Tag: Amittrajit Ghosh

  • Amittrajit Ghosh posts stunning time in SuperSpecial: INRC Ro2

    Amittrajit Ghosh posts stunning time in SuperSpecial: INRC Ro2

    Itanagar (Arunachal Pradesh) June 15, 2023: Double National Overall INRC champion Amittrajit Ghosh and experienced co-driver Ashwin Naik zoomed to the top of the charts, thrilling the crowds with stunning drifts to clock 1min 53.5sec in the 2.05-KM Super Special Stage second run. Ghosh had skipped SSS-I, which is also the SS5, on Wednesday (June 14) night as the Rally of Arunachal headed to a climax.

    Earlier, Gaurav Gill posted a time of 2-min flat in the first run of the Super Special Stage. “I always give my best but the huge crowds are too close to comfort. Both the runs in ‘Triple S’ are quite different tracks but I enjoyed my run,” the three-time APRC champion said. Obviously, the times of left and right ones could not be compared despite both being the same distance of 2.05km.

    Despite their intimidating presence, the ‘Master of Speed’ displayed controlled aggression and put in a couple smart and pitch-perfect drifts posting the best time of 2-min flat in the first run.

    The Ziro leg is cancelled according to a bulletin by the CoC Girijashankar Joshy, and the rally will finish the course with four more Special Stages at the Chimpu and Hollongi, twice each in the same direction.

    Safety was an issue with huge number of spectators thronging the Super Special Stage (SSS) venue. But the organisers were alert and quick to stop the SSS as the situation become unmanageable. The drivers who did not compete were given scratch times.
    Photo: YouTube grab

    The leg one standing will be available only after scratch times were given to those who did not complete the SSS runs.

    While 51 cars took the start, four cars logged a DNF. Three from INRC3 and one Gypsy. Prominent among them are Pragathi Gowda and Jason Saldanha.

    Revised Itenerary

    Rally of Arunachal 2023
    Day 2 Programme ( 15th June ) at Itanagar

    14:45 Parc ferme out / Service in
    45 Mins Service
    15:30 Service out
    15:45 SS7 Chimpu
    17:18 SS8 Holongi
    17:58 Service In
    30 Min Service
    19:33 Regroup Out
    19:48 SS9 Chimpu
    21:21 SS10 Holongi
    22:01 Service In
    10 Min Service
    22:11 Parc ferme

  • Amittrajit Ghosh takes lead after two Stages; Gill in striking distance: INRC

    Amittrajit Ghosh takes lead after two Stages; Gill in striking distance: INRC

    Itanagar (Arunachal Pradesh) June 14, 2023: Double INRC champion Amittrajit Ghosh and co-driver Ashwin Naik of Arka Motorsports took a narrow 7.2-second lead at the end of two stages on Day 1 of the Rally of Arunachal, the second round of the Blueband fmsci Indian National Rally Championship here on Wednesday.

    Overnight rains made the hilly tarmac terrain challenging and the Special Stages started late. Keeping in view the safety aspects and lack of time, the final two Special Stages scheduled for the evening were cancelled. However, the short 4.1km Super Special Stage (SSS) will be held in the night for the benefit of the local spectators.

    After the completion of two special stages, Kolkata’s Amittrajit Ghosh along with Mangaluru’s co-driver Ashwin Naik took the lead with consistent times in both the stages. However, first round winner of the South India Rally,  Aroor Arjun Rao and co-driver Satish Rajagopal, who began with a blistering pace winning the first stage, played safe in the next stage, and were in third place after the finish of two Special Stages.

    Arjuna Awardee and three-time Asia Pacific Winner, Gaurav Gill (Aniruddha Rangnekar) who skipped the first round to take part in APRC Asia Cup qualifier that were held together, overcame initial hiccups and clocked the fastest time in Special Stage 2 and stood overall second after two Special Stages. He lost about 20 seconds to the front runner Arjun, in Chimpu SS1, but is back in the game to mount a challenge as four special stages are slated for tomorrow in Ziro.

    Suhem Kabir and co-driver Jeevarathinam of Ammyfied Rallying were leading the INRC2 class while Sheshank Jamwal (co-driver Aseem Sharma) of Arka Motorsports is in the top spot in INRC3 category. In the INRC4 class, the pair of Abhin Rai and Uday Kumar was heading the field with another Ammyfied Rallying pair topping the Gypsy Challenge after two stages is Samrat Yadav and Arvind Dheerendra.

