2013 Global RallyCross Championship

The 2013 Global RallyCross Championship was the third season of this championship. The season consisted of nine weekends, three in X Games events (including a doubleheader after an event cancellation). Toomas Heikkinen earned his first series championship after a record-setting streak of five consecutive victories.

Rules changes edit

A penalty box will be added for this season. In case of a false start, the driver must endure a stop-go penalty in this zone avoiding the need to restart the race.[1] Stop-go penalty can be also given for too aggressive car-to-car contact, such causing a competing driver to spin out by pushing their car.[2]

Teams and drivers edit

Manufacturer Constructor Team Individual Team No. Drivers Rounds Cars
Chevrolet   PMR Motorsports PMR Motorsports 59   Pat Moro 8–9 Chevrolet Sonic
Citroën   LD Motorsport LD Motorsport 33   Liam Doran 1 Citroën DS3
Dodge   Pastrana Racing Pastrana Racing 99   Bryce Menzies 1–6, 8–9 Dodge Dart
  Henning Solberg 7
199   Travis Pastrana 1, 4, 6, 8–9
  Timur Timerzyanov 2–3, 5, 7
Ford   OMSE2 Royal Purple OMSE2 7   Townsend Bell 2–3 Ford Fiesta ST
32   Steve Arpin All
Rdio OMSE2 77   Scott Speed All
  Olsbergs MSE Olsbergs MSE 18   Patrik Sandell All
Rockstar Energy Olsbergs MSE 34   Tanner Foust All
Rockstar Energy Metal Mulisha Olsbergs MSE 38   Brian Deegan All
Bluebeam Olsbergs MSE 57   Toomas Heikkinen All
  Hoonigan Racing Division Hoonigan Racing Division 43   Ken Block All
Hyundai   Rhys Millen Racing Rhys Millen Racing 4   Stephan Verdier 8–9 Hyundai Veloster
14   David Sterckx 6
67   Rhys Millen 6, 9
Mini   LD Motorsport LD Motorsport 33   Liam Doran 2–3, 5–6 Mini Countryman JCW
  Prodrive Prodrive 40   Dave Mirra 8–9
Mitsubishi   X Team Racing X Team Racing 12   Nelson Piquet Jr. 1, 4, 8–9 Mitsubishi Lancer
  Guilherme Spinelli 2–3
Peugeot   XRC Team Brasil XRC Team Brasil 12A   Eduardo Marques Jr. 1 Peugeot 207
13   Mauricio Neves 1
Subaru   Subaru Puma Rallycross Team USA Subaru Puma Rallycross Team USA 11   Sverre Isachsen 2–9 Subaru WRX STI
40   Dave Mirra 2–7
81   Bucky Lasek 2–9
  Verdier Racing Verdier Racing 12   Stephan Verdier 6
Volkswagen   Marklund Motorsport Marklund Motorsport 29   Buddy Rice 1 Volkswagen Polo
  Mattias Ekström 2–3
  Timur Timerzyanov 6
92   Anton Marklund 1–3, 6

Schedule edit

[3]

Round Location Companion Event Date
1   Foz do Iguaçu X Games Brazil April 21
2–3 (DH)   Munich X Games Munich June 29–30
4   New Hampshire Motor Speedway Lenox Industrial Tools 301 July 11
5   Bristol Motor Speedway Standalone July 20
6   Irwindale Event Center X Games Los Angeles August 4
7   Atlanta Motor Speedway Standalone August 10
8   Charlotte Motor Speedway AACA AutoFair Fall Meet September 22
9   Las Vegas SEMA Automotive Trade Show November 7

(DH): An event in Barcelona at Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium May 19 was called off because of weather conditions. The Munich round, originally scheduled for June 30, was converted into a doubleheader round with races on June 29 and 30.[4]

