Category: Non-F1

  • Samuel Jacob clinches Overall National Title; Aishwarya retains National Ladies title: INRC 2w

    Samuel Jacob clinches Overall National Title; Aishwarya retains National Ladies title: INRC 2w

    Hampi (Karnataka), 31 Jan 2021: Samuel Sajan Jacob clinched the National Championship title while defending champion Aishwarya Pissay sealed the Ladies class once again in style with a huge margin in the fourth and final round of the God Speed Racing MRF MoGrip Indian National Rally Championship (INRC) for two-wheelers 2020 organised by Motorsports Academy of Vijayanagar under the aegis of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (FMSCI) here on Sunday.

    TVS Racing’s RE Rajendra won the Super Bike Pro-Expert Class while Samuel Jacob continued his winning run in the Super Sport 260cc Group B class to clinch the Championship in his class.

    TVS Racing also continued their domination in the Ladies Class with Aishwarya Pissay consolidating her position with another facile win but the Hosur company lost their grip in the scooter field which was won by a TVS rider Karthik N but a privateer displaced the established order taking the second place. Ninganna M Handral from Bengaluru, astride a TVS N Torq was streets ahead of Pinkesh Thakkar of TVS Racing. TVS Racing has been sweeping this class for some time now.

    Asad Khan who won the Super Bike Expert Class Group A in the Hampi round on Sunday.

    The Bullet class was dominated by Himalayans again with three Bengaluru riders sweeping the podium. Privateer Sharath Kumar finished ahead of SD Vishwas and Abhijeet Sarkar even as Naresh was disqualified.

    Provisional Results:

    Class 1: Super Bike Pro-Expert Group A: 1. #2 Rajendra RE, Hosur (TVS Racing – Apache RTR) (1hour, 9min, 53.686seconds); 2. #1 Nataraj R, Bengaluru (TVS Racing – Apache RTR) (1:11:26.388); 3. #47 Nikhil B, Kodagu (Privateer – Yamaha WR) (1:14:27.967).4. #3; Vinay Prasad, Bengaluru, Hero Xpulse (DNF). 4 Riders took part in this class.

    Class 1A: Super Bike Expert Group A: 1. #4 Asad Khan, Chickmagaluru (Pvt – Suzuki RMX 450) (1:13:29.709); 2. #5 Sarath Mohan, Mallapuram (Pvt – Suzuki RMX 450) (1:15:49.166); 3. #7 Amarenda Sathe, Pune (Pvt – TVS Apache) (1:27:37.014).

    Class 2: Super Sport 130cc, Group B: 1. #8 Varun Kumar A, Bengaluru (Pvt – Yamaha YBX) (1:23:03.313); 2. #9 Syed Kalaam, Bengaluru (Pvt – Yamaha YBX) (1:31:36.279); Only two of the four riders finished.

    Class 3: Super Sport165cc Group B: 1. #17 PV Francis, Chickmagalur (Pvt – Hero Impulse) (1:17:31.427); 2. #18 Shoeb Mohamed Khan, Mysuru (Pvt – Hero Impulse) (1:18:54.571); 3. #10 Abrar Ahmed, Mysuru (Pvt – Hero Impulse) (1:19:33.674). 5 of 7 riders finished the class.

    Class 4: Super Sport 260cc Group B: 1. #19 Samuel Jacob, Hosur (TVS Racing – Apache RTR) (1:11:01.565); 2. #21 J Imran Pasha, Mysuru (TVS Racing – Apache RTR) (1:11:15.009); 3. #22 Yuva Kumar, Bengaluru (Pvt – Hero Xpulse) (1:14:59.028). 8 of 9 riders finished the class.

    Class 5: Super Sport 400cc Group B: 1. #29 Sajeesh Reghunathan, Bengaluru (Pvt – KTM Duke 390) (1:23:31.810); 2. #30 Harish S,  Bengaluru (Pvt – KTM Duke 390) (1:23:32.588 – Including 1:00 penalty); Only 2 of 4 riders in the class finished.

    Class 6: Super Sport 550cc Group B: 1. #34 Sarath Kumar S, Bengaluru (Pvt – Himalayan) (1:18:28.232); 2. #31 Vishwas SD, Bengaluru (Pvt- Himalayan) (1:19:20.126); 3. #35 Abhijeet Sarkar, Bengaluru (Pvt – Himalayan) (1:33:11.197). 3 out of 4 riders finished, 4th rider Naresh VS Disqualified (Dsq).

    Class 7: So S3 Scooter 210 Group B: 1. #39 Karthik N, Hosur (TVS Racing -TVS N Torq) (1:22:15.338); 2. #38 Ninganna M Handral, Bengaluru (Pvt -TVS N Torq) (1:23:39.334); 3. #36 Pinkesh Thakkar (TVS Racing -TVS N Torq) (1:30:21.819). 3 out of 5 riders finished. One DNF, one DSQ.

    Class 8: Ladies Class: Group B: 1. #41 Aishwarya Pissay, Bengaluru (TVS Racing – Apache RTR) (1:20:30.772); 2. #43 Tanika Shanbhag, Satara (Pvt – Hero Xpulse) (1:23:03.591); 3. #42 Ryhana Bee, Chennai (Pvt – TVS Apache) (1:25:06.192). All 3 riders finished.

    Non championship Class: Star of Karnataka: 1. #52 Stephen Roy RA, Kushalanagar (Pvt – Hero Impulse) (1:17:39.868); 2. #49 MD Ansar, Bengaluru (Pvt – Hero Impulse) (1:21:49.531); 3. #45 Akshay Raje Urs, Mysuru (Pvt – Hero Xpulse) (1:22:23.201). 6 of 7 riders finished. One DNF.

    Overall Points table at the end of fourth and final round in Hampi

    MRF MoGrip Indian National Rally Championship for 2w (INRC) 2020

    #NamePositionFinal Points
    1SAMUEL SAJAN JACOB183
    2IMRAN PASHA J248
    3RAJENDRA  R E343
    4ASAD KHAN438
    5SACHIN D536
    6YUVA KUMAR634
    7NATARAJ R731
    8SUHAIL AHMED829
    9SARATH MOHAN920
    10SANJAY SOMASHEKAR1017
    11NIKHIL B118
    12NARESH V S126
    13SINAN FRANCIS132
    14RAKESH N132
    15TRINESH V132
    16ARMUGAM SATHYARAJ132
    17SUDEEP KOTTARY141
    18STEPHEN ROY151
    19FRANCIS P V161

    Note: As received from God Speed Racing, prooters of MRF MoGrip INRC 2w 2020

  • Gaurav Gill joins exclusive club in INRC Hall of Fame! Musa Sherif, first navigator to do 293 rallies

    Gaurav Gill joins exclusive club in INRC Hall of Fame! Musa Sherif, first navigator to do 293 rallies

    Bengaluru, 1 Feb 2021: Following are the Statistics of the Indian National Rally Championship after the end of the third round of the four-round INRC 2020 calendar which is pushed to 2021 due to the COVID pandemic.

    Gaurav Gill and Musa Sherif have been together for 63 Rallies out of which they finished 39 Rallies, notching up 38 podiums and 36 victories. Gill was behind the wheel of a Mitsubishi Cedia for his first three titles while the last four came through the bulky Mahindra XUV.

