Category: Domestic

  • Gaurav Gill wins Rally of Arunachal: INRC Round 1

    Gaurav Gill wins Rally of Arunachal: INRC Round 1

    By Samikshan Dutta

    Itanagar, 17 Dec 2020: Ace Indian rallyist Gaurav Gill began his Champions Yacht Club-FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2020, with a bang winning the Rally of Arunachal in style here on Thursday.

    Gaurav driving on JK Tyre took a total of 56:55.200 minutes to complete eight special stages and record a victory by a margin of an impressive 4:25.700 minutes over Karna Kadur. Dean Mascarenhas finished third overall with a time of 1:02:30.500 hour.

    The three-time APRC champion was in his ominous best and even a flat tyre on final stage could not stop him from underlining his supremacy in the opening round.

    Gaurav along with co-driver Musa Sherif got off to a thrilling start and after opening up a considerable lead on the opening day which witnessed four thrilling night stages; it was all about driving safe and bringing his XUV300 home.

    However that did not stop him from going full throttle and he drove like a man possessed to win three on day four to increase his lead further. On the final stage, he had a flat tyre just two kilometres away from the flying start but he still managed to finish which was enough for him to draw the first blood.

    “It was a great start to the season. The stages were really fast and I enjoyed driving here. The car has been fantastic and there is absolutely nothing I could complain about. We made some adjustments to the car from last year and it has worked wonders. And all I could say is, me behind the wheels of a car like this on tarmac is just the perfect combination,” an ecstatic Gaurav Gill said.

    Karna Kadur on MRF Tyres overcame initial hiccups which involved a tailspin on ss2 to make his way to the podium. Karna driving a Volkswagen Polo who won the final stage of the round clocked a total time of 1 hour: 01 min:2.9 secs. Karna and his navigator Nikhil V Pai who ended the opening day in second place showed great grit to stave off a fierce challenge from Dean (& co-driver Shruptha Padival).

    Dean who finished third claimed victory in his category too, INRC 2. Sahil Khanna & Vidit Jain of Snap Racing took the second place in INRC 2 category with an overall time of 01:03:25.900 hour followed by Rahul Kanthraj & Vivek Y Bhatt who took a total time of 1:06:34.300 hour to complete the round.

    Defending champion Team Yokohama’s Chetan Shivram’s title defence took a great hit as he crashed out of the round in the first stage only due to engine failure. He started off well and in the first few kilometers was a treat to watch but mid-way into the stage his car stalled, crashing his hopes. The malfunction could cost him dear as he is likely to miss out of Round 2 as well which will be held at the same place on December 19th.

    While it was business as usual for the big guns, it was the young Bengaluru women’s team of Pragathi Gowda and co-driver Deeksha Balakrishna who impressed everyone with their performance on their debut outing. Representing Team Vasundhara, an all-women’s rally team, Pragathi posted a total time of 01:07:53.400 hour to not only win the women’s category ahead of her teammate and veteran Bani Yadav (& Subhkiran Pal Kaur Brar), she also won the Junior INRC Category beating the likes of Arjun Rao and Rakshith Iyer. She finished fourth in the INRC 3 category and ended ninth on the overall standing.

    Maninder Singh Prince along with co-driver Vinay Kumar posted a total time of 01:05:49.700 hour to clinch the INRC 3 category, while Fabid Ahmer (&Eldo Chacko) won the second place for their total time of 01:06:05.700 hour. Aditya Thakur and his co-driver Virender Kashyap of Team Nutulapati took 01:07:07.700 hour to complete the rally and take the third position.


    Provisional Results

    1. Gaurav Gill/ Musa Sherif; (56;55.200 minutes); 2. Karna Kadur/Nikhil Pai (1:01:2.9 hour); 3. Dean Mascarenhas /Shruptha Padival (1:02:30.500 hour)

    INRC2: 1. Dean Mascarenhas /Shruptha Padival(01:02:30.500 hour); 2. Sahil Khanna/Vidit Jain (01:03:25.900 hour); 3. Rahul Kantharaj/ Vivek Y Bhatt (1:06:34.300 hour).

    INRC3: 1. Maninder Singh Prince/ Vinay Kumar (01:05:49.700 hour); 2.  Fabid Ahmer/Eldo Chacko (01:06:05.700 hour); 3. Aditya Thakur/ Virender Kashyap (01:07:07.700 hour);

    INRC4: 1. Lanusanen Pongenar/ Lokaranjan HJ (1:18:03.200 hour); 2. Khyati Mody/ Sagar Mallappa (1:22:53.500 hour); 3. Rohit Iyer/ Manjunath (1:33:11.000 hour);

    Overall Leading: 1. Gaurav Gill/ Musa Sherif (Delhi/Mangalore) XUV300; (00 hour, 56 minutes; 55.200seconds); 2. Karna Kadur/ Nikhil Pai (Bengaluru) VW Polo (1:01:2.9sec); 3. Dean Mascarenhas /Shruptha Padival (Mangaluru- VW Polo) (1:02:30.500);

    INRC2: 1. Dean Mascarenhas /Shruptha Padival (Mangaluru – VW Polo) (01:02:30.500); 2. Sahil Khanna/Vidit Jain (Gurgaon/Noida – Snap Racing, VW Polo) (01:03:25.900); 3. Rahul Kantharaj/ Vivek Y Bhatt (Bengaluru – Polo) (1:06:34.300).

    INRC3: 1. Maninder Singh Prince/ Vinay Kumar (01:05:49.700); 2.  Fabid Ahmer/Eldo Chacko (Kerala- Polo) 01:06:05.700); 3. Aditya Thakur/ Virender Kashyap (Himachal Pradesh – Polo) (01:07:07.700);

    INRC4: 1. Lanusanen Pongenar/ Lokaranjan HJ (Nagaland/Bangalore – Honda City) (1:18:03.200); 2. Khyati Mody/ Sagar Mallappa (Mumbai/Bengaluru – Honda City) (1:22:53.500); 3. Rohit Iyer/ Manjunath (Mysore/Bengaluru – Esteem) (1:33:11.000);

  • INRC night-stage fireworks light up Itanagar and forces Ghosh to do the firefighting

    INRC night-stage fireworks light up Itanagar and forces Ghosh to do the firefighting

    Itanagar, 16 Dec 2020: Champions Yacht Club promoted Indian National Rally Championship presented an early Christmas gift in the form of Diwali fireworks that woke up the sleepy village of Chimpu with screeching sounds and visible thrills. The few hundred fortunate fans, who enthusiastically cheered and clapped for every car that took the flying finish witnessed and enjoyed the motorsport thrills that only a few or fortunate can witness. The rare moment was the highlight tonight, as the beast of a machines, XUV300 driven at mind-boggling speeds produced pleasing sights.