Season summary edit

The first event of the season in Foz do Iguaçu was performed on a purpose built gravel track, with the start/finish straight having the only tarmac section. Fifteen drivers took part in the event. Liam Doran set the fastest laptime in the seeding round.[5] Heat 1 was won by Finnish driver Toomas Heikkinen, who took advantage of a crash at the start of the heat. Ken Block took second place, with Liam Doran placed third, after retiring on Lap 1. Heat 2 was won by Brian Deegan followed by Travis Pastrana is second. Nelson Piquet Jr. finished third despite being penalized for a jump start. Bryce Menzies finished the heat in last place. In Heat 3 the reigning champion Tanner Foust took victory over Steve Arpin. Patrik Sandell and Mauricio Neves finished in third and fourth place, respectively. Scott Speed was the winner of Heat 4 by passing Anton Marklund on the last corner, despite spinning on the first lap. Buddy Rice ended up third, with Eduardo Marques, Jr rounding off the heat. Buddy Rice won the Last Chance Qualifier, meaning he qualified for the final along with second-place finisher Patrik Sandell. Doran's car failure at the start of the race, retires both himself and Bryce Menzies, denying them both of qualifying for the final.

The Final saw mayhem at the first turn on Lap 1, which shook up the field, placing Heikkinen into the lead from Speed and Marklund after Lap 1. After Lap 2, Speed slowed down, which allowed Marklund to jump into second place. By the end of Lap 3, the race is red flagged, and is scheduled to restart, after retirements from Foust, Pastrana, Block and Rice. On the restart, Scott Speed sat on pole from a six car grid. Travis Pastrana, Buddy Rice, Ken Block and reigning champion Tanner Foust were all unable to make the restart. On Lap 1 Toomas Heikkinen aggressively made his way into the lead, ahead of Speed and Arpin by the end of the lap. On the second lap, Arpin took the joker lap, but failed to pass Speed, leaving the top three the same after the end of the lap. On Lap 4, Sandell takes the joker lap to pass Arpin into 3rd place, as Speed starts closing down Heikkinen for the lead. On the final lap, Speed finally used his joker lap to pass Heikkinen on the last corner of the race, to take the gold medal. Heikkinen won the silver, and Sandell the bronze. For all three of them it was their first X Games medals, most notably Speed, who had not ever drove a rally car prior to the event. Steve Arpin finished 4th, ahead of Brian Deegan in 5th, and Anton Marklund in 6th.

The second round of the season was set to take place in Lluís Companys Olympic Stadium, as part of the Barcelona X Games. Spanish drivers Nani Roma and Carlos Sainz, both Dakar Rally champions, arrived to debut in this event.[6][7] However, after heavy rain all day, the whole event was eventually moved to Munich after several delays on May 19, and the Munich event turned into a doubleheader. Day 1 featured Liam Doran win in his new Mini, while Toomas Heikkinen won gold in race 2. The Subaru PUMA Rallycross Team USA made their 2013 debut, and Townsend Bell made his GRC debut in the #7 Royal Purple Ford Fiesta, for OMSE2.

Round 4 took place in Loudon, New Hampshire, at the New Hampshire Motor Speedway. GRC Lites made their debut there, and Joni Wiman won the first-ever Lites race. In the Supercar class, Travis Pastrana returned, and Tanner Foust led 9 of 10 laps in the final, but crashed in the final corner, handing the win to Heikkinen. The fifth round of the season took place in Bristol. Joni Wiman won the Lites final, which had to be restarted because Kevin Eriksson flipped over on the first lap. Patrik Sandell won his heat, but Heikkinen cruised to an easy third victory in a row. Round 6 took place at Irwindale Speedway, as part of X Games Los Angeles. David Sterckx, Rhys Millen, and Stephan Verdier made their 2013 debut, and Reinis Nitišs made his Lites debut. In Supercars, Sverre Isachsen won heat 1, which had to be restarted because Steve Arpin crashed. Heat 2 saw Liam Doran win. Toomas Heikkinen won Heat 3, while Heat 4 went to Ken Block. Anton Marklund crashed on the 1st turn of the LCQ, and that caused the 2nd red flag of the day. Marklund was out. On the restart, Rhys Millen and Scott Speed advanced. In the final, Ken Block, Liam Doran, and others crashed on the first turn. Toomas Heikkinen won the final X Games LA gold medal in history. Tanner Foust took silver, and Sverre Isachsen took bronze.