    Musa Sherif becomes the leading co-driver with the highest number of rallies, finishing his 293rd rally in the third round at Coimbatore, consecutively calling the notes for 29 years. He has navigated for 47 drivers in that period. These 293 rallies include over 150 rallies in INRC.

    INRC Titles from 1988 – 2020

    Driver’s Championship winners – After INRC got the National Championship status in 1988

     Driver’s NameNumber of titlesYears wonRemarks
    1Gaurav Singh GillSeven (7)2007, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2017, 2018, 2020 
    2V Naren KumarSeven (7)1999, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2010 
    3N LeelakrishnanSix (6)1990, 1991, 1992, 1993, 1998, 2001 
    4Hari SinghFour (4)1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 
    5Farad BhatheenaTwo (2)1988, 1989 
    6Vikram MathiasTwo (2)2004, 2008, 
    7Amittrajit GhoshTwo (2)2012, 2013, 
    8Lohit UrsOne (1)2015, 
    9Karna KadurOne (1)2016, 
    10Chethan ShivramOne (1)2019, 

    Co-Drivers’ Championship winners

     Driver’s NameNumber of titlesYears wonRemarks
    1Musa SherifSeven (7)2007, 2009, 2011, 2014, 2017, 2018, 2020 
    2D Ram KumarSix (6)2000, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2010 
    3Gurinder Singh MannFour (4)1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 
    4N MahendranThree (3)1991, 1992, 1993, 
    5Farooq AhmedThree (3)1998, 1999, 2001, 
    6Raj BagriTwo (2)1988, 1989, 
    7Ashwin NaikTwo (2)2012, 2013, 
    8CV JayakumarOne (1)1990, 
    9Sujith Kumar BSOne (1)2004, 
    10PVS MurhtyOne (1)2008, 
    11Shrikanth GMOne (1)2015, 
    12Nikhil PaiOne (1)2016, 
    13Dilip SharanOne (1)2019 

    Drivers, Co-Drivers and Teams that won the National Championship from 1988
    YearDriver & Co-DriverTeamCarTuner
    11988Farad Bathena/ Raj BagriTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)Mohinder Lalwni
    21989Farad Bathena/ Raj BagriTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)J Anand
    31990N Leelakrishnan/ CV JaykumarTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)N Leelakrishnan
    41991N Leelakrishnan/ N MahendranTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)N Leelakrishnan
    51992N Leelakrishnan/ N MahendranTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)N Leelakrishnan
    61993N Leelakrishnan/ N MahendranTeam MRFMaruti Gypsy Group II (A)N Leelakrishnan
    71994Hari Singh/ Gurinder Singh MannJK Tyre Rally TeamMaruti Gypsy Group A-1-AS Karivardhan
    81995Hari Singh/ Gurinder Singh MannJK Tyre Rally TeamMaruti Gypsy Group A-1-AS Karivardhan
    91996Hari Singh/ Gurinder Singh MannJK Tyre Rally TeamMaruti Esteem Group A-1-APNR Satish
    101997Hari Singh/ Gurinder Singh MannJK Tyre Rally TeamMaruti Esteem Group A-1-AWSRF
    111998N Leelakrishnan/ Farooq AhmedTeam MRFMaruti Esteem Group A-1-AN Leelakrishnan
    121999VR Naren Kumar/ Farooq AhmedTeam MRFMaruti Esteem Group AN Leelakrishnan
    132000VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KumarTeam MRFMaruti Baleno Group AN Leelakrishnan
    142001N Leelakrishnan/ Farooq AhmedTeam MRFHonda City Group AN Leelakrishnan
    152002VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KumarTeam MRFHonda City Group AN Leelakrishnan
    162003VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KUmarTeam MRFHonda City Group AN Leelakrishnan
    172004Vikram Mathias/ Sujith Kumar BSTeam MRFHonda City Group AN Leelakrishnan
    182005VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KumarJK Rally TeamMaruti Baleno Group NN Leelakrishnan
    192006VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KumarJK Rally TeamMaruti Baleno Group NN Leelakrishnan
    202007Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifTeam MRFMitsubishi Cedia Group NJ Anand
    212008Vikram Mathias/ PVS MurthyRed Rooster RacingMitsubishi Cedia Group N+N Leelakrishnan
    222009Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifTeam MRFMitsubishi Cedia Group N+J Anand
    232010VR Naren Kumar/ D Ram KumarRed Rooster RacingMitsubishi Cedia Group N+N Leelakrishnan
    242011Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifMRFMitsubishi Cedia Group N+J Anand
    252012Amittrajit Ghosh/ Ashwin NaikRRPMMitsubishi Cedia Group NB Rajan
    262013Amittrajit Ghosh/ Ashwin NaikRRPMMitsubishi Cedia Group NB Rajan
    272014Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifMahindra AdventureMahindra XUV 500N Leelakrishnan
    282015Lohitt V Urs/ Shrikanth GowdaMRU Motorsport Mitsubishi Cedia Evo8 Mohamed Rafiq Udaya
    292016Karna Kadur/ Nikhil V PaiTeam Yokohama IndiaVolkswagen Polo Group NN Leelakrishnan
    302017Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifMahindra AdventureMahindra XUV 500N Leelakrishnan
    312018Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifMahindra AdventureMahindra XUV 500N Leelakrishnan
    322019Chetan Shivram/ Dilip SharanTeam Akshara RacingVolkswagen PoloFazil Khan, FRK
    332020Gaurav Gill/ Musa SherifJK Tyre Racing teamMahindra XUV 300N Leelakrishnan
    342021

  • Gaurav Gill wins record 7th INRC title; equals Naren Kumar’s feat; surpasses Leela’s

    Gaurav Gill wins record 7th INRC title; equals Naren Kumar’s feat; surpasses Leela’s

    By David Bodapati

    Coimbatore, 31 Jan 2021: Gaurav Gill and experienced navigator Musa Sherif, clinched their 7th National title in the Rally of Coimbatore, the third and penultimate round of the Champions Yacht Club fmsci Indian National Rally Championship 2020 (INRC), with a round to spare here on Sunday.

    Gill equalled the record of Naren Kumar’s seven National titles and surpassed Narayanaswamy Leelakrishnan (6), his current tuner. Incidentally, Gill also won three FIA Asia Pacific Rally Championship titles and he has also taken part in the World Rally Championship in WRC2 class.

    Gill garnered 116 points from three rounds and with only K-1000 with a maximum of 39 points on offer, left in the calendar, Gill has sealed the championship with a round to spare. Here in Coimbatore, Gill’s XUV 300 turbo suffered from electrical issues and he struggled to do even 100 Kmph.

    Yet, Gill won five of the six stages and despite having electrical issues from the very beginning that hampered his speed, he brought home his limping car to get him the latest National title that put him on a pinnacle.

    Dr Speed Bikku Babu takes a right-hander in SS5 on Sunday. Babu finished 2nd overall and first in his class in the Round 3 of the Indian National Rally Championship.
    Gaurav Gill, left and Musa Sherif, who won the seventh National title together

    “Yes, the stages were very narrow and rough terrain which made it highly technical. This year the stage distance was increased and now it is one of the longest (over 19 Kms) stages in Indian rallies, so the route became very tough. But I like it because, it is always nice to win the Stages which are tough and demanding. I did suffer initial hiccups but as the saying goes, it is nice to conquer things when the going gets tough,” quipped Gill.