    After the wheel flew off, for over 70 metres in the pitch-dark night huge sparks lit up the night with the rim screeching the tarmac before coming to a halt at the TC. The flying wheel miraculously missed everyone and sped across in a jiffy and landed near a house in no-man’s land. The hot right front rim, shining bright like a round ring in a smelting furnace, National double champion in 2012 and 2013, Amittrajit Ghosh, sprinting to bring back the tyre in a few seconds like an F1 pit crew, presented a spectacle that reminded a splendid glimpse of what happened in Formula One to Grosjean’s car recently. It was scary though, for only die-hard fans and fraternity who watch motorsports regularly would understand such accidents.

    But it is also a tribute to the safety arrangements done by the Arunachal Pradesh, Lhakpa Tsering, the Director of the event, and all the officials, organisers and marshals. Rally of Arunachal is the only rally in India which gets the safety operations approved and implemented by a State Government with none other than the Superintendent of Police personally seen handling the scene at the spot, just before the stage became green. Closing a National Highway, NH415 in this case, is unheard of in Indian Rallying History until Rally of Arunachal came up.

    Later, in a few minutes, Ghosh got back into the seat and drove off, as if nothing happened. INDIAinF1 caught up at the Service Park with the co-driver Ashwin Naik and Ghosh, who were visibly upset and disappointed. “It was dangerous and just an unlucky incident,’’ dismissed Ghosh initially. But he failed to reel out quotes, as is his wont in normal times. For a few seconds, he was silent, then added: `”It is a rare incident, a wheel would fly off, happens in a decade or so in rallying. My wheel studs came off just before the flying finish.’’ As soon as he stopped after FF, and even as Ashwin is reporting and taking the timesheets, Ghosh jumped out ran, and brought the tyre back.

    The tarmac stage and the highly technical superfast Special Stages, the cold temperatures of a night stage may have spoiled many cars, with some stalwarts suffering initial hiccups even before the start of the SS1 and one such unfortunate exit today was the Volkswagen Polo, of Overall defending champion Chetan Shivram of Snap Racing, who did take the stage but gave up in 13 minutes in SS1. “It stalled before the start and we managed to take the start. But within 5km it stalled again. I am not sure what it is and have to check what happened. We came well prepared and gunning for a big fight but am very, very disappointed,’’ said Chetan Shivaram, who is a mentor to many drivers including the talented newcomer Pragathi Gowda, a newbee who drove like a veteran, doing a wonderful job on the day first day of her debut.  “Amazing, it is a wonderful day. I am so happy and having fun,’’ said a pleased-like a punch MBA student of Symbiosis, Pune. Born and bought up in Bengaluru, the 23-year old gets inspiration from her father, just like her silent navigator, who is born and bred under the motorsports culture. Pragathi’s navigator being none other than, Deeksha, the daughter of Balakrishna, popularly known as BK, and currently elevated to full-time motorsports job as Sporting Director in FMSCI. BK is a life-coach helping many a needy.

    Incidentally, Amer Beg and Shahid Salman of INRC3, also of Snap Racing and defending champion in INRC4, Vaibhav Marathe of Goa, are the three casualties that logged DNF tag today (did-not- finish).  Local driver Pen Sonam and co-driver Lenin Jose did not start their Gypsy.

    For the record, the King of Indian Motorsports Gaurav Gill was fastest in all the four stages despite displaying controlled aggression and easing off in the opening stage. As his car approached into the first few km, it sounded very different, with unusual lift-off sound that broke the screeching, steady noise, which is music to the ears of a rally fan. `I had a set-up issue and did take time but there on managed to touch top speeds,’’ said the multiple APRC champion and six-time Indian National title winner.

    And the reigning champ Chethan Shivram too clocked a DNF stalling his car in the very first stage. Of the 43 cars only 39 finished the Day 1, in the Rally of Arunachal, the first round of Champions Yacht Club fmsci Indian National Racing Championship (INRC) 2020.

    MRF continues to pump in money with COVID only changing their status to Associate Sponsor and Sakthi Herbal Nutpowder, a popular health product in Andhra Pradesh making its debut in another AP, that is Arunachal Pradesh, thanks to the promoters. Team Vasundhara, another Hyderabad Jewellery giant, too added their glittering presence & power to “Women in Motorsport”, a concept that is being promoted by FIA. And along with individual team promoters, Mallikarjuna Rao, of Team Nutalapati, Aashish of Team Vasundhara joined the local village fans and sat on the parapet wall of small kiosk/eatery and awaited the cars. They were lucky to see such thrilling motorsports action on their very first day. Rao was seen jumping with joy and congratulating everyone, when he heard that Dr Speed Bikku Babu, is leading the class, at that point while at the service park. The two Vasundhara team drivers too dished out some stunning times today. The third Team owner, Anumolu Ramakrishna is an NRI in USA and could not come here. But this reporter heard him talk to the drivers of his two cars, Lanusanane, who was excluded before being allowed to take the start.

    Coming back to the `Flying Wheel’, fortunately, every one escaped miraculously, but all the drama and fireworks of this dangerous incident, did throw light on the security arrangements and safety aspects and the Stage Commander and his team and Marshals should be commended for convincing a person no other than the Superintendent of Police, who insisted that traffic should be allowed to go for a few minutes between SS 1 and SS2. Fortunately,better sense prevailed and Stage Commander Chandramouli and senior rally sportspersons like Srikanth Gowda and other team members did a good job convincing the top police chief. The gentle giant did endure some irritating advise from a journalist and stayed on much beyond the midnight mark and supervised safety protocols.

