll in 14th from his teammate Sebastian Vettel – the two Germans used medium tyres.
Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was 16th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, with McLaren’s Norris in 18th after the team managed to fix up his issue for couple more laps. His teammate Ricciardo and Bottas didn’t get any laps under their belt ahead of the sprint race.
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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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Verstappen takes Emilia Romagna GP sprint race pole amid red flag stoppages
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took F1 pole for Emilia Romagna GP Sprint Race from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and McLaren’s Lando Norris after five red flags.
Q1:
The Friday qualifying for the sprint weekend in F1 Emilia Romagna GP saw the likes of Alfa Romeo, Aston Martin and Alpine use the the slick tyres for their first run with everyone else barring Ferrari use the intermediate compound.
The Ferrari pair did not head out immediately like others but when they did, they used the dry compound as well. While others started to pit to change to dry compound, Williams’ Alexander Albon’s right-rear brakes caught fire as he limped back to the pits.
In doing so he left quite a bit of debris on track to cause a red flag. Once the session re-started, it was a game of putting in the fastest lap as late as possible in drying conditions. The lead changed hands multiple times but went to Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc (1m18.796s).
He comfortably led Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz in the Top 3, as the Mercedes duo barely made it to Q2. In fact, Lewis Hamilton was only 0.004s away from getting knocked out with AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda (1m20.474s) in 16th.
It was both the AlphaTauri cars actually with teammate Pierre Gasly (1m20.732s) 17th from Williams’ Nicholas Latifi (1m21.971s) who had a spin in late stages of the session but managed to continue. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon (1m22.305s) was 19th after he didn’t venture out to set a lap time for his second run due to suspected gearbox issue.
Q2:
The second session in F1 Emilia Romagna GP saw a quick run from all the 15 drivers with the rain threat looming. The all got a lap in before a red flag for Sainz who crashed out at Rivazza after losing his rear into the left-hander after setting the second best time.
It was Verstappen leading Sainz, McLaren’s Lando Norris in the Top 3 when the red flag was displayed with both Mercedes outside the Top 10 as the rain arrived at Imola.The time ticked away wherein no one took a chance to venture out to start off.
Drivers did venture out but only for a citing lap than to set a lap time as Verstappen ended up fastest with a 1m18.793s lap. Mercedes’ George Russell (1m20.757s) was the first to be knocked out in 11th from Haas’ Mick Schumacher (1m20.916s).
Mercedes’ Hamilton (1m21.138s) was 13th from Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou (1m21.434s) and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll (1m28.119s). With both Mercedes knocked out, it was the first that neither car made it to Top 10 since Suzuka of 2012.
Q3:
The final part in F1 Emilia Romgana GP saw an intermediate tyre run from the nine drivers in damp but clearing conditions. There was another red flag as Haas’ Kevin Magnussen almost hit the barrier at Acque Minerali but did not hit it like Bottas in FP1.
He reversed the car and bit and managed to get out of the situation and continue on, with the re-start not far off after that. No times were set by the time red flag was waved, with the first timed lap coming from Magnussen himself after the re-start.
There was another red flag for Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas who stopped in sector three with a problem, as Verstappen went quickest with a 1m27.999s lap despite lifting off for yellow flags. Leclerc stood second from Norris, Magnussen and Alonso.
The Spaniard had his lap deleted along with Perez with both having to have another go. With the rain arriving around re-start, it was tricky for everyone. But nothing could be done even on re-start as an off for Norris ended the session under a red flag.
It was Verstappen on pole for Saturday’s F1 Emilia Romagna GP Sprint race, with Leclerc (1m28.778s) and Norris (1m29.131s) in the Top 3, where the Brit went off on the same corner as Bottas in FP1 and Magnussen in Q3.
The Dane though ended up fourth with a 1m29.164s lap from Alonso (1m29.202s) in the Top 5, as McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo (1m29.742s) was sixth with Perez (1m29.808s) seventh, Bottas (1m30.439s) eighth and Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel (1m31.062s) ninth as Sainz rounded out the Top 10 despite not taking part.
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Leclerc leads Sainz in a wet FP1 session of Emilia Romagna GP
Ferrari ended up 1-2 in a wet FP1 of F1 Emilia Romagna GP with Charles Leclerc ahead of Carlos Sainz and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen P3.
It was a wet start to F1 Emilia Romagna GP in Imola with several drivers going off in the opening moments on the wet tyres. By the end of the session, they moved to intermediate compound but they still kept on going off due to damp conditions.