    The Arjuna Awardee and Delhi-based driver, who is nick-named the King of Indian Motorsports, is truly a force to reckon with, and had he progressed to the WRC earlier than he did, in his peak, India and FMSCI would now have boasted of a World Champion.

    But all is not lost as Gill still dreams of WRC, and the champion in him is eager to produce big results. For now, he will be taking part in the FIA Asia Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) again with the first round of 2021 season in Chennai from 26 to 28 March. It will be run simultaneously for Asia Cup and South India Rally as the 2021 INRC Round, provided the calendar is approved by FMSCI for INRC.

    Meanwhile, two entrants from Kerala, “Dr Speed” Bikku Babu, who is maturing like old wine, won in the INRC 2 class and “Mr Clean” Fabid Ahmer topped the INRC 3 category, to make up for a bad outing in Itanagar. Ahmer managed to recoup, fight and get back with his clean-and-steady driving to lead the championship once again by eight points in INRC3.

    Dean Mascarenhas, who retired with a gear box failure, still leads the championship in INRC2 with one round to go. The A seeded driver, Babu, and B seeded Ahmer, are not the only drivers from the stable of Chettinad Sporting, as the Goa-Coorg combination of Vaibhav Marathe, a product of Champions Group, won INRC 4 class, along with co-driver Suhan M Kabir. The duo clinched the issue after some hiccups in Round 1 at Itanagar. The Champions Yacht Club Director in Goa, Marathe, is leading the championship table in his class with a podium in Round 2 and a win here.

    Dr Speed Bikku Babu, left, and Bonny Thomas, INRC Overall second and INRC2 winners in the Rally of Coimbatore on Sunday. Photo by David Bodapati

    The Team which hogged limelight on the day was Chettinad Sporting, led by Thyagarajan and Roshan, the men behind the cars’ performance. The team won three out of four Championship classes and had one more podium to boost as a bonus. It was in 2014 in Nashik that the team had swept all the classes but one, and today is a great day for a team which started its journey with South India Rally in 1996 and went on to field two cars for the rally in Coorg in 2007, where Chettinad Sporting had a good presence with their blue colour dominating the car livery. And today, after 25 years, they came out with flying colours with three wins. “Three cheers to all the mechanics, the drivers, co-drivers and the men who believed in them who made the journey possible… For us, drivers and co-drivers are always the heroes and all praise should go to them,” said Thyagarajan.

    Gill, too, has played no less a role, as both Bikku Babu and FabidAhmer were part of his Rally School and learnt the tricks of the trade to blossom and perform to their potential. Chettinad Sporting provieds technical support to Gill’s academy in the Kethanur windmill farms near Coimbatore.

    Meanwhile, defending champion Chethan Shivram with a new navigator in Shahid Salman, in his Volkswagon Polo 1.6 bereft of the usual LSD, still managed to finish fourth overall and second in his class which is a big achievement. But the luck that deserted with Dilip Sharan, who is now navigating for Rakesh Shukla in an Esteem, may have dampened the spirit, but the champ in Shivram continues to fight for honours with K-1000 still on the radar. Chetan and his brother Dilip had won the 2019 championship with FRK led by Fazal Khan tuning the car, for Team Akshara Racing, as they got into the exclusive club of 10 Overall INRC winners in 32 years.

    Vaibhav Marathe and Suhan Kabir bring Yokohama their first class win in ten years with their last title coming in 2010 for Red Rooster Racing. Photo by David Bodapati

    Harikrishna Wadi and co-driver Chirag Thakur put their Honda City on top in the Junior INRC category and 11th overall, while Pragathi Gowda, driving with a new navigator in her third rally, in Trisha Jagannath, came second in their VW Polo. Mysore lad Rakshith Iyer and co-driver Chandrasekhar were third in Junior class in an Esteem.

    Sanjay Razdan and navigator Karan Aukta won the Gypsy Challenge with veteran Sanjay Agarwal and co-driver Smitha Prasad taking second and the pair of Divyanshu Vyas and VenuRemesh Kumar third.

    In the Ladies Class, 27-year debutante Athira Murali of Kottayam won the Round 3 in an INRC4 Esteem along with co-driver George Varghese, despite losing a lot of time due to a slower car ahead which had technical issues. Another lady driver from the north, Amandeep Kaur, who is also making her debut in the INRC, came second, with ever-smiling navigator Mohit Malik in a Baleno ahead of mother-daughter pair of doctors in Dr Shivani Pruthvi and Dr Deepthi Pruthvi, from Davangere in Karnataka, who finished on the podium, despite some issues with the car, in this class.

    Of the 59 cars that took the start on Day 1, only 33 cars completed the rally and 26 failed to finish. The fourth and last round of the delayed 2020 INRC 2020, K-1000, is scheduled to be run by Karnataka Motor Sports Club (KMSC) from 12 to 14 February, 2021.

    Unaudited Provisional Results: (Round 3 after Sunday’s six Special Stages):

    Overall: 1. Gaurav Gill/ Musa Sherif (Mahindra Adventure3 00) (1hour, 27min, 56.700seconds); 2. Dr Speed – Bikku Babu/ Bonnie Thoma (VW Polo) (1:29:21.100); 3. Fabid Ahmer/ Eldo Chacko (JK Tyre) (VW Polo) (01:29:57.200); 4. Chetan Shivram /Shahid Salman (VW Polo) (01:31.05.500); 5. Aditya Thakur/ Virendra Keshyap (VW Polo) (1:31:36.700); 6. Ritesh Guttedar M/  Lokaranjan HJ (VW Polo) (01:31:43.600); 7. Sahil Khanna /Vidit Jain (Snap Racing) (VW Polo) (01:32:54.200); 8. Maninder Singh Prince/ Vinay Padmashali (JK Tyre – VW Polo) (1:32:57.400); 9. Phillippos Mathai/ Kumar Ramasamy (Mahindra XUV 500) (1:33:18.600); 10. Mohammed Kasim/ Sanath G (VW Polo) (1:33:45.300).

    INRC2:1. Dr Speed – Bikku Babu/ Bonnie Thomas (1:29:21.100); 2. Chetan Shivram /Shahid Salman (01:31.05.500); 3. Ritesh Guttedar M/  Lokaranjan HJ (01:31:43.600); 4. Sahil Khanna /Vidit Jain (Snap Racing) (01:32:54.200); 5. Rahul Kantharaj/ Vivek Bhatt (01:54:07.500); 6. Suhem Kabir/ Jeevarathinam (2:12:24.600); 7. Lakshay Veer Dabas/ Sagar Mallappa (Snap Racing/ VW Polo) (2:13:27.500); All in VW Polo.

    INRC3: 1. Fabid Ahmer /Eldo Chacko (JK Tyre) (VW Polo) (01:29:57.200); 2. Aditya Thakur/ Virendra Keshyap (VW Polo) (1:31:36.700); 3. Maninder Singh Prince/ Vinay Padmashali (VW Polo) (1:32:57.400); 4.Mohammed Kasim/ Sanath G (VW Polo) (01:33:45.300); 5. Harkrishnan Wadia /Chirag Thakur (Honda City) (01:34:42.300); 6. Pragathi Gowda/ Trisha Jagannath (Team Vasundhara/ VW Polo) (1:37:08.200); 7. Ashad Pasha/ Deeksha Balakrishna (VW Polo) (01:37:18.300).