    Provisional Unaudited Leg Results – After Day 1 (Special Stage 4 – SS4)

    Overall Leading: 1. Car#4 Gaurav Gill/ Musa Sherif (Delhi, #PoweredByMahindra) XUV300; (28minutes: 22.700 seconds); 2. c#8 Karna Kadur/ Nikhil Pai (Bengaluru, Arka Motorsports) VW Polo (31:31.300); 3. C#3 Dr `Speed’ Bikku Babu (Kerala, Pvt) /Bonnie Thomas (Kerala) VW Polo (31:42.200);

    INRC:  1. C#4 Gaurav Gill (Delhi, Privateer #PoweredByMahindra) XUV300; (28minutes: 22.700 seconds);  2. C#8 Karna Kadur (Bengaluru, Privateer, Arka Motorsports) VW Polo (31:31.300); 3. c#7 Amittrajit Ghosh (Kolkota) /Ashwin Naik (Mangalore) (#PoweredByMahindra) (2:29:25.400);

    INRC2: 1. Dr Speed Bikku Babu (Kerala, Pvt) /Bonnie Thomas (Kerala) (31:42.200); 2. Dean Mascarenhas Shruptha Padiva (Mangalore, Pvt) (31:47.800); 3. Sahil Khanna (Gurugaon) / Vidit Jain (Noida) (Snap Racing) VW Polo (32:29.400);

    INRC3: 1. Aditya Thakur (Team Nutalapati) (Himachal Pradesh) (VW Polo) (33:24.300); 2. Mininder Singh Prince/ Vinay Kumar (Snap Racing) C#20; VW Polo (34:06.900); 3. Syed Salman Ahmed/ BK Rishab (VW Polo) (34:47.900);

    INRC4: 1. Mujeeb Rehman/ Goutham CP c#27; (Honda City) (33:22.000); 2. C#30 Lanusanen Pongener/ Lokaranjan HJ (Honda City); 3. Khyati Mod/ Sagar Mallappa, C#31 Honda City; (42:17.000).

    Gypsy Challenge: 1. Amanpreet Ahluwalia/ Sandeep Mansukhani (Maruti Suzuki Gypsy) (35:50.500); 2. Daksh Gill/ Mrinmoy Saha (38:14.000); 3. Mohd. Kaif Khan/ Arjun Dheerendra (38:49.400);

    Note: Junior INRC will be added on the final day.

  • INRC, the flagship event of Indian Motorsports, returns to North East with a double dhamaka

    INRC, the flagship event of Indian Motorsports, returns to North East with a double dhamaka

    By David Bodapati

    Itanagar (Arunachal Pradesh), 14 Dec 2020: The flagship event of all the Nationals in Indian Motorsports, the Indian National Racing Championship 2020 (INRC) makes a grand return to the North East with a double dhamaka of back-to-back rounds where a combined 86 highly-competitive drivers and navigators are expected to begin their fight for national honours with the King of Indian Motorsports Gaurav Gill leading the charge in Yellow colours.  INRC 3-day Round 1 is on Dec 15 &to 17 and Round 2 is from 18th to 20 including scrutiny, reconnaissance and Special Stages, with night stages thrown in as bonus.

    Speedmaster and former national Overall INRC champion Karna Kadur of with one of the senior most navigators Nikhil Vittal Pai, can throw a spanner in any of the top-guns with speed, aggression and experience at their command. A win is long-time coming for the Karnataka duo and they can spring a surprise. With Yokohama coming back, the good days of Team Red Rooster Racing were fresh in the minds of Rally lovers. Kadur was also a driver instructor at that academy under 7-time National champion and celebrated tuner N Leelakrishnan.

    Another Bengaluru team Rahul Kantharaj and Vivek Y Bhatt, also former champions, begin as co-favourites in INRC2 class along with Dhruva Chandrasekhar pairing with experienced navigator PVS Murthy and, Suhem Kabir navigated by Jeevarathinam. These stalwarts have been in the rally scene thrilling fans with their skills for many years.

    Bringing in a slew of benefits to the Indian rally scene, the promoters Champions Yacht club under Vamsi Merla have brought benefits that trickled down to the drivers, where huge costs of transportation, tyres, free accommodation, and entry fee waiver were provided along with the organisers, Motor Sports Association of Arunachal.

    Defending champion Chetan Shivram will be back with his tested navigator Roopesh Kholay, representing Yokohoma-shod tuned by FRK Racing in the INRC2 rally-prepared Volkswagon Polo while 7-time National Champion and multiple-APRC title holder Gaurav Gill of Delhi, also seeded A, will be running Yellow on JK Tyres in Mahindra XUV 300 and will be the cynosure of all eyes. His Mahindra teammate Amittrajit Ghosh, who shifted from MRF to JK tyres this season, is seeded B, and will drive XUV300 in INRC, but Mahindra pulled out their team entry season. Such a heavy vehicle, one may think, is not ideal for high rally speeds, but when a heavyweight like Gill, is given an upgrade to Sequential gear system, the mean machine will trend on twitter too, not just on the closed highway Special Stages. This is the only rally in India, where a State Government provides security and closes a National Highway for motorsport. Look for #PoweredByMahinndra hashtag and watch live times at @VgoNext on Facebook! The Rally of Arunachal last held in 2018 as INRC leg, Gill and Musa Sherif, the senior most navigator in the country, were leading by a mile when the drive shaft gave away and Amittrajit Ghosh, capitalised on it with both hands. But not before Gill touched a speed of 172-kmph.

    The other champion drivers of last year seeded A to watch out for are talented Dean Mascarenhas and navigator Shrupta Padival, Kerala’s Speed king Dr. Bikku Babu with co-driver Bonnie Thomas, both in INRC2 along with defending overall champion driver Shivram, whose champion co-driver Dilip Sharan will be missing in action. Goa’s Vaibhav Marathe and Suhan MK, of Coorg, the reigning INRC3 champs will be in Honda City with last year’s junior champion Fabid Ahmer, from Palakkad driving with a new co-driver Eldo Chacko from Ernakulam, is expected to provide stiff fight from behind the wheel of a VW Polo INRC3.