    Talented Jahan Singh Gill is leading the Junior INRC while International lady driver Anushriya Gulati posted a comfortable lead over Nikeetaa Takkale in the Ladies class.

    Aditya Thakur (centre) and Virender Kashyap, the 2021 INRC overall champions praise the fast and flowing stages of Itanagar before the start of Super Special Stage on Wednesday.

    After the 4.10km Super special Stage tonight, the rally caravan will travel uphill to Ziro mountains on Thursday for four more Special Stages. The Prize Distribution will be held on June 16 at the Ziro resort.

    Provisional Unaudited Results (Day 1): Overall and INRC:

    1. Amittrajit Ghosh/ Ashwin Naik (Arka Motorsports) (18minutes, 59.6seconds); 2. Gaurav Gill/ Aniruddha Ragnekar (Privateer, Delhi/Pune) (19:06.8); 3. Aroor Arjun Rao/ Satish Rajagopal (Mandovi Racing) (19:07.8);

    INRC2:

    1.Suhem Kabir/ Jeevarathinam J (Ammyfied Rallying) (19:38.2); 2. Chetan Shivram/ E Shivaprakash (Snap Racing) (19:56.8); 3. Dr Bikku Babu/ Milen George (Chettinad Sporting) (20:04.2).

    INRC3: 1. Sheshank Jamwal/ Aseem Sharma (Arka Motorsports) (19:43.0); 2. Jason Saldanha/ Thimmanna Uddapanda B (Dark Don Racing) (20:14.400); 3. Jahaan Singh Gill/ Suraj Keshav Prasad (SNAP Racing) (20:14.9).

    INRC4: 1. Abhin Rai/ Uday Kumar (Ammyfied Rallying) (21:28.5); 2. Vivek Ruthuparna/ Sanjay Agarwal (SNAP Racing) (22:20.8); 3. Hage Chada/ Pramod Raman (pvt, Itanagar/Bengaluru) (23:10.2).

    Gypsy Challenge: 1. Samrat Yadav/ Arvind Dheerendra (Ammyfied Rallying) (20:54.2); 2. Amanpreet Ahluwalia/ Amber Udasi (Pvt. Delhi/Chanigarh) (21:34.7); 3. Baljinder Singh Dhillon/ Goutham CP (Pvt. Delhi/Chikmagalur) (22:48.8).

    Junior INRC: 1. Jahaan Singh Gill/ Suraj Keshava Prasad (Snap Racing) (20:14.9); 2. Arvan Pratap Singh/ Arjun SSB (Ammyfied Rallying) (20:30.8); 3. Abhin Rai/ D Uday Kumar (Ammyfied Rallying) (21:28.5).

    Women’s class: 1. Anushriya Gulati/ Arjun Dheerendra (Dark Don Racing) (21:32.5); 2. Nikeetaa Takkale/ Venu Ramesh Kumar (Ammyfied Rallying) (21:48.8); 3. Shivani Parmar/ Dr Vani Parmar (Chettinad Sporting) (22:00.6).

  • 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.

  • Ghosh, Naik win Rally of Arunachal Pradesh as Gill pulls out with mechanical problems

    Ghosh, Naik win Rally of Arunachal Pradesh as Gill pulls out with mechanical problems

    Winners of INRC Round 3 (Rally of Arunachal) overall – Amittrajit Ghosh (Left) and his co-driver Ashwin Naik (in Itanagar’s Police Parade ground (Chimpu) today.

    Itanagar, 4 November 2018: On a day of upsets, Team Mahindra Adventure’s Amittrajit Ghosh (co-driver Ashwin Naik) showed great tactical acumen to win the Rally of Arunachal, Round 3 of the MRF FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2018, here on Sunday. Ghosh, who exhibited amazing fightback on Day 1 to rise from ninth to third, enjoyed a much-needed slice of luck as overnight leader Gaurav Gill (Musa Sherif) pulled out of the competition as his car broke down in the sixth stage.