    INRC 4: 1. Vaibhav Marathe/ Suhan MK (Honda City) (01:36:51.700); 2. Yeswanth Padale/ Bharth SM (Honda City) (1:40:34.300); 3. Pradeep Ravi/ Arvind Dheerendra (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:42:13.200); 4.Sumesh M/ Anil Abbas (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:46:31.700); 5. Athira Murali/ George Varghese (1:52:10.400); 6. Amandeep Kaur/ Mohit Mallik (Maruti Suzuki Baleno) (01:14:18.300); 7. Rakesh Shukla / Dilip Sharan (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:53:01.300).

    Junior INRC: 1. #28; Harikrishna Wadi/ Chirag Thakur (JK Tyre -Honda City) (1:34:42.300); 2. #38; Rakshit Iyer/ M Chandrashekar (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (2:04:07.800); 3. #36; Shivani Pruthvi/ Deepthi Pruthvi (JK Tyre Mitsubishi Cedia) (2:15:15.200); Only 4 cars of the 6 eligible for Junior INRC finished.

    Non-Championship class

    Gypsy Challenge: 1. Sanjay Razdan/ Karan Aukta (01:40:40.200); 2. Sanjay Agarwal/ Smitha Prasad (01:42:44.700); 3. Divyanshu Vyas/ Venu Remesh;Kumar (01:44:03.900);4. Mohd. Kaif Khan/ Arjun Dheerendra (01:44:30.900); 5. Dheeraj KV/ Pramod Raman (01:45:31.700); 6. Daksh Gill/ Mrinmoy Saha (1:57:58.600);

    (Only 6 of the 12 Gypsies finished).

    Ladies Class: 1. #47 Athira Murali/ George Varghese (Esteem); 2. #46 Amandeep Kaur/ Mohit Malik (Baleno); 3. #36 Shivani Pruthvi/ Deepthi Pruthvi (Mitsubishi Cedia).

    eom/david/31jan2021

  • Athira Murali, makes INRC debut

    Athira Murali, makes INRC debut

    Coimbatore, 31 Jan 2021: Athira Murali, 27, made her debut in INRC at Coimbatore in INRC4 category here at the third round of the Indian National Rally Championship for cars 2020 season. The Kerala girl from Kottayam, exhibited rich driving skills to clock good timings and beat many male counterparts at the Windmill farms of Kethanoor in January 2021.

    Inspired and supported by her father, VN Muraleedharan, she fell in love with cars and took up the sport at a late stage but made an impressive debut and looks forward to continue her passion. She rented a rally-prepared car funded by her family and unless a sponsor comes forward, the promising talent may fade away before it blossoms. But with right support and hardwork, and if her energies are channelised properly she has all the talent to go places.

    She not only won the Ladies class, but finished fifth in INRC4 category which had 12 entries. Navigated by experienced and disciplined George Varghese, the 4×4 lady driver managed to beat another debutant in Ladies class Amandeep Kaur and Madhi Elangovan, and experienced drivers in higher classes including Pragathi Gowda and Shivani Pruthvi. She was also faster than six other male drivers despite losing much time in SS1 due to a slower car of Madhi, ahead which had suffered technical issues and stalled in SS3 midway through the stage.

    Though entered as privateer, Athira is from Team R Sports, her tuner is Raja Padmanabhan from Palakkad, who did his best to support her. She is also a URF and India book of Records holder and a journalist with Kaumudy, with her popular weekly show aired on Tuesday at 8pm prime time in Malayalam. A popular Vblogger in Malayalam, she commands a following of close to 70,000 and her Auto Vlogg reaches to more than 1.5 lakh audience on YouTube channel @AthiraMurali.

  • Gaurav Gill powers his limping Mahindra to top spot after Leg 1: INRC Round 3

    Gaurav Gill powers his limping Mahindra to top spot after Leg 1: INRC Round 3

    Kethanur (near Coimbatore), 30 Jan 2021: King of Indian motorsports, Gaurav Gill and co-driver Musa Sherif, powered their limping Mahindra XUV 300, to clock the fastest timing of the day, finishing ahead of the pack to lead the Day 1 of the Rally of Coimbatore, the third round of the Champion Yacht Club fmsci Indian National Rally Championship (INRC) for four wheelers here at the Kethanur windmill farms on Saturday.

    The Arjuna Awardee and three-time APRC champion, Gill with Sherif, who is taking part in his 293rd rally, had trouble even before they started the Special Stages, as they faced electrical issues and the car failed to gain speed. They did continue despite the `misfiring’ and still clocked better timings than the others in three of the four stages.

    “I was definitely off the pace, by some four minutes. Not sure what the problem is, but hopefully, it would be sorted out tonight. The misfiring started in the very first corner of the first Stage. So much so, I couldn’t even do 100 Kmph! It was frustrating in the sense that I would like to deliver good results to my sponsors and the team. Anyway, tomorrow, I hope to be on the kind of pace I want to,” said Gill at the end of the day.

    Meanwhile, other top-guns Karna Kadur (co-driver Nikhil Pai), Amittrajit Ghosh (co-driver Ashwin Naik) and Dean Mascarenhas (co-driver Shruptha Padiwal), had a bad day. Kadur, running with a new engine, encountered “teething problems” through the day and lost time, but will be eyeing leg points on the morrow.Ghosh had his share of problems and had stopped while Mascarenhas dropped out due to gearbox issues.

    Gaurav Gill, left, and Musa Sherif, who is on his 293rd rally after reccee on Friday.

    Dr “Speed” Bikku Babu, once again was in his elements and finished the day second overall with another talented Kerala youngster Fabid Ahmer, along with new co-driver Eldo Chacko, overall third at the end of the day after four Special Stages. Two more stages will be run on Sunday.

    While Dr Bikku Babu is leading the INRC 2 class from Chetan Shivram, who is now with a new co-driver Shahid Salman and running on stock engine. Sahil Khanna, navigated by Vidit Jain, is in third place. In INRC 3, Arjun Rao (co-driver Shanmuga Sundaram) is trailing Fabid Amer by just 22 seconds. Adiya Thakur (co-driver Virendra Kashyap) is in third.

    In INRC 4, the Goa-Kodagu combination of Vaibhav Marathe and Suhan MK are ahead of Yeswanth Padale and Bharath SM, and Rounak Singh and  Amit Waghchaure.

    Other casuality on Saturday was Rahul Kantharaj (co-driver Vivek Bhatt), who had a puncture and lost precious time.

    Provisional Unaudited Results: (Results are given till 7 places, were available, to facilitate drivers and co-drivers to count their leg points)

    Overall: 1. Gaurav Gill/ Musa Sherif (Mahindra Adventure3 00) (58:41.800); 2. Dr Speed – Bikku Babu/ Bonnie Thoma (VW Polo) (1:00:01.300); 3. Fabid Ahmer/ Eldo Chacko (JK Tyre) (VW Polo) (01:00:08.300); 4. Arjun Rao/ Shanmuga Sundaram (VW Polo) (1: 00:30.800); 5. Aditya Thakur/ Virendra Keshyap (VW Polo) (1:01:04.500); 6. Chetan Shivram /Shahid Salman (VW Polo) (01:01.13.100); 7. Sahil Khanna /Vidit Jain (Snap Racing) (VW Polo) (01:01:33.100); 8. Ritesh Guttedar M/  Lokaranjan HJ (VW Polo) (01:01:37.400);

    Note: Phillippo Mathai/ Kumar Ramasamy (Mahindra XUV 500- MRF Tyres) 01:02:47.600 get six leg points for 2nd in INRC class; However, INRC is not a separate class.