After the races in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia and Australia, this was their first time on a wet circuit with the 2022 generation of F1 cars. This was also the first chance for teams and drivers to try out the wet and intermediate tyres.
Pre-session, the FIA updated about new ICE, TC, MGU-H and MGU-K for Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, while Williams’ Alexander Albon took a new ES and CE. There were loads of offs as mentioned above with some having multiple.
The two Ferrari drivers were among the multiple list with both Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz having moments, with McLaren’s Lando Norris even calling out the red flag. Fortunately, the Brit managed to drive back onto the track after brief beached moment.
The likes of Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen had moments along with Alpine duo of Esteban Ocon and Fernando Alonso. Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas had a spin post the chequered flag but managed to not hit the barrier.
In terms of the standings, Ferrari ended up 1-2 with Leclerc (1m29.402s) leading from Sainz (1m30.279s), while Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (1m30.867s) in third from Haas pair of Magnussen and Mick Schumacher in the Top 5.
The other Red Bull of Sergio Perez slotted in sixth from Alpine’s Alonso with Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel, AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda and Mercedes’ George Russell in the Top 10. Alfa Romeo’s Bottas was 11th from AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly.
Behind him was Alpine’s Ocon in 13th with McLaren pair of Norris and Daniel Ricciardo in 14th and 15th. Aston Martin’s Stroll was 16th from Williams’ Albon, Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, Alfa Romeo’s Guanyu Zhou and Williams’ Latifi.
Among the 20 runners, Hamilton set his time on the wet compound after he complained of lack of grip due to lack of downforce all-through the session. With no more practice run before qualifying later, it leaves teams with little chance to change things due to the restrictions of F1 sprint weekend.
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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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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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Daruvala reflects on positive three-day F2 test at Barcelona
Jehan Daruvala speaks on a positive three-day FIA Formula 2 (F2) Championship test at Barcelona with Prema Team.
By Darshan Chokhani
Barcelona, 15 Aprill 2022: Following the completion of the two rounds of the 2022 F2 season, the teams had a three-day in-season test at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya before the third round to take place next weekend at Imola.
The first day saw Daruvala end up 15th in the standings after setting the best time of 1m29.909s with 51 laps done. Teammate and fellow Red Bull driver Dennis Hauger (1m30.439s) was 19th with 52 laps done.
The second day saw Daruvala in 10th with a best time of 1m30.057s lap where he did 64 laps in all, whereas teammate Hauger (1m30.169s) was 13th with 62 laps in his kitty. The day saw damp conditions in afternoon.
The final day had Hauger finish ahead of Daruvala, with the Norwegian completing 48 laps to be fifth after setting a 1m27.945s lap. At the same time, Daruvala was seventh with a best time of 1m28.019s and 52 laps.
“We got three good days overall in Barcelona with the tyres we had,” said Daruvala. “We had two options and six primes, so when the track conditions were closer to what we will have for the weekend, we used options.
“The pace was there on both the long and short runs, and the car felt good. Compared to Jeddah, it’s completely different for everyone. There is going to be a lot of degradation when we come back here, and it’s going to be interesting. I think we learned a lot over the last few days and it will definitely help us for the weekend.”
Teammate Hauger added: “Day 1 was quite messy overall, but in the other days I feel we made great steps, both on me for the driving and in terms of our feel with the car and everything.
“Then the engine broke down in the last afternoon, but driving wise, in performance mode we managed a good step, which is a confidence boost ahead of the next round. We also had something tested out and that is good as well. Overall, a lot of positive things to take away into the next rounds.”
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Hero signs drag champ Hemanth Muddappa as brand ambassador
Bengaluru, 8 March 2022: 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.
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, said a press release received here on Tuesday.
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 life-threatening accident to clinching the title of India’s Fastest Racer, Muddappa’s race with his life has been inspirational and thrilling as well.
Ranjivjit Singh, Chief Growth Officer, Hero MotoCorp said, “We are delighted to welcome Hemanth as a new addition 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 hasn’t been fully explored so far. Drag racing is the shortest and quickest form of motorsports and the Hero Xtreme 160R, the fastest to 0-60 km/h in its segment, is a perfect fit for this racing format.”
Hemanth Muddappa, Rider, Hero MotoCorp said, “This is the beginning of a thrilling ride and I am elated to join the Hero family as it aims to grow the drag racing culture in India. The sport has the power to take the young Indian sportspersons to the world podium. Hero MotoCorp is continuously doing great work towards the enhancement of all motorsport. I have always admired the company from afar and now it is a privilege to represent it. I will continue to do my best to win and break records and keep the Hero flag flying high always. Go Boom!”