    Ghosh tackled the day’s three stages cautiously, finishing second in SS5, third in SS6 and again second in SS7 for a cumulative top timing of 00:57:33.6. It was 5.9 seconds faster than INRC 2’s Phalguna Urs and Srikanth Gowda giving them the victory. The Snap Racing pair, who were hot on Gill’s tail all of Saturday, didn’t have a fruitful second day, managing only two fourth-place and one fifth-place finish in the stages.

    Amittrajit Ghosh in action

    Phalguna’s drive was still good enough to earn his team the INRC 2 win. Former champion Karna Kadur (PVS Murthy) made a valiant charge, taking the second place in SS6 and even winning SS7, but that could only fetch him the runner’s up trophy. Kadur’s Arka Motorsports team-mate Rahul Kanthraj (Vivek Y Bhatt) dropped one position to settle for the third place.

    The INRC 3 too saw a change in the overnight pecking order, with leaders Suhem Kabeer (Jeevarathinam) of Team Champions slipping out of reckoning in the day’s first stage itself after a crash. It allowed his team-mate and defending champion Dean Mascarenhas (Shruptha Padival) to claim the title. Aroor Vikram Rao (Somayya AG) and local outfit Phurpa Tsering (Chow Tiktha) took the other two places on the podium.

    “We started the Rally of Arunachal on an ominous note, taking the ninth place due to a technical issue. But I and Ashwin kept pushing until we managed to bounce back to the pole,” a victorious Amittrajit said.

    “Today too, we suffered as we had changed the tyres for wet conditions but the track dried up by the time we hit it. But we drove steadily to win the title, which became easier after Gaurav pulled out with a mechanical failure. We are now looking forward to the next two rounds, even though we know that Gaurav will be back in his elements and will put up a tough fight,” he added.

    The results:

    INRC Overall: 1. Amittrajit Ghosh / Ashwin Naik (Team Mahindra Adventure; 00:57:33.6); 2. Phalguna Urs / Srikanth Gowda (Snap Racing; 00:57:39.5); 3. Dean Mascarenhas / Shruptha Padival (Team Champions; 00:57:57.7).

    INRC 1: Ghosh / Naik; 2. Lokesh Gowda / Venu Ramesh Kumar (Team Champions) (01:07:20.8).

    INRC 2: 1. Phalguna Urs / Srikanth Gowda (Snap Racing; 00:57:39.5); 2. Karna Kadur / PVS Murthy (Arka Motorsports; 00:58:37.0); 3. Rahul Kanthraj / Vivek Y Bhatt (Arka Motorsports; 00:58:55.2).

    INRC 3: 1. Dean Mascarenhas / Shruptha Padival (Team Champions; 00:57:57.7); 2. Aroor Vikram Rao / Somayya AG (Falkon Motorsports; 01:05:17.0); 3. Phurpa Tsering / Chow Tiktha (Phurpa Tsering; 01:14:57.9).

    FMSCI 2WD CUP: 1. Adith KC / Arjun SSB (Team Champions; 01:01:20.0); 2. Rakshith Iyer / Sagar Mallappa (Pvt; 01:10:54.4).

  • Gaurav Gill shrugs off a puncture to take decisive lead in Rally of Arunachal

    Gaurav Gill shrugs off a puncture to take decisive lead in Rally of Arunachal

    File picture of Gaurav Gill who leads Rally of Arunachal at the end of Leg-1. Photo: Anand Philar

    Itanagar, 3 November 2018: Three-time APRC champion Gaurav Gill recovered from a tyre puncture and only his second stage defeat this season to surge into the lead on Day 1 of the Rally of Arunachal which doubles up as the Round 3 of the MRF FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2018, here on Saturday.

    Team Mahindra Adventure’s Gill, with Musa Sherif by his side, won the other three stages in his usual aggressive style to set himself up for another victory in this elite championship. He raced at speeds over 180 Kmph, recording a scorching average speed of 115.55 km/h in the opening stage.

    He was at his slowest in the second stage, managing an average of 99.92 km/h, which was still good enough to give him the second position in that stretch.

    Gill’s Mahindra Adventure team-mate Amittrajit Ghosh (co-driver Ashwin Naik) won the Stage 2 in style. He had, however, suffered a setback in Stage 1, struggling with a power issue to finish ninth. However, he made up in the remaining rounds to climb to the third position by the end of an exciting day although his car is still not firing on all cylinders.