    INRC2:1. Dr Speed – Bikku Babu/ Bonnie Thomas (1:00:01.300); 2. Chetan Shivram /Shahid Salman (01:01.13.100); 3. Sahil Khanna /Vidit Jain (Snap Racing) (01:01:33.100); 4. Ritesh Guttedar M/  Lokaranjan HJ (01:01:37.400); 5. Dhruva Chandrasekhar/ PVS Murthy (01:04:11.700); 6. BC Roopesh/ Ragavendra Phalguna (01:13:10.400); 7. Rahul Kantharaj/ Vivek Bhatt (01:23:29.700). All in VW Polo.

    INRC3: 1. Fabid Ahmer /Eldo Chacko (JK Tyre) (VW Polo) (01:00:08.300); 2. Arjun Rao/ Shanmuga Sundaram (VW Polo) (1: 00:30.800); 3. Aditya Thakur/ Virendra Keshyap (VW Polo) (1:01:04.500); 4. Maninder Singh Prince/ Vinay Padmashali (VW Polo) (01:02:36.400); 5.Mohammed Kasim/ Sanath G (VW Polo) (01:02:39.900); 6. Harkrishnan Wadia /Chirag Thakur (Honda City) (01:03:17.400); 7. Daraius Shroff/ Nitin Jacob (VW Polo) (01:03:22.900).

    INRC 4: 1. Vaibhav Marathe/ Suhan MK (Honda City) (01:04:15.300); 2. YeswanthPadale/ Bharth SM (Honda City) (1:07:27.500); 3. Rounaq Singh/ Amit Waghchoure (Maruti Baleno) (01:08:41.900); 4. Pradeep Ravi/ Arvind Dheerendra (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:09:13.400); 5.Sumesh M/ Anil Abbas (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:11:54.700); 6. Amandeep Kaur/ Mohit Mallik (Maruti Suzuki Baleno) (01:14:18.300); 7. Rakesh Shukla / Dileep Sharan (Maruti Suzuki Esteem) (01:15:51.700).

    Junior INRC: 1. Pragathi Gowda/ Trisha Jagannath (01:05.10.300); 2. Rohit Iyer/ M Manjunath (01:21:32.200); (Only 2 Junior INRC cars finished the four stages today)

    Non-Championship class: Gypsy Challenge: 1. Sanjay Razdan/ Karan Aukta (01:07:17.700); 2. Abhishek Gowda/ Dheeraj Maney (01:08:34.100); 3. Sanjay Agarwal/ Smitha Prasad (01:08:39.000); 4. Divyanshu Vyas/ Venu Remesh;Kumar (01:08:48.600); 5. Mohd. Kaif Khan/ Arjun Dheerendra (01:10:20.600): 6. Dheeraj KV/ Pramod Raman (01:10:49.600); 7. Shyam Gopinath/ Ashwin Gururaj (01:1103.500).

    Leg points as follows: 1st Place: 7 points; 2nd Place: 6 points, 3rd Place: 5 points; 4th Place: 4 points; 5th Place: 3 points; 6th Place: 2 points; 7th Place: 1 point.

    Pragathi Gowda, left, who won the Junior INRC in Itanagar first round with Deeksha (not in pic) has a new navigator, a childhood friend and schoolmate Trisha Jagannathan, after the Reccee on Friday.

    (15of the 59 cars that took the start, failed to finish all the four Special Stages, but many of them will be rejoining on Sunday in the Super Rally format to earn Leg Points).

  • Coimbatore all set for 4w INRC Round 3 at Wind-mill farms

    Coimbatore all set for 4w INRC Round 3 at Wind-mill farms

    Coimbatore, 28 Jan 2021: Gaurav Gill the King of Indian Motorsports and his trusted navigator Musa Sherif, who won both the back-to-back rounds in Arunachal Pradesh will start as favourites in the Rally of Coimbatore, the third round of the Champions Yacht Club fmsci Indian National Rally Championship for 4-wheelers 2020 at the Kethanoor wind-mill farms on Saturday and Sunday.

    Organised by Coimbatore Auto Sports Club (CASC) and promoted by Champions Yacht Club, the premier rally event under the aegis of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs in India (fmsci) attracted a huge number of 61 entries in top four classes. The top-INRC contenders A-seeded Gaurav Gill- Musa Sherif, will be spearhead their challenge in the Mahindra XUV 300, while Karna Kadur and Nikhil Pai will be behind the wheel of a Volkswagen Polo 1.6 INRC NA. Amittrajit Ghosh and Ashwin Naik will be in the other Mahindra XUV300 to completed the three INRC entries.

    The top INRC class will also see talented Younus Ilyas and Harish KN, in a Race Concepts prepared Mitsubishi Cedia while the INRC Round 3, will see the return of Philippos Matthai with veteran stalwart Kumar Ramaswamy, making a comeback, after he last called the notes, for a one off rally for both Akbar Ebrahim. They will be driving a Mahindra XUV500.

    Dean Mascarenhas, along with co-driver Shruptha Padival, also in a VW Polo 1.6 INRC2 and will have Dr Speed, Bikku Babu (co-driver Bonny Thomas) and defending champion driver Chetan Shivaram with a new navigator in Sahid Salman, also in a VW Polo 1.6. All three are A-seeded drivers and will be fighting for honours in INRC2 and Overall categories.

    The INRC3 category is filled with talented youngsters, led by steady driver Fabid Ahmer (co-driver Eldo K Chacko, who will face stiff competition from youngsters like Aditya Thakur (co-drier Virender Kashyap), and Round 1 winners Maninder Singh Prince and Vinay Padmashali. Besides Arjun Rao and Shanmuga SN too can be a black horse on their day. All are on VW Polos.

    The Green car of Mujeeb Rehman and co-driver Goutham CP will now be with the Yellows as the INRC4 winner in Itanagar was roped in immediately after his win by the JK Tyre team. Lanusanen Pongener, the Round 1 winner will have a new navigator in Rohit N and the first INRC round winner from Nagaland can spring a surprise on his day. The other favourites are Mysore brothers Rakshit Iyer (co-drier M Chandrasekhar) and Rohit Iyer along with navigator Manjunath (Times Manju).

    It will be interesting to see the mother-daughter couple come back after missing the first two rounds. Shivani, who just graduated as a Doctor, will be joined by navigator mom, Dr Deepthi Pruthvi. The other talented lady driver Pragathi Gowda who won the Junior INRC, will not have her debut partner, Deekshita as her navigator. Trisha Jagannath will make the calls for Pragathi, while Deekshita Balakrishna will be navigating for Chikmagalur drier Asad Pasha, all three in a Polo in INRC3. The other lady driver Khyati Mody with co-driver Mahesh Nandi will be in a Honda City in INRC4. Co-driver Smitha Prasad will be the other lady co-driver navigating for Sanjay Aggarwal in a Gypsy.

    The rally has two physical stages, 19.25km of Black Thunder and 14.25km of Thunder World. Both the stages will be run twice on Saturday and once on Sunday for a total Special Stage distance of 100.5km and along with a liaison distance of 35.94km, will make up the 136.44km rally route.