    Conducted by Motorsports Club of Arunachal headed by dynamic Lhakpa Tsering and his hardworking team, in association with Ramakrishna Race Performance (RRPM of Kolkata) and promoted by Champions Yacht Club under the able leadership of Vamsi Merla, under the aegis of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (fmsci), the INRC for two-wheelers returns to Itanagar after a hiatus of a year missing the calendar and the Tarmac terrain of 2018 event is still preferred by all the drivers this year too. The sport touched a new height with 43 confirmed entries reaching the North East assisted by supported transportation by road for the cars and by helicopter ride for some lucky drivers and navigators. “This is the first time that sports persons in the country are being taken to the venue by a copter in any sports discipline for a domestic National event, thanks to COVID19 and the concern of the promoter,” said a rally fan of 25-years from Bengaluru.

    Sponsors of Team Vasundhara arrive along with other drivers and co-drivers in Itanagar which saved them an 8-hour drive. On the right: A couple of drivers interact with the captain of the Helicopter in Itanagar on 14 December 20, Photos by David Bodapati

    The 178.22km Special Stage (SS) rally on closed tarmac 4-way highways runs on a short liaison distance of 70.22km under regular road-traffic rules and along with Special Stage distance of 108km at high rally speeds. Gill touched speeds of 190km in 2018. There are two Physical Stages named Chimpu and Hollongi, both 13.8km, run twice each in forward direction and reverse direction form 8 SS for Round 1 and 8SS for round two. `The terrain is very fast and we are expecting fast times and all the arrangements for regular motorsport safety, scrutiny and the current government supervised COVID bio-bubble is being followe,’’ assured Coc Girijashankar Joshi.

    The fmsci National Championship will run for 19 classes with titles for Drivers, Co-drivers and teams in  INRC, INRC2, INRC3, INRC4, INRC NR4 and Indian National Junior Champion driver. The fmsci Gypsy Rally championship will be a support class.

    “Motorsports needs makes us give utmost priority to safety and now COVID19 Standard Operating Procedure (SoP) taught us to be more stringent on important issues like health and all the drivers, support staff are being taken RTPCR tests and a full safe environment being created with utmost care. The terrain is fast and we have 43 top entries from all over the country. The Arunachal Pradesh government and Tourism department all other supporting us and I thank them,” said Lhakpa Tsering, Director of the Meet and the man behind the big event coming to NE one again.

    Team Nutalapati owner Mr Nutalapati Mallikarjuna (left), well-known builder in the Andhra Pradesh capital region of Amaravati and former chairman of Police Housing Board and the name behind the brand Sakthi Herbal Nutpowder Mr Nagalumera (right) of Shetty Industries, agree to pose in front of the copter on Monday. Along with Team Vasundhara, the news sponsors of two women teams, have brightened the rally scene in the absence of regular tyre giants and manufacturers who disappeared from the scene suddenly due to COVID19 effect. Watchout for this space on how promoter, new sponsors and new teams, specially with a focus on Women in motorsport.

  • Anish Shetty clinches top honours on Day 2: MMSC Bike Racing Nationals

    Anish Shetty clinches top honours on Day 2: MMSC Bike Racing Nationals

    Chennai, 12 Dec 2020: Anish Damodar Shetty of Race Concepts, a fitness trainer from Bengaluru, pulled off a brilliant tactical win in the premier Pro-Stock 301-400cc class race in the first round of the MRF MMSC fmsci Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship at the MMRT in Irungattukottai, near here on Saturday.

    Biding his time, Shetty, starting fifth on the grid, made a strong move in the second half of the six-lap race to finished ahead of a strong TVS Racing combination of multiple champion Jagan Kumar and defending champion Deepak Ravikumar who raced nursing an injured knee following a crash during practice session earlier in the week.

    Equally impressive winner today was TVS Racing’s KY Ahamed who held off Eneos Honda Erula Racing riders Mathana Kumar and Rajiv Sethu, in the Pro-Stock 165cc category. Sethu, the Race-1 winner yesterday, could not capitalise on a pole-position start. Ahamed’s victory somewhat compensated for the absence of team-mate and multiple champion Jagan Kumar whose bike stalled on the out-lap before the race.

    Elsewhere, local challenger Aravind Selvam (Rulexx Rockstar Racing) won a tight race in the Novice (Stock 165cc) class while Ann Jennifer (Sparks Racing), also from Chennai, and winner of yesterday’s Race-1, scored another dominant win for a grand double in the Girls (Stock 165cc) category. The race was reduced to three laps following a red flag stoppage due to a crash.

    Bengaluru’s Abhishek Vasudev today roared to victory in both the Open category races of the TVS One-Make Championship organised by the MMSC for a fine treble following his win in Race-1 yesterday while Navneeth Kumar from Puducherry completed a double in the Novice class of the same championship.

    Pune’s Sarthak Chavan, all of 14 years, became the youngest winner of the weekend when he streaked to victory in the Open (NSF 250R) class of the Idemitsu Honda India Talent Cup.

    The results (Provisional – all 6 laps unless mentioned):

    National Championship:

    Pro-Stock 301-400cc (Race-2): 1. Anish Damodara Shetty (Race Concepts) (11mins, 51.346); 2. Jagan Kumar (TVS Racing) (11:54.613); 3. Deepak Ravikumar (TVS Racing) (11:54.705).

    Pro-Stock 165cc (Race-2): 1. KY Ahamed (TVS Racing) (12:17.204); 2. S Mathana Kumar (Eneos Honda Erula Racing) (12:17.281); 3. Rajiv Sethu (Eneos Honda Erula Racing) (12:17.344).

    Novice (Stock 165cc, Race-2): 1. Aravind Selvam (Rulexx Rockers Racing) (13:05.564); 2. Mohan Babu P (Pvt, Chennai) (13:05.743); 3. Seshadri S (Sparks Racing) (13:06.196).

    Girls (Stock 165cc, Race-2, 3 laps): 1. Ann Jennifer (Sparks Racing) (06:40.064); 2. Lani Zena Fernandez (Gusto Racing) (06:48.619); 3. Rakshitha Dave (Gusto Racing) (07:02.282).

    TVS One-Make Championship (Open, Race-2): 1. Abhishek Vasudev (Bengaluru) (11:50.689); 2. Anand R (Chennai) (11:52.682); 3. Vysakh Sobhan (Cherthala) (11:56.357). Race-3: 1. Abhishek Vasudev (11:51.663); 2. Anand R ((11:54.698); 3. Aditya Rao (Bengaluru) (11:56.604).