    Snap Racing’s Phalguna Urs (Srikanth Gowda) grabbed the second position with one second and two third place finishes in the Stages. They, however, slipped to fifth place in the fourth and final stage of the day, to be trailing Gill and Sherif by one minute, 31.8 seconds.

    Their fine show was good enough to give them the lead in the INRC 2 category, ahead of top contenders Rahul Kanthraj (Vivek Y Bhatt) and Karna Kadur (PVS Murthy).

    In the INRC 3 category, Suhem Kabeer (Jeevarathinam) made the most of championship leader Aroor Vikram Rao’s (Somayya AG) bad luck in Stage 4 to streak ahead into the lead. Suhem, however, was in his elements, winning two of the stages in his category.

    Five-time INRC champion Gill was pleased with his driving, despite the puncture. “The first stage went off very well. We, however, hit a stone in Stage 2 and picked up a puncture,” he pointed out. “We still managed to finish in decent time, which helped us stay in the lead.”

    Gill explained that the final day might be tricky as the track was likely to be muddy following rains while they only had tyres suited for tarmac. “It won’t be easy but we will give it our best shot,” he declared.

    Ghosh also was not too unhappy with the way the day panned out. “Our car had power issues during Stage 1 and we fell back to the ninth place. By the end of the day, we have climbed to third. Our goal now is to focus on the second position. First is not within reach as we are quite far behind in terms of speed,” he said.

    The results:

    INRC Overall: 1. Gaurav Gill / Musa Sherif (Team Mahindra Adventure; 00:31:22.9); 2. Phalguna Urs / Srikanth (Snap Racing; 00:32:54.7); 3. Amittrajit Ghosh / Ashwin Naik (Team Mahindra Adventure; 00:33:05.1).

    INRC 1: Gill / Sherif; 2. Ghosh / Naik; 3. Lokesh Gowda / Venu Ramesh Kumar (Team Champions; 00:37:30.4).

    INRC 2: 1. Phalguna Urs / Srikanth Gowda (Snap Racing; 00:32:54.7); 2. Rahul Kanthraj / Vivek Y Bhatt (Arka Motorsports; 00:33:20.9); 3. Karna Kadur / PVS Murthy (Arka Motorsports; 00:33:52.7).

    INRC 3: 1. Suhem Kabeer / Jeevarathinam (Team Champions; 00:33:17.8); 2. Dean Mascarenhas / Shruptha Padival (Team Champions; 00:33:23.2).

    FMSCI 2WD CUP: 1. Adith KC / Arjun SSB (00:34:18.6).

  • Gaurav Gill set to fire in Rally of Arunachal, Round 3 of MRF FMSCI INRC 2018

    Gaurav Gill set to fire in Rally of Arunachal, Round 3 of MRF FMSCI INRC 2018

    (L-R) Aroor Vikram Rao, Amittrajit Ghosh, Gaurav Gill, Karna Kadur & Rahul Kanthraj during media interaction in Itanagar for Round 3 of the MRF FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2018

    Itanagar, 2 November 2018: India’s top rallyist Gaurav Gill will be hoping to inch closer to his sixth national title as the Rally of Arunachal, Round 3 of the MRF FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2018, unfolds here over the weekend.

    Gill, the Team Mahindra Adventure spearhead, who won the grueling Dakshin Dare Rally last month, has been in imperious form through the season, winning the first two rounds with consummate ease.

    Along with his trusted co-driver Musa Sherif, Gill is expected to thrill the local crowds with his speed and daredevilry behind the wheel. He will have to keep his eye on his team-mate Amittrajit Ghosh (co-driver Ashwin Naik), though, who will be aiming to upstage him.

    Ghosh is currently in the second position and has been driving a lot more assuredly, even though he had to drop out of contention in the Dakshin Dare Rally owing to vehicle malfunction.

    Team Mahindra Adventure will be wary of Arka Motorsports’ Karna Kadur, who is likely to enjoy a slight edge over the tarmac stretches. Kadur has a new co-driver by his side, PVS Murthy, and is leading the charts in the INRC 2 category. He is third behind Gill and Ghosh in the overall championship standings.

    His team-mate Rahul Kanthraj (co-driver Vivek Y Bhatt) is also a strong contender, currently holding the second position in the INRC 2 category.