    Zayn Khan, who missed the first two rounds, and became the first Virtual Steward in the history of INRC will be back as the Chief Steward with D Ramkumar and R Mahendran as the other stewards, with the former doubling up as FMSCI observer. Both Ramkumar and Mahendran are stars of yester years with Mahendran winning the first INRC round in 1988 along with L Gopalakrishnan. Ramkumar was a key winning partner for many years to champion Naren Kumar.

    S Ramesh Kumar will be the Technical Delegate while Shyam Kumar, will be the Safety Officer. In Itanagar, Shyam performed the roles of Steward, Observer and Safety Delegate for both the rounds. J Prithviraj will be the Clerk of the Course.

    K1000 will the fourth and final round, to be held near Bengaluru from Feb 12 to 14 in a truncated INRC Calendar of 2020 which was hit by COVID pandemic.

  • Some rare feats in INRC history; Some honest questions!

    Some rare feats in INRC history; Some honest questions!

    By David Bodapati

    Bengaluru: Indian Motorsports is still running and breathing life because there are some mad people who are passionate about motorsports. Once the bug bites, it is very difficult to leave motorsports. Once Vicky Chandhok, the man who brought F1 to India said: `”You can make Millions in Motorsports, but before that you have to spend Billions.”

    So many enthusiasts, organisers, promoters end up spending huge amounts in the belief that the amount spent, is promoting motorsports. They end up paying from their pockets. Indian Rallying saw the likes of Red Rooster Racing, then the likes of a popular cine artiste Ajith, then teams going to MotoGP and then Sidvin sponsoring a team in WRC. Many others have been there. As far as sponsors are concerned, names like Bosch, Castrol, Yokohoma, Bharat Petroleum’s Speed, MAK, Ceat, have all came, saw and left. I have missed many names… though.

    All faded in their time because of lack of returns. Now it is interesting to see, big jewellers and Construction giants from Andhra Pradesh coming in as sponsors due to the efforts of the INRC promoter. But only time will tell, if we can sustain, provide them with good media, and retain them as supporters of the sport.

    All the officials, stewards, Federation, marshals, organising clubs, promoters and everyone, including media, should realise that without drivers and riders, we are zero. We think that because we are organising or the Federation is there, so sport is there. Sport is never there because of all of us, the sport is there because there are sportspersons, who sacrifice many things in life, work hard and showcase their talent. Only because or riders, drivers and co-drivers the sport exists. Whether it is a karting kid of six years or an 80-year-old veteran in racing. Oldies may be `BIG’, but bumping out youngsters, playing dirty and spoiling the mood and spirit of sport should be nipped in the bud.

    Or else, Indian motorsports will remain like this for the next 50 years. Glad that COVID 19 prevented many of the `Oldies’ to stay indoors this 2020. An youngster who won the first three races on his debut, disappeared and did not take part in the second year of that championship and switched to a different championship. Another talented driver, retired prematurely and became a coach! A driver from the East or a rider from the South were famous 20 years back, for their aggressive tactics which intimidated their rivals. With the current President being strict with the stewards and demanding immediate reports, the governance has improved a bit, if one can say so, and cleaning up the sport is of utmost priority.

    Coming back to FMSCI, Akbar Ebrahim, during his previous tenure in 2018, made efforts to increase the membership of the council as recommended by the Ministry of Sports. However, he did not get his amendment passed as the council blocked it, only increasing the membership by one member. Now we have 10 members. As long as this undemocratic number continues, the Union Ministry of Sports is not likely to recognise motorsports as a sporting discipline.

    We are already not an Olympic sport which is a big disadvantage. FMSCI does not have an India selection committee. Those who represent India are handpicked and not selected on merit or talent or the number of wins they have. The sports ministry considers it as being done as per the `whims and fancies’ of the council. There are 27 federations in the recognised list of Sports Federations and who are on the Ministry’s list for priority funding. The Ministry has also put out guidelines for all the National Federations to promote transparency, good governance and accountability. So if FMSCI wants to be National Federation, as an ASN of FIA andbe a member of Indian Olympic Association, it has to fulfill and follow certain norms and conditions.

    So it is time we clean up our own act. In 2018, when Ebrahim informed about many changes and developmental programmes he is planning to introduce, much of it did not appear in the media, because the same evening, Gaurav Gill announced his entry into WRC, at the K1000 press conference in Bengaluru.

    That year, he finished his tenure and there was a break and now in his second stint as FMSCI president, one hopes he continues his sincere efforts to bring some discipline into the administration of motorsport and elevate sportspersons to the level they deserve. Being an active racer himself, like Vicky Chandhok and many others in the council, it is time we respect the drivers and riders, who are being ill-treated by many officials in many championships. Almost all council members, except one or two, have been sportspersons at some point of time. So it would be easy to understand the plight of drivers and riders. Hope this article is taken in good spirit.

    In let us see in what way and how, fmsci can promote sport. Any rider or driver getting a sponsor is a difficult job. So if one gets a sponsor, the fmsci charges more money to allow him to take part. Is this what other sports are doing. No federation charges money from sportspersons, so exorbitantly, to take part in sport. Instead of encouraging more sportspersons, are we chasing them away. Time to introspect.

    These are some of the things that should be discussed in the council about how to make things easy for more sportspersons to take part in the 10 different National Championships. Not whether Coimbatore or CASC, should be thrown out. CASC has not done its society registration renewal for many years. But when they joined FMSCI 50 years back, too the Society renewal of CASC was not done. So the status quo remains. Why did then FMSCI accept them as founder members. If that is the case many of the founders will lose their membership.

    The criteria for becoming a founder member is to pay their subscription and conduct activities as prescribed by the council. The actual question that needs to be asked is why are Founding members given a veto power. The Ministry of Sports did not recognise motorsports not just because we are not an Olympic sport. Every federation in the country which is member of IOC, is truly representative and all India in nature, having federal Units in each state. The Ministry wanted the council to be increased to 18 or 19, by taking other active clubs as council members, so that slowly the representation will improve. This has been resisted by the founding members.

    In an interview to this website in 2018 at Bengaluru after the K1000 press conference, Akbar Ebrahim, said that he was planning to introduce an amendment to expand the council membership to 18 or 19 members. But since it has to be approved by the council, he has first introduced 11 members. Then there will be five founding members and the other six can override the founders, if they are `blocking the development of sport’. So that transparency, governance and accountability will increase. But fmsci has increased the membership fee of the clubs from Rs.2000 a decade back by about five to 8 times bigger. How can a club conduct sport by paying such huge amounts to federation. Why is the federation paying income tax of a few lakhs. Why cant they use the money to buy sporting equipments, or spend for other sporting activities, which will then reduce their income tax. Why should a hosting club pay the stewards flight fares, their hotel accommodation in a star hotel, and their fancy food bills… these are some of the things council should discuss. Not whether a founding member should be barred, because they are not in the same camp. Coimbatore is one of the first clubs to conduct drag races much before Sholavaram, in Sulur, an old air strip, according to Britannica Encyclopedia which used to attract more than a lakh spectators. Unfortunately, these were not documented.

    They are one of the few clubs along with KMSC (formerly BMSC), MMSC, now defunct APMSC (Charminar challenge), Motor Sports Club of Chikmagalur (MSCC) and the Kerala KASC, who used to be active.