    Novice (Race-2): 1. Navneeth Kumar (Puducherry) (13:23.998); Mohan Babu (Chennai) (13:27.416); 3. Alwin Sundar (Chennai) (13:27.961).

    Girls (Race-1, 5 laps): 1. Jagruthi Kiran Penkar (Kalyan) (11:36.074); 2. Arpitha VM (Mangaluru) (11:36.085); 3. Jagathishree Kumaresan (Chennai) (11:41.206). Race-2 (5 laps): 1. Jagathishree (11:35.169); 2. Jagruthi Kiran Penkar (11:35.182); 3. Arpitha (11:35.630).

    Idemitsu Honda India Talent Cup: Open (NSF 250R, Race-1): 1. Sarthak Chavan (Pune) (11:13.344); 2. Kavin Quintal (Chennai) (11:13.696); 3. Varoon Sadasivam (Chennai) (11:20.728).

    Novice (CBR 150, Race-1): 1. Shyam Sundar (Chennai) (13:40.109); 2. Prakash Kamat (Bokaro) (13:40.619); 3. Vivek Rohit Kapadia (Belgaum) (13:49.088).

  • Honda racers bring airbags to Indian two-wheeler racing at MMRT

    Honda racers bring airbags to Indian two-wheeler racing at MMRT

    Chennai, 12 Dec 2020: History was made today at the MMRT when for the first time in Indian two-wheeler racing, protective air bags vests were worn by the riders during the first round of the MRF MMSC fmsci Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship 2020.

    The 10 under-18 riders, participating in the Idemitsu Honda India Talent Cup Open (NSF 250R) category, donned the airbag vest that inflates on impact, thus providing additional protection to the racers in the event of a fall.

    The initiative is another big step forward by the Madras Motor Sports Club and Honda Racing to take motorsport to the next level.

    Last year, Honda introduced the Moto3-spec NSF 260R bikes as part of the Talent Cup programme, replacing the Honda CBR250R category, and designed to nurture Indian talent. 

  • KY Ahamed beats mentor Jagan Kumar in TVS 1-2 in Pro-Stock 301-140cc

    KY Ahamed beats mentor Jagan Kumar in TVS 1-2 in Pro-Stock 301-140cc

    Chennai, 11 Dec 2020: KY Ahamed led an emphatic 1-2 finish for TVS Racing as he vanquished his mentor and multiple champion Jagan Kumar to win the premier Pro-Stock 301-400cc race in the first round of the MRF MMSC fmsci Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship at the Madras Motor Race Track at Irrungattukottai, near here, on Friday.

    Later the Madras Motor Sport Club promoted Bike Racing Nationals, saw international Rajiv Sethu bring some cheer to Honda camp with a commanding win from pole position in the Pro-Stock 165cc class race, ahead of Jagan Kumar (TVS Racing) and Mathana Kumar, the other Eneos Honda Erula Racing rider.

    Other winners in the National Championship races of the day were the 22-year old Bengalurean Ullas Santrupt (RACR Castrol Power Racing) in the Novice (Stock 165cc) class and local lass Ann Jennifer of Sparks Racing, who took the honours with ease in the Stock 165cc race for girls.

    Ann Jennifer

    Meanwhile, another Bengalurean, Abshikesh Vasudev chalked up a fluent win in the TVS One Make Championship (Open) and Navneeth Kumar from Puducherry  topped in the Novice category of the same championship,

    In the Pro-Stock 301-400cc race, Ahamed and pole-sitter Jagan fought a thrilling battle with the latter initially in the lead before his team-mate upped his pace to move into the front midway through the six-lap race. Thereafter, the duo opened up a sizeable lead over the rest of the pack for a 1-2 finish for TVS Racing. Completing the podium was Hyderabad’s Karthik Mateti (Gusto Racing).

    The Pro-Stock 165cc race saw Sethu taking a sizeable lead at the start. Behind him, Jagan, Mathana Kumar and Senthil Kumar, the other Eneos Honda Erula Racing rider were involved in a close fight for podium spots. Jagan finally pulled off a brilliant move over Mathana at the last corner of the last lap to finished second.

    Ullas Santrupt- Photos: Anand Philar

    Earlier, starting fifth on the 40-bike Novice race grid, Santrupt clawed his way through the field and eventually forged ahead to win from fellow-Bengalurean Nithin S (Sparks Racing) and privateer Mohan Babu (Chennai) with less than a second separating the trio. The final outcome was in suspense until the last couple of laps with the front-runners dicing hard for positions until Santrupt moved ahead and hung on to his slender lead.

    The results (Provisional – all 6 laps unless mentioned):

    National Championship:

    Pro-Stock 301-400cc (Race-1): 1. KY Ahamed (TVS Racing) (11mins, 47.347secs); 2. Jagan Kumar (TVS Racing) (11:48.059); 3. Karthik Mateti (Gusto Racing) (11:51.430).

    Pro-Stock 165cc (Race-1): 1. Rajiv Sethu (Eneos Honda Erula Racing) (12:08.653); 2. Jagan Kumar (TVS Racing) (12:13.410); 3. S Mathana Kumar (Eneos Honda Erula Racing) (12:13.445).

    Novice (Stock 165cc, Race-1): 1. Ullas Santrupt (RACR Castrol Power Racing) (13:06.057); 2. Nithin S (Sparks Racing) (13:06.281); 3. Mohan Babu (Pvt, Chennai) (13:06.512).

    Girls (Stock 165cc, Race-1, 5 laps): 1. Ann Jennifer (Sparks Racing) (10:58.872); 2. Lani Zena Fernandez (Gusto Racing) (11:14.395); 3. Alisha Abdullah (Sparks Racing) (11:14.456).

    TVS One-Make Championship (Open, Race-1): 1. Abhishek Vasudev (Bengaluru) (11:48.941); 2. Karthik Mateti (Hyderabad) (11:54.768); 3. Anand R (Chennai) (11:54.954). Novice: 1. Navneeth Kumar (Puducherry) (13:20.647); 2. Sudheer Sudhakumar (Delhi) (13:24.196); 3. Teja TVR (Hyderabad) (13:24.218).