    Aroor Vikram Rao (co-driver Somayya AG) is leading the INRC 3 category and he will be keen to consolidate his position in the picturesque locals of Arunachal Pradesh.

    The Round 3 of MRF FMSCI Indian National Rally Championship 2018 being officially flagged off by Chief Minister of Arunachal Pradesh Shri Pema Khandu (with flag) in Itanagar on November 2

    Championship standings after Round 2:

    INRC Overall: 1. Gaurav Gill & Musa Sherif (Team Mahindra Adventure) 50 points; 2. Amittrajit Ghosh & Ashwin Naik (Team Mahindra Adventure) 36 points; 3. Karna Kadur & PVS Murthy (Arka Motorsports) 30 points.

    INRC 1: 1. Gaurav Gill & Musa Sherif (Team Mahindra Adventure) 50 points; 2. Amittrajit Ghosh & Ashwin Naik (Team Mahindra Adventure) 36 points.

    INRC 2: 1. Karna Kadur & PVS Murthy (Arka Motorsports) 50 points; 2, Rahul Kanthraj & Vivek Y Bhatt (Arka Motorsports) 36 points; 3. Jacob KJ & Nitin Jacob 24 points.

    INRC 3: 1. Aroor Vikram Rao & Somayya AG 50 points; 2. Suhem Kabeer & Jeevarathinam 30 points; 3. Dean Mascarenhas & Shruptha Padival 28 points.

  • Raid de Himalaya 2018: New section will challenge the best of men and machine

    Raid de Himalaya 2018: New section will challenge the best of men and machine

    Shimla, 28 September 2018: On the most impossible roads of the Kargil, Zanskar and Ladakh sectors, motorsport titans of India are going to clash at the 20th edition of the Raid de Himalaya, the World’s highest cross-country motorsport challenge. The Raid 2018 will run from October 8 to October 14. It will begin and finish at Leh.

    A total of 31 teams for Xtreme cars and trucks, 37 teams for Xtreme motorcycles and quads, 12 bikers in the Alpine two-wheeler category, and 31 teams in Adventure Trail, which follows the Time-Speed-Distance format, are going to race on the highest reaches of the Himalayas.

    This year’s Raid will run its first stage on the never-before traversed section from Lamayuru, called the Moonland of Ladakh, to Photoksar. Rallyists are going to race on a newly-upgraded road that was earlier a mule track into Zanskar. Crossing the Sirisir La at a height of 4,805 meters above sea level, the 20th Raid De Himalaya is going to enter totally unchartered territory.

    Raid 2018 is all set for the clash between motorsport titans Philippos Mathai and Amittrajit Ghosh of Team Mahindra, Raid winner 2015 Lhakpa Tsering, Raid 2017 runners-up Sanjay Razdan and Sanjay Agarwal, Raid 2017 third overall.

    The choice of vehicles for these motorsport champions is diverse. The gruelling Raid de Himalaya 2018 is going to feature Mathai and Ghosh driving the XUV 500, Sanjay Razdan driving the Maruti Gypsy, Sanjay Agarwal driving the Grand Vitara, and Lakhpa Tsering of Arunachal Pradesh challenging them all with the Polaris RZR 1000 Turbo Dynamix.

    Raid 2018 will see competitors racing to Umba La, a high mountain pass at an elevation of 4.496 meters above sea level. This is one of the most spectacular stretches globally, and is listed on dangerousroads.org. The high mountain road features more than 50 hairpin curves and dangerous drop-offs.

    Lhakpa Tsering, Raid Winner 2015, said it takes guts to race at the heights and the roads that form part of the Raid de Himalaya. “Rallying is not cricket or tennis where you have 17-18 year olds as champions. Competitive high-altitude racing needs maturity, brains and physical fitness, and tremendous grit,” said Lakhpa, 45, who has been in motorsport for 20 years.

    The Raid is considered among the top ten toughest rallies of the World. The Raid was established in 1999, and those in the motorsport circuit admit that it’s made grown men cry ever since.

    In 20 years, the Raid has mapped a total of 13.23 lakh kilometres over the highest motorable roads of the Himalayas, including route reconnaissance and transport stages. Competitors driving four wheelers, two wheelers and scarabs have raced over 41,570 kilometers in two decades.