    Coimbatore also had the honour of hosting the first rally, after INRC got the status of a National Championship in 1988 with Mr L Gopalakrishnan and Mr R Mahendran, winning the rally in a Maruti 800, the only time a Maruti won INRC round before Gypsy’s took over. I know I will be termed immediately as a biased reporter. But I have been in Jodhpur too. It is then FMSCI president who conducted the Press Conference along with Mr Vamsi Merla, the promoter, which this reporter attended. Things would have been much better but for the local uprising. CASC has also been hand-holding and supporting the Popular rally for many years, as my good friend late George Francis used to reel out stories as he was a regular in Kerala, as every rally used to provide a chance for him to visit his native place. I too attended a few of them, with Kuttikanam, the Misty Meadows Rally of Kerala in 2010, being my favourite.

    Obviously, drivers and riders will not comment. Why a particular journalist is painted Red Or Yellow. Are we promoting sport, or is media becoming a rogue element in killing the sport… A moot point to debate and food for thought. Will stop here. I and George, have been mulling over this story for the last five years, but did not get the courage to write. I will be killing my conscience and will be doing disservice to my later friend George Francis and wanted to do this before his death anniversary on April 11. As a senior journalist, I feel I should not shun my duty of being a watchdog! I request everyone to take this in the right spirit and do something to sort out the mess!

    The year 2020 is a no-nonsense year in the history of Indian Rallying: It is also a year which began on a negative note and ended on a positive note. The COVID19, has changed the world and the evolving situation demanded that FMSCI, the governing body of motorsports in India too, had to make rules and ban huge gatherings. The year started with the arrival of Corona virus and ended with hope, as vaccination entered the market and by Jan 16, the roll out of vaccination was undertaken. But no rally (INRC) was held in 2020. The 2020 calendar is being completed in January and February 202`1, with two back-to-back rounds in Itanagar, Arunachal Pradesh on super-fast Tarmac on National Highway NH415.

    Disclosure: This reporter covered the Rally of Arunachal Pradesh and his one-way travel to Guwahati and both ways Helicopter rider from Guwahati to Itanagar was paid by the Promoters, Champion Yacht Club, and his stay was offered by the Tourism Department of Arunachal Pradesh. INDIAinF1 is thankful for providing a chance to our reporter to attend the INRC Rounds 1 & 2.

  • Karna Kadur & Nikhil Pai raring to go: 4w INRC Round 3

    Karna Kadur & Nikhil Pai raring to go: 4w INRC Round 3

    By David Bodapati

    Coimbatore, 25 Jan 2021: Karna Kadur and Nikhil Pai, make a rare combination. It is a rare species! If I may call it so, an endangered species! Two of the most-talented and skilled drivers and co-drivers in the country, arguably best in their class. It is difficult to say, if the navigator is better because of the driver or the Driver is better because of the co-driver.

    If we leave top guns, like Ram Kumar and Kumci Kumar, and the legendary Farooq Ahmed, currently not rallying in the season, Nikhil Pai, one of the senior most, if you put aside the Kasargod king, Musa Sherif, is a class in his own. Both have their unique features and respect each other. Musa is a veteran of over 200 rallies in INRC. Musa’s story is another great story, we must tell in these pages. Watch out!

    Today, it is Nikhil Pai, a sound engineer, cool, calm and composed! For the first time, I was able to hear his speed, sound and watch the moon at the same time. It was Karna Kadur who produced the sound, but the man who directed the show was Pai. Both are made for each other. One is as good as the other. A co-driver worth his salt, Nikhil Pai was a joy to watch at Arunachal Pradesh, as always. Karna came into his own after a reluctant run and excelled with controlled aggression and with the exception of the likes of Gill, a Speed demon, there is none that can stop the duo. INDIAinF1 rated them as the best in their class and next only to Gaurav Gill, as we have to take notice of their class, car and the machine. It is a VW Polo INRC NA.

    Yours humbly, (I am) is a big fan of Karna Kadur. All I have for the co-driver, Nikhil Pai, is #Respect. Besides, National Championship titles in other classes, they were crowned as Overall Champions in the Indian National Rally Championship 2016, a great honour to enter the list of National INRC Champions. They achieved it in a Volkswagen Polo in Group N and the unsung hero but for whom the victory may not have been possible is the duo’s mentor – a friend, philosopher and guide, N Leelakrishnan, who tuned the machines and coached them.

    In 2010, I was sitting with the tribals under the foothills of Sahayadri mountain ranges in Western Ghats, in front of a right hander, leading into a tricky bounce before they enter a straight. Here, Karna, who graduated to a bigger machine in Mitsubishi, after Red Rooster Racing identified him as a precious talent and gave him a powerful Cedia.

    INRC giant: N Leelakrishnan, right, who has 25 National titles in the 32-year history of Indian National Rally Championship from 1988 to 2019. He has six drivers National titles and as he tuned his own car and went on to be the tuner for 13 other overall winners. An impeccable record of 19 wins as a tuner. Here he is preparing Karna Kadur’s car for the second round of INRC 2020 after taking the driver feedback. Photo by David Bodapati

    The triple somersault and the safe exit, was baptism by fire. Pai was not his navigator then. The genial giant, Karna, never looked back, missing his first National title in 2012 but went on to win multiple National titles in every class he entered.

    And soon he had Nikhil Pai, giving the calls and the sound engineer, sound and steady in his performance, ever smiling and willing to enhance the show by his driver with impeccable prep, hardwork and disciplined attitude, and what it takes to beat the best… When they first became the National champions both were together.When they first won a National title for Polo, they were together. No driver misses the advantage of such a navigator. I love Karna, I admire Nikhil. Both are good and complement each other. It was also the dependable duo, who brought the first National title for VW Polo, winning their overall National Title in 2016.

    The other driver I admire and follow is Dean Mascarenhas, who faded away after a stunning debut as a 18-year teenager. But in Itanagar, he had a mature drive and proved that he still can hog limelight, only if sponsors back him up. Wish talented drivers are nurtured and sponsored!

    Karna on the other hand is already moulding youngsters and is good at managing teams. Karna, born into a sporting family, is a talented and hardworking driver, nay a thinking driver! And he is made of champion stuff, as he excelled in many forms of motorsports, a teacher in the mould of his guru, Leela, the 6-time National champ, an impeccable master of holistic driver development!

    “It is not fair to compare drivers, or for that matter co-drivers of different eras,” he told this reporter recently. But `we journalists’ end up writing good (and sometimes bad) without much thought. So, I may have missed some greats from the past, in the glorious 33-years (including 2020) of INRC… May Their Tribe increase!

    Unsung heroes: Mechs and Engineers are the unsung heroes behind any rally winner. The three here and other team members, worked day and night as the double-header with just a rest day in between took a toll on the mechs. Next round we promise you to get their names.

    The third round of the Indian National Rally Championship 2020 (INRC) for four-wheelers is scheduled to be held at the Kethanoor windmill farms near here from Jan 29 to 31. Promoted by Champions Yacht Club and organised by Coimbatore Auto Sports Club (CASC), under the aegis of fmsci, the governing body of motorsports (FIA ASN) in India, the top drivers in their class Karna Kadur and Nikhil Pai are raring to go in their (the magic behind the car with legendary Leelakrishnan at work) VW Polo shod on MRF tyres, expect some fireworks on Karna’s favourite gravel terrain, the patchy, pebble-filled windmill farms.

    “It’s rally week! While Karna (Kadur), me (Nikhil Pai) and everyone at Arka Motorsport , MRF Racing and Volkswagen Motorsport India are busy getting our car ready, here’s a little peek at the last two rounds of the Rally of Arunachal where we finished 2nd and 3rd overall respectively. Hoping to better that performance this weekend at Coimbatore, the 3rd round of the INRC. See you there!,” say the champion duo.