    About Madras Motor Sports Club

    Since its humble beginnings in 1953, the Madras Motor Sports Club has grown in stature as the hub of motorsport activity in India. Having moved from Sholavaram to its present location in Sriperumbudur in 1979, MMSC has kept pace with changing times by upgrading facilities. At a cost of about Rs 20 Crore, the MMSC built a pit complex comprising 20 garages, VIP hospitality suites and a viewing gallery, on the eastern side, apart from a second Paddock on the western side with its own short circuit. The Control Room too was upgraded with state-of-the-art hardware while the track itself was improved to meet the exacting FIA standards for Grade-2 certification. The facilities are also extensively used by various vehicle manufacturers for testing their products, displays and corporate days.

  • MMSC set to host India’s biggest bike racing weekend

    MMSC set to host India’s biggest bike racing weekend

    Chennai, 9 Dec 2020: Big grids, a massive card of 29 races and over 200 entries mark the first round of the MRF MMSC fmsci Indian National Motorcycle Racing Championship 2020 which gets underway at the MMRT, here on Friday, behind closed doors, and in what is the biggest domestic racing weekend in India.

    Due to the pandemic and consequent restrictions, the 2020 two-wheeler racing championship has been packed into two back-to-back weekends (Dec 11-13 and Dec 18-20) with competitions in 10 categories.

    The National Championship comprises two Pro-Stock classes – the premier 301-400cc and 165cc – besides two Stock 165cc categories – Novice, which will have a grid of 40 riders, and Girls.

    Also in the mix are two One-Make Championships organised by the MMSC – the Idemitsu Honda India Talent Cup (CBR 150cc and NSF 250R) and TVS One-Make Championship (RTR 310 Open, Novice, Girls and Media).

    MMSC have left no stone unturned in ensuring that not only all Covid-19 safety protocols are followed, but also to deal with the challenges posed by the unpredictable weather by providing grooved tyres also for the Pro-Stock categories.

    Having endured a 15-month break since the 2019 season, the racers are chafing at the bit with all of country’s top riders lining up as also India’s leading bike manufacturers, Honda, TVS, Yamaha and KTM.

    MMSC president Ajit Thomas said: “We are just bowled over by the response from the riders, especially the first-timers. Two-wheeler championship has always produced exciting and close races, and we expect much the same in the two rounds that we are organising this month. Due to the pandemic, lockdown and restrictions, the racing season was put on hold until last month when we squeezed in two rounds of races to complete the four-wheeler championship. Over the next two weekends, the safety protocols would be very much in place despite easing of restrictions and the events will be held behind closed doors.”

     About Madras Motor Sports Club

    Since its humble beginnings in 1953, the Madras Motor Sports Club has grown in stature as the hub of motorsport activity in India. Having moved from Sholavaram to its present location in Sriperumbudur in 1979, MMSC has kept pace with changing times by upgrading facilities. At a cost of about Rs 20 Crore, the MMSC built a pit complex comprising 20 garages, VIP hospitality suites and a viewing gallery, on the eastern side, apart from a second Paddock on the western side with its own short circuit. The Control Room too was upgraded with state-of-the-art hardware while the track itself was improved to meet the exacting FIA standards for Grade-2 certification. The facilities are also extensively used by various vehicle manufacturers for testing their products, displays and corporate days.

  • JK Tyre Racing Nationals at Kari Speedweay

    JK Tyre Racing Nationals at Kari Speedweay

    Coimbatore, 9 Dec 2020: The Kari Motor Speedway in Chettipalayam in Coimbatore will hear the familiar roar of Formula cars as the much-awaited 23rd JK Tyre FMSCI National Racing Championship (JKNRC) gets under way here on Friday.
    The organisers have put in place stringent protocols, matching international standards, to ensure that the back to back rounds are held with the safety, comfort and convenience of all the teams, drivers, their support staff, officials and media in mind. “We have studied and followed every precaution prescribed by the world as well as national governing bodies to make sure that the championship is conducted smoothly,” Sanjay Sharma, Head-Motorsport, JK Tyre said. “In these unprecedented times we are delighted that we could host such an important event in the FMSCI calendar,” he added.

    JKNRC this season will witness two categories – The National championship class on JK Formula LGB 4, an Indian manufactured single seater racing car weighing 450 kg with 1.3 litre engine and JK Tyre Novice Cup for rookie drivers on a similar looking formula 1300s but with different chassis design and suspension geometry. The former has attracted 26 of the country’s best drivers while the latter has more than 20.

    There will be 12 races over three days, with each day witnessing four races (including two qualifying rounds on Day 1) that will test not only the speed but also the fitness and endurance of the drivers coupled with technical package put together by the teams.

    As in the past, an all-women’s team from Ahura racing will also be in fray adding to flowing of adrenaline on the track.

    The top racers of the country, including Vishnu Prasad, Raghul Rangasamy and Mira Erda (MSport), Ashwin Datta and T.S. Diljith (Dark Don Racing), and Chirag Ghorpade (Momentum Motorsport) to name a few will be in fray, battling for the honours.

    The pomp and gaiety that comes as a package with every JK Tyre Racing Championship will however be missing this time around in adherence of safety regulations.

    Among the key steps taken to battle COVID-19, the organisers will have clear dos and don’ts s right from the main entry gate to all the way up to the track. The pits too have been extended considerably to ensure social distancing.

    Local officials will be helping with bulk of the work to avoid too many visitors from other cities and states.

    The documentation and scrutiny will be on Thursday, followed by a compulsory drivers’ briefing towards the end of the day.

    Friday will witness official practice sessions, qualifying rounds and two races in each category followed by four races on Saturday and Sunday.

    For the sake of race lovers, who have always thronged the circuit in large numbers, the event will be streamed live on Sunday so that they don’t miss the action. Viewers can watch the races on:
    www.jktyremotorsport.com/live
    Facebook.com/jktyremotorsport
    Youtube.com/jktyremotorsport

    About JK Tyre Motorsport:
    JK Tyre has been closely associated with the world of motorsports for almost three decades back. The company laid down a long term plan to popularise and promote the sport in the country. Its first target was to change the notion that this was a sport for the elite. So it packaged and redesigned it in a spectator-friendly way, drawing the
    masses to the sport.