    Raid de Himalaya, India’s most formidable motorsport race, is the flagship rally of the country’s leading motorsport club, Himalayan Motorsport. Vijay Parmar, President of Himalayan Motorsport, said that it has been the Raid’s tradition to open new areas every year to adventure tourism.

    “Raid 2018 offers new winding high-altitude dirt roads as extremely challenging stages on the worlds’ highest cross-country challenge. We have been discovering new routes every year. For the 20th anniversary of our epic rally, there had to be something special. Racing on the new pass of Kaldang-Kildang La at an elevation of 4.092m in the Ladakh region, and the daunting stretches of Photoksar and Sirisir La promises to make Raid 2018 a nail-biting finish,” said Parmar.

  • Amittrajit Ghosh and Ashwin Naik chalk up ERC3 debut win in EKO Rally Acropolis

    Amittrajit Ghosh and Ashwin Naik chalk up ERC3 debut win in EKO Rally Acropolis

    Amittrajit Ghosh and co-driver Ashwin Naik celebrate their ERC3 win in the EKO Rally Acropolis. Photo: ERC

    Athens, 03 June 2018: Amittrajit Ghosh and co-driver Ashwin Naik from India scored a fairy-tale underdog victory in the FIA European Rally Championship’s ERC3 category of the EKO Rally Acropolis, winning on their debut in an older-specification Ford Fiesta R2 on Sunday.

    Leading his class heading into Sunday, Ghosh simply had to bring his Prospeed-prepared car home in one piece to complete his first ERC appearance – his third outside native India – in first place. He did exactly that, continuing a deliberate approach to prioritise survival over speed in Acropolis’ rough, rock-strewn stages he had taken since Friday.

    “Coming here with an older generation R2, the goal was to finish. In the back of my mind, I knew that if we got to the finish we’d be on the podium, but yesterday morning, when I was only two seconds behind [Artur] Muradian in the Peugeot I knew I could do it,” he told ERC Radio at the finish line.

    Amittrajit Ghosh on the charge. Photo: ERC

    TBRacing’s Muradian had been ERC3’s quickest driver throughout all three days, but his PEUGEOT 208 R2 was appropriate battle-scarred from his fast approach. He was fastest in all but one stage he completed, but sheared wheel bolts in SS5 on Saturday morning forced him to retire from the lead.

    “[The wheel bolts] sheared, like somebody cut them off. It’s funny because it was the first turn of the stage, 90 metres, sharp right and you can see the wheel flying in front of you! We lifted the car and when we decided to put the tyre back on, we noticed there were no bolts. We found all four of them in the corner later on!” he said.

    Despite his speed, Muradian’s Saturday retirement meant he would settle for third place, well behind ERC Ladies’ Trophy frontrunner Emma Falcón in second. She bravely fought through all four of Leg Three’s stages with no brakes, her middle pedal going down to the floor and forcing Falcón to use her handbrake instead.

    Chrysostomos Karellis had hoped to return for Leg Three after his retirement in Drossohori on Saturday but did not make it out of service come Sunday morning.

    Amittrajit Ghosh….sensational win. Photo: ERC

    The Indian pair’s victory that saw them finish over 12 minutes ahead of their nearest rivals,  was a foregone conclusion at the end of Saturday’s stages when they enjoyed a commanding lead despite treacherous conditions as Ghosh rightly opted for safety-first approach which put him ahead of class rivals.

    Ghosh was taking part in only his third rally event outside of his native India, piloting a Baltic Motorsport Promotion-prepared Ford Fiesta R2. Much of the foundation for his victory was laid on Saturday when after Leg Two’s morning loop, he led in ERC3, taking a steady approach as others were caught out by tricky conditions.

    “The whole plan for the event was not to take any risks but drive at a decent pace, so we were surprised to see that we were only two seconds off the fastest [in SS3],” said Ghosh. “For the first 7-8 km [in SS4] we took it almost at recce speed as I knew if you go hot there, you’re not going to finish that stage. When I saw our competitor [Chrysostomos Karellis] unfortunately parked, I knew the call was right.”

    Though he lost 17 seconds to previous leader Artur Muradian in SS4, he then moved to the front when a wheel bolt failure ended Muradian’s day in the following stage. “In the next stage at the first corner he was parked,” said Ghosh “I immediately backed off because it doesn’t make any sense to push, and this car can’t take it. If you drive anything more than 70%, I don’t think any car is going to finish.”