    See you in Kethanoor! Happy Rallying!!

    Watch the Arunachal Pradesh INRC Round 1 & 2 short Video here!

    Editor’s Note: David Bodapati, has been following INRC from 1988 as a sub-editor in Indian Express and has been covering at least one round (read K1000) from 1996, except an year or two, and did research for over 10 years to compile INRC Hall of fame.

    This article has been last updated on 28 Jan 2021 at 12.12pm

  • Samuel Jacob overall winner in 2w MRF Mogrip INRC: Rally of Coimbatore

    Samuel Jacob overall winner in 2w MRF Mogrip INRC: Rally of Coimbatore

    Coimbatore, 24 Jan 2021: Samuel Jacob of Team TVS Racing astride a TVS RTR 260cc became the Overall Winner of MRF Mogrip fmsci Rally of Coimbatore 2020, the third round of the Indian National Rally Championship for two-wheelers here on Sunday. He clocked a penalty of 1 hour 1 minute and 3 seconds in the National event successfully hosted by the Coimbatore Auto Sports Club and promoted by God Speed Racing under the dynamic leadership of Shyam Kothari, 7-time national motocross and multiple champion.

    J Imran Pasha, also from TVS Racing, bagged the Overall Runner-up place clocking 1:1:39. “The track gave ample scope to test the abilities of both the man and the machine, with many challenging and technical stages,” said Samuel, the winner of Group A pro-expert class. The event ran like clock-work without any delay, despite the COVID19 restrictions and a total distance of 80.22km, with a Special Stage distance of 67.00 kms was run on Saturday and Sunday.

    Local lad K Saravana Kumar won the Star of Tamil Nadu category exclusively for riders from Tamil Nadu. He posted a splendid performance finishing overall 23rd with a time of 1 hour 9 minutes and 13 seconds. The ceremonial flag off was held from Suguna Kalyana Mandapam by Goutham Hari, MRF, Regional Sales Manager on Saturday.

    Deeban Kumar, MRF’s District Manager, Coimbatore, was the chief guest for the prize distribution function which was held at Sennammal Kovil Mandapam, near Kethanur on Sunday. Organisers, CASC thanked MRF Limited and Godspeed for sponsoring and conducting the Championship successfully.

    Provisional Unaudited Results:

    Class 1: Super Bike Pro-expert Group A: 1. #4 Nataraj R (TVS Racing) (01:02.28.714); 2. #11 Rakesh Kumar P (Privateer Apache RTR) (01:07:40.744); 3. #12 Vinay Prasad (Pvt. Hero Xpulse) (01:08:01.976).

    Class 4: Super Sport 260B: 1. #1 Samuel lJacob (TVS Racing) (01hour; 01minute, 03.089 seconds);2. #6 J Imran Pasha (TVS Racing) (01:01.39.601); 3. #2 D Sachin (TVS Racing) (0:02.55.334). (All Apache
    RTR)

    Editor’s note: Results are incomplete and will be added as and when official copy is received

  • Heartbreak for Ashwin Datta as Sandeep conquers title

    Heartbreak for Ashwin Datta as Sandeep conquers title

    Coimbatore, 26 Jan. 2021: Racing ace Sandeep Kumar of Chennai clinched the Formula LGB 4 class as he brought out all his experience to keep his cool for his first major National title with a podium in the last race of the season in the 23rd JK Tyre fmsci National Racing Championship at the Kari Motor Speedway here on Sunday.

    Youngster Amir Sayed from Kottayam annexed the Rookie championship even as all eyes were focussed on the title fight in the higher class where championship leader Ashwin Dutta, missed the title by a whisker. The Formula LGB 4 season provided all the thrills and even the last race to decide the winner proved to be a thriller till the last corner of the last lap. But all the chaos and mechanical hiccups were a heartbreak for Ashwin Datta. In a fight between two Dark Don teammates, both from Chennai, Datta began the day with brake issues and logged zero points in Race 1 in the morning yielding much ground to Sandeep.

    The loss was a double whammy as he had to start from the back of the grid for the 12th and final race of the season, which saw the formation lap run for three times before the race was restarted. Ashwin lost his focus and in a melee at the first corner, he was forced to retire after contact with other cars, leaving his teammate from Dark Don in best position to win the championship.

    Sandeep, the 28-year advocate, brought to the fore all his vast experience and played it cool. The 2012 Scirocco cup awardee, who spent two years in Europe, thus gained his first National Championship title, taking second in the final race. He logged 66 points to Ashwin’s 63.Vishnu Prasad, was third with 54 points.

    “I kept my cool and did my job. The final standings have to be tabulated,” said Sandeep.

    Meanwhile, teen sensation Amir Sayed won the Novice Cup. “I enjoyed myself and it was fun driving in this championship. I am happy to win the title,” said Amir, who logged 120 points with an all-win record.

    He was extremely happy to be crowned champion but kept his emotions in check. There was no undue celebration and even on the podium, he was well in control. “It has been a very thrilling and satisfying championship for me,” said Amir.

    Amir, who had started from Karting, is a debutant in the racing championship. He talks about the transition, “I spent a lot of time with Vishnu Prasad on the tracks in Chennai and Coimbatore. He has mentored and guided me and that is why I could do well in this championship,” added Amir. The obvious plan for the next seasons for Amir would be to shift gears and move to the higher category.

    Provisional Race Results: Formula LGB 4 (Race 4 -14 laps): 1. Mohamed Ryan – MSport – 20:21.929; 2. Vishnu Prasad – MSport – 20:23.545; 3. Arya Singh- Dark Don Racing – 20:25.170.

    Race 5 (15 laps): 1. Diljith TS –Dark Don Racing- 23:58.426; 2. Sandeep Kumar A – Dark Don Racing – 23:58.890; 3. Sarosh Hataria – Ahura Racing – 23:59.793

    Race 6: (15 laps): 1. Vishnu Prasad- MSport –21:01.907; 2. Mohamed Ryan – Msport –21:07.490; 3. Sarish Hatarai – Ahura Racing – 21:14.292.

    JK Tyre Novice Cup: Race 5 (10 laps): 1. Amir Sayed- MSport – 14:17.157; 2. Chetan Surineni – Momentum Motorsports – 14:31.672; 3. Aman Chaudhary- DTS Racing – 14:32.509;

    Race 6 (10 laps): 1. Amir Sayed- MSport – 16:34.084; 2. Chetan Surineni- Momentum Motorsports- 16:56.452; 3. Neym Rizvi- MSport- 17:01.933;

    Overall Championship Standings:

    LGB Formula 4

    1. Champion: Sandeep Kumar, Dark Don Racing –66 points;

    2. Ashwin Datta, Dark Don Racing –63 points;

    3. Vishnu Prasad, MSport –54 points

    Novice Cup

    1. Champion: Amir Sayed, Msport – 120 points;

    2. Dhruvin Gajjar, DTS Racing –49 points;

    3. Aman Chaudhary, DTS Racing –46 points.

    Ladies Class

    1. Champion: Anushriya Gulati, Ahura Racing;

    2. Mir Erda;

    3. Phoebe Nongrum.

    Rookie Class

    1. Champion: Anushriya Gulati, Ahura Racing, 77 points.

    eom/JKtyre release/updated 14mar21