    The company then endeavored to spot, nurture and sharpen the drivers to turn them into world champions. With this goal in mind, we conceptualized the JK Tyre National Racing Champion in 1997. Our efforts started paying dividends in just a few years’ time, with the likes of Narain Karthikeyan and Karun Chandok going all the way to the F1 rung, the highest level of single-seat racing in the world. Since then, a number of stars emerged, including Armaan Ebrahim, the Maini brothers (Kush and Arjun), Anindith Reddy Konda, amongst many others. 

    Before all this, JK Tyre had a successful stint in rallying too, conquering the scene in the early 90s. At the same time, gradually, we moved on to various disciplines, including cross-country rallying and off-roading, leaving a mark in each of them with their unique and innovative ways. JK Tyre Motorsports is also very proud of the role it has played in bringing women into motorsports in a big way. Apart from encouraging them to get into the sport through karting as kids, we also gave them opportunities in various national championships. Last year was particularly rewarding for us as an All-Women Racing team was introduced for the first time in the LGB 4 category. In addition, the company also undertook various other initiatives to encourage them to try motorsports, even if for fun to begin with.  

    To supplement JK Tyre’s entry into the two-wheeler market, the JKNRC hosted the Suzuki Gixxer Cup and the Red Bull Road to Rookies Cup categories and saw enthusiastic participation from across the country. Today, the company is synonymous with motorsports, and even more so with racing, creating a lot of goodwill for
    the brand. Right from budding racers to accomplished drivers in the country, everybody owes their rise and
    success to JK Tyre.  

  • Suhail Ahmed hogs limelight; DNF for Rajendra again: 2w K1000

    Suhail Ahmed hogs limelight; DNF for Rajendra again: 2w K1000

    By David Bodapati

    Bengaluru, 6 Dec 2020: Privateer with no sponsor, Suhail Ahmed, astride a KTM 450EXC, stunned the top guns with another good performance to take the overall lead in the championship while defending champion Rajendra RE logged another DNF in the second round of the MRF Mogrip fmsci Indian National Rally Championship for bikes where TVS Racing continued its domination in the other Group B classes in the K-1000 rally here on Sunday.

    Organised by Karnataka Motor Sports Club (KMSC), one of the oldest active members of Federation of Motors Sports Clubs of India (fmsci), its flagship K1000 rally is promoted by God Speed Racing of Pune, the COVID19 guidelines were followed and medical partner MEDISPRO sanitised the bikes and provided safety guidance including masks and sanitisers.

    “Overall experience was great and I enjoyed this round especially with my riding and the bike on these fast and tricky stages. The Tribal Special Stage was a bit technical with a jump after a huge elevation dip and bend and some tight corners while the first physical stage, Kaadu suited me as it was fast with flowing corners. I am buoyed now and looking forward to the Coimbatore round to increase my lead,” said the Bengaluru rider, astride a KTM 450 EXC.

    Rajendra, who lost the opening round in Puttur, suffered an engine failure in SS3 after taking the initial lead in the first two Special Stages and his teammate Nataraj, who could only finish overall 8th won the Group A Superbike Pro-Expert class, which has only two bikes. “It was a bad day again. My engine gave up after I was 2km into SS 3 but I am looking forward to bouncing back as we still have 100 points to fight for in four rounds,” said the defending champion who is on a hat-trick of titles if he claims the championship this year too. The Shimoga rider who spearheads the TVS Racing campaign on an Apache RTR 200 clocked the second-fastest stage time for both Tribal SS (8: 58.722) and Kaadu SS (7:47.160). Through the six stages in the day no one beat his times except Suhail who clocked 8:55.906 in SS1 and went on to perform better and better. He rode the same stage in 8:46.078 (SS3) and 8:42.714 (SS5) as they were run alternately. For the Kaadu Stage, he clocked 7min 46.341sec in the first run (SS2) and dipped it to 7:41.902 in SS4, the second run and eased off in the final SS6 timing 7:51.851 for a comfortable victory as he becomes K1000 Overall Champion, a credit many riders crave for and joins the Hall of Fame with the likes of multiple-champion and legends like Jagat Nanjappa and CK Chinnappa. Suhail Ahmed is the defending champion in Class 6 for SuperSport 55cc.

    Arun T, who won the Class 3, in action, on Sunday – K1000 2w INRC

    Suhail, the fastest rider of the day apart from Overall honours, also bagged his class Group A Superbike Expert class. TVS Racing redeemed their pride bagging three of the eight classes in Group B with Baja World Cupper Aishwarya Pissay and Syed Asif Ali continuing their domination in the Ladies class and Scooter class respectively. Sachin D, another professional rider with TVS Racing, delivered another well-deserved win in SuperSport 260cc class.

    Varun Kumar A who won Class 2 in K1000, the Round 2 of INRC for 2w at Tribal Adventure Cafef on Sunday. Photo by David Bodapati

    But it was Star of Karnataka rider Stephen Roy, the unsung hero on Sunday, as he beat many a stalwart taking 10th overall. Varun Kumar, Arun T, Sajeesh Reghunathan and Naresh VS were the winners in other Group B classes.

    Naresh VS, known as Bruce Lee, among the fraternity, astride the solid-looking Himalayan also clocked cautious times in the first two stages on the first run and then switched up gears to deliver knock-out speeds before relaxing for a facile win with almost a two-minute lead, which may translate into more than 2km lead. “I am on a high and the feeling is definitely great for two reasons: I am participating after a gap of a year in any event, rally or race. Secondly, in my 10-year riding career, I am riding the Bullet Himalayan for the first time. And finishing first in both the rounds makes me very happy and leading the INRC championship in this class with an overall 11th position is a bonus. I am working hard to continue the same pace and look forward to clocking better times in the rounds to come,” quipped Naresh, the Lee, who is on a Himalyan high, after two wins.

    Of the 70 entries received, 68 bikes started the rally and 3 were disqualified while 13 failed to finish the 48.48 km Special Stage distance which included two Stages that were run thrice each.