    His nearest competitor Emma Falcón suffered a puncture in SS5, allowing him to extend his gap and potentially set him up for a sensational debut ERC3 win.

    Source: ERC

     

  • Kolkota’s Bro-sis duo hog limelight in different teams

    By David Bodapati

    Chennai, 26 June 2011: Kolkata’s talented youngster Amittrajit Ghosh with co-driver Ashwin Naik of Mangalore saved the day for Team MRF winning the 37th South India Rally as the Red giants lost the second runner Lohit Urs (Srinivasa Murthy PV) to a stewards’ decision in the second round of the Speed Indian National Rally Championship, at Irrungattukottai, 35 kms from here, on Sunday.

    Talking about experienced Ashwin Naik, a veteran journalist quipped: “To finish first, first you have to finish. And that happens only when you have a navigator who can control the emotions of a driver,’’ and that’s what Amit Ghosh acknowledged of Ashwin’s expertise today at the Post-event press conference.

    Thus, Team MRF dominated the second rally of the season despite strong contender Gaurav Gill of Delhi (co driver Musa Sherif) logging a DNF with gear box problems when he was only a few kilometers to the finish and tried to run only on 5th gear but could not complete on Day One. Experienced Arjun Balu (Sujith Kumar), also of team MRF, saw their car roll to a halt after SS 6 on Saturday but bounced back to get 7 leg points on Sunday as they were the fastest. It was the new recruit Ghosh, who led the Red challenge till the end winning the top class 2000N+ in the Super Rally format . The lone opposition of privateer Arjun Rao Aroor (Satish Rajagopal) who started his own AR Racing after quitting MRF failed he did not complete the rally. The tight corners and twisty route apart from the bumpy terrain of `Track Stage’ took a toll on the cars and 12 out of 27 dropped out, to tell the tale of the challenging terrain.

    In the 2000cc N class, talented youngster who was out of the INRC, Karna Kadu of Bangalore, after a crash in Nashik in 2009, made a stunning comeback after a year’s hiatus, to edge out overnight leaders Rahul Kantharaj and Vivek Bhat also of Bangalore and made it a double whammy for his navigator exactly after a year. His codriver, Somonita Ghosh, sister of winner Ghosh, is the only lady driver in the National Championship. The name Kadur rings a bell in the ear of every motorsport fan for the exploits of his father Mr Kadur, and one hopes that the young giant takes forward the family tradition. “It was a brilliant rally and I am happy where I am finished,’’ said a content Kadur, winning his second only run on the powerful Cedia machine in the INRC. Rahul Kantharaj and Vivek Bhat, who finished second in the 2000 cc N category had a flat tyre while Vikram Devadasen and Somayya AG came third.  “But for the flat tyre today on SS7, we would have retained our lead,” said Kanthraj with Bhat in tow as they tried to hide their disappointment.

    In the Gypsy Class, the seasoned Sanjay Agarwal (Shivaprakash E) from Bangalore dedicated his victory to Manoj Dalal, the Clerk of the Course (CoC), who as a co-participant saved his life 10 years back at the same venue in South India Rally, when Sanjay broke his back and still insisted that he would drive. “I am alive and here, because of Manoj, whose timely help saved my life,’’ said Sanjay, with everyone applauding him. Sachin Singh (Venu Ramesh) who lost a minute due to electrical malfunction and finished second while Shafeeq (Adhiraj Bardhan) came third.

    In the 1600cc class, Vignesh Devadasen, ably assisted by Anoop Kumar of Bangalore who survived a 300 ft fall in Nashik, won the rally and proved that the safety is of paramount importance. Leader of the championship, Aniruddha Rangnekar and Overdrive’s Hally Prabhakar as codriver finished a deserved second as they managed to nurture their car.

    Here you can watch the YouTube video by OVERDRIVE produced by CNBCTV18.

    The results (provisional unaudited partial classification):

    Overall: Amittrajit Ghosh / Ashwin Naik (MRF) 1 (2hr, 05 mins, 59.0 secs); Karna Kadur (Somonita Ghosh) 2 (2: 08: 44.0 secs);  Rahul Kanthraj / Vivek Bhatt (Pvt) 3 (2: 09: 03.4).

    2000cc (N+): Amittrajit Ghosh / Ashwin Naik (MRF) 1 (2hr, 05 mins, 59.0 secs);

    2000cc (Group N): Karna Kadur (Somonita Ghosh) 1 (2: 08: 44.0) 1; Kanthraj / Bhatt 1 (2: 09: 34.0); Vikram Devadasen  / Somayya AG (Pvt) 3 (2: 09:53.0).

    1600cc: Vignesh Devarajan / Anoop Kumar (pvt) 1 (2: 31:56.0); Aniruddha Rangnekar / Halley Prabhakar 2 (2: 41: 31.0);

    1400cc (Star Cup): Hrishikesh Thackersey / Kaushik H Shinde 1 (2: 04.14.0); Karan AM / Shanmuga SN 2 (02:03:.4).

    Gypsy – stock: Sanjay Agarwal / Shivaprakash E 1 (2:00:31.0); Sachin Singh / Venu Ramesh 2 (2:02:35.0); Shafeeq-ur-Rehman / Adhiraj Bardhan 3 (3:03:34.0).

    Note to editors: Since 1400cc and Gypsy Cup are not officially part of INRC, the scratch time given for the cars in the other classes for the cancelled stage are not added to these class cars and the timings are for only ten stages.

  • Ghosh, Naik win Rally of Coimbatore with 20-sec `Grace Time’

    Coimbatore, 28 June 2009: Amittrajit Ghosh and co-driver Ashwin Naik of Red Rooster Racing won the Rally of Coimbatore, the season opener of the IMG-PSP Speed Indian National Rally Championship at the Windmill farms of Kethanoor, near here on Sunday.

    The Kolkata-Mangalore duo were helped by a stewards’ decision late on Saturday night to push Saturday’s leaders Arjun Rao Aroor and co-driver Satish Rajagopal to second place. Ghosh gained 20 precious seconds as stewards upheld his request for `grace time’ as he lost a lot of time after the duo were boxed down by a slower car during the Special Stage 8 on Saturday.

    Now Rao and Rajagopal finished 14 seconds behind Ghosh. On Sunday morning, Ghosh steered his Cedia well and made up crucial time clocking an identical time in the final stage after he lost 19 seconds to Rao in the penultimate stage. The overnight lead of `grace time’ given to him, helped him clinch the issue.

    However, Team MRF protested the 20-second `grace time’ given to Ghosh and if the Stewards uphold the protest, then it is likely that Rao might yet be declared champion again. Delhi’s Sandeep Sharma and co-driver Arjun Chopra of Team Thunderbolt finished third in a Maruti Gypsy.

    Results (provisional): Overall: 1. Amittrajit Ghosh/ Ashwin Naik (Red Rooster Racing, Cedia N+) (2:10:45); 2. Arjun Aroor Rao/ Satish Rajagopal (Team MRF, Cedia N+) (2:10:58); Sandeep 3. Sharma/ Arjun Chopra (Team Thunderbolt, Maruti Gypsy) (2:16:12).

    2000cc Class (Cedia N+): Amittrajit Ghosh/ Ashwin Naik 1; Arjun Rao Aroor/ Satish Rajagopal; 2. Arjun Balu/Sujith Kumar (Team MRF) (2:18:08).

    1600cc (Maruti Baleno): 1. Vishal GA/ Robinson Rajkumar (2:21:58); 2. Sujay S/ Varun S (2:22:42); 3. Rahul Kantharaj/ Vivek Bhatt (2:26:48).

    1400cc (MPFI Esteem): 1. Bikku Babu/ Bonnie Thomas; 2. Amith Anand/ Prakash Rodrigues (2:20:23); 3. Francis Jose/ Manoj M (DDL Sports) (2:22:08),

    Rally Star Cup (Carbureted Esteem): 1. Karna Kadur/ Somonnita Ghosh; 2. Venkatapathy/ Santosh Kumar S; 3. CG Balaram/ CG Raghuram (2:18:17).

    Maruti Gypsy: 1. Sharma/ Chopra; 2. Khushwant Randhawa/ Harminder S Kaler (2:22:04); 3. Vijay Jose/ Pradeep Nagabhushan (2:36:16).