    Naresh VS aka Bruce Lee winning Class 6 in the INRC Round 2, K1000 on Sunday. A David photo

    Provisional Final Results (Round 2 – 6 Special Stages)

    (Privateer if team is not mentioned; Karnataka if State not mentioned)

    Overall: 1. Suhail Ahmed (Bengaluru) (Privateer) (KTM 450EXC) (49 minutes, 44.598 seconds); 2. Sachin D (Bengaluru) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR 200 4v(49:51.536); 3. Samuel Shajan Jacob (Mangalore) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR 200 4v) (51:12.785).

    Group A:

    Class 1: Superbike Pro-Expert: 1. Nataraj R (Kanakapura, Bengaluru) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR200) (52:50.844); 2. Rajendra RE (Shimoga)(TVS Racing) (Apache RTR200) (DNF in SS3);

    Class 1A: Superbike Expert: 1.  Suhail Ahmed (Bengaluru) (Privateer) (KTM 450EXC) (49:44.598); 2. Sharath Mohan (Malappuram, Kerala) (Suzuki RMX 450Z) (52:01.686); 3. Asad Khan (Chikkamagalur) (Suzuki RMX 450Z) (52:21.017).

    Group B:

    Class 2: Super Sport upto 130cc: 1. Varun Kumar A (Bengaluru) (Yamaha YBX) (58:50.342); 2. Nithesh G Poojary (Mangalore) (Honda CBF Stunner) (1:00:21.715); 3. Rakesh Kumar V (Bengaluru) (Yamaha YBX)  (01:01:06.161).

    Class 3: Super Sport 165cc: 1. Arun T (Hassan) (Hero Impulse) (54:48.775); 2. Francis PV (Chikkamagaluru) (Hero Impulse) (55:29.837); 3. Ahmed Abrar (Mysuru) (Hero) (56:01.513).

    Class 4: Super Sport 260cc: 1.Sachin D (Bengaluru) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR 200 4v) (49:51.536); 2. Samuel Shajan Jacob (Mangaluru) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR 200 4v) (51:12.785); 3. Yuva Kumar (Bengaluru) (Hero MotoSports) (Hero Xpulse) (52:22.727)

    Class 5: Super Sport 400cc: 1. Sajeesh Reghunathan (Bengaluru) (KTM Duke) (56:52.044); 2. Harish S (Bengaluru) (KTM Duke 390) (58:08.696); 3. Karthikeyan D (Coimbatore, TN) (KTM Duke 390) (1:02:16.020).

    Class 6: Super Sport 550cc: 1. Naresh VS (Bengaluru) (Himalayan) (54:30.919); 2. Sharath Kumar (Bengaluru) (Bullet) (56:29.533); 3. Arun Joy M (Ernakulam, Kerala) (Himalayan) (57:26.009).

    Class 7: S0 to S3 Scooter 210cc: 1. Syed Asif Ali (Bhopal, MP) (TVS Racing) (NTorq125) (57:43.255); 2. Karthik N (Bengaluru) (Privateer) (Bike: TVS) (57:57.044); 3. Shamin Islam Khan (Nashik, Maharashtra) (TVS Racing) (NTorq125) (58:21.325).

    Class 8: Ladies Class: 1. Aishwarya Pissay M (Bengaluru) (TVS Racing) (Apache RTR 200 4v) (59:20.729); 2. Tanika Shanbag (Satara, Maharashtra) (Hero Impulse) (1:00:12.227); 3. A Ryhana Bee (Chennai) (Hero Impulse) (1:09:23.693).

    Star of Kanataka: 1. Stephen Roy (??) (Hero Xpulse 200) (54:21.090); 2. Dhanush P (Kodagu, Karnataka) (Hero Xpulse) (59:23.719); 3. Syed Thowhid (??) (Hero Xpulse) (1:03:53.947).

    (Editor’s note: Revised results and report edited on 8Dec2020. Riders who want to the contact INDIAinF1 can reach us through WhatsApp on 98455 69496 for editing factual errors. Thanks)

  • K-1000 for bikes, the 2nd round of INRC, flagged off after Recce

    K-1000 for bikes, the 2nd round of INRC, flagged off after Recce

    By David Bodapati

    Bengaluru, 5 Dec 2020: Defending champion Rajendra RE of TVS Racing will be looking to bounce back at the popular K-1000 rally, the second round of the God Speed Racing MRF fmsci Indian National Rally Championship for bikes which was flagged off here at the Tribal Adventure Cafe on Saturday.

    Organised by Karnataka Motor Sports Club (KMSC), one of the oldest active founder members of the Federation of Motors Sports Clubs of India (fmsci), has been running the K1000 for over four decades and with 2W rally being revived in recent years, KMSC, is once again in the thick of action with God Speed Racing as promoters of the 2w Rally Nationals.

    Raghavendra, Senior District Manager of MRF, flagged off the rally. “KMSC has taken all the precautions and the rally is being organised with all safety precautions under strict guidelines as prescribed by the Sports Ministry and the Federation,” said Sanjeev Shah, General Secretary of KMSC.

    Rajendra, who lost the premium class race in Group A to teammate Samuel Shajan Jacob at Puttur in the first round recently, is raring to go. The talented multi-national champion suffered a rare setback and will be astride a Apache RTR 200cc but his teammate Jacob will be eager to do an encore to increase his points tally. TVS Racing once again looks strong in other classes too, and has a World Cup champion in Aishwarya Pissay, who will be defending her title in the Ladies class and has already bagged the first round with a huge lead. Ryhana Bee the runner up and who recently won the Sprint Nationals round will be putting up a fight with three other girls in the fray.

    With reigning champion Syed Asif Ali and Pinkesh Thakkar suffering mechanical issues, another TVS Racing rider Shamim Khan won the first round in the Scooter Class which is usually dominated by TVS Racing as they sweep the podium in every round. One has to watch if the likes of Karthik, who took a podium in Round 1, can get up to speed here.

    Asad Khan, the winner in  Class 1A in Puttur will also look to consolidate his position. KMSC received 70 entries. The two physical stages, Tribal (8.01km) and Kaadu (8.15km), will be run thrice, to make it 48.48km of Special Stage distance. Along with transport (liaison) distance of a bit less than 120km, the total distance of the rally is 168.33km. Both the stages and the parc ferme, are at the Tribal Adventure Cafe, near Devanahalli.