Round 7 took place at Atlanta Motor Speedway, as a standalone event. Bryce Menzies was replaced by Henning Solberg in the #99 Dodge, and Travis Pastrana was once again replaced by Timur Timerzyanov. Patrik Sandell crashed into a dirt embankment in the LCQ, sending him airborne. Toomas Heikkinen almost secured the championship with another win, while Joni Wiman won in Lites. Round 8 took place at the dirt track at Charlotte Motor Speedway, where Pat Moro debuted his new Chevrolet Sonic and Dave Mirra helped Prodrive make its official debut, after having rented its Mini to Doran for much of the season. Block, Speed and Deegan took heat victories, while Foust missed the final after rolling his car during the final heat. Speed won the final, while third place for Heikkinen (having qualified via the LCQ) gave him the championship title.

The season finale took place in Las Vegas during the week of the SEMA Show as a two-day event, with practice, seeding, and the first set of heats run on Wednesday and the second set of heats, LCQ, and final run on Thursday. Heikkinen aimed to continue his streak of eight consecutive podiums with a pair of heat wins, while Foust, Block, and Speed also swept each of their heats. The LCQ saw Nelson Piquet Jr. spin Sverre Isachsen to earn a transfer spot and land his Mitsubishi in the final, but a protest from Isachsen saw stewards disqualify Piquet for aggressive driving and restore the transfer spot to the Norwegian. In the final, a jump start from Foust forced him into the penalty box, giving Block a lead that he would never relinquish. Block would earn his first GRC victory in his 17th GRC start, while Foust ended the season with a runner-up finish and Travis Pastrana completed the podium.

Results edit

Events edit

No. Event Seeding Round Heat 1 Heat 2 Heat 3 Heat 4 Winner Team Manufacturer
1 Foz do Iguaçu   Liam Doran   Toomas Heikkinen   Brian Deegan   Tanner Foust   Scott Speed   Scott Speed   OMSE2 Ford
2 Munich   Liam Doran   Liam Doran   Tanner Foust   Ken Block   Toomas Heikkinen   Liam Doran   LD Motorsport Mini
3   Toomas Heikkinen   Toomas Heikkinen   Mattias Ekström   Liam Doran   Brian Deegan   Toomas Heikkinen   Olsbergs MSE Ford
4 Loudon   Ken Block   Ken Block   Toomas Heikkinen   Tanner Foust N/A   Toomas Heikkinen   Olsbergs MSE Ford
5 Bristol   Ken Block   Ken Block   Patrik Sandell   Sverre Isachsen N/A   Toomas Heikkinen   Olsbergs MSE Ford
6 Irwindale   Brian Deegan   Sverre Isachsen   Liam Doran   Toomas Heikkinen   Ken Block   Toomas Heikkinen   Olsbergs MSE Ford
7 Atlanta   Toomas Heikkinen   Toomas Heikkinen   Ken Block   Tanner Foust N/A   Toomas Heikkinen   Olsbergs MSE Ford
8 Charlotte   Ken Block   Ken Block   Scott Speed   Brian Deegan N/A   Scott Speed   OMSE2 Ford
9 Las Vegas   Tanner Foust   Tanner Foust   Toomas Heikkinen   Ken Block   Scott Speed   Ken Block   Hoonigan Racing Division Ford

Drivers standings edit

Points are awarded to the top sixteen finishers using the following structure:

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   11th   12th   13th   14th   15th   16th 
Points 20 17 15 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
  • Bold indicates the fastest in the seeding round.
  • * indicates a heat win.

GRC Lites edit

Pos. Driver No. Team  
LOU
 
BRI
 
IRW
 
ATL
 
CHA
 
LV
Pts.
1   Joni Wiman 93 Set Promotion 1 1 1 1 1 1 128
2   Sebastian Eriksson 37 Olsbergs MSE 2 5 3 3 3 3 93
3   Mitchell deJong 24 Olsbergs MSE 4 2 2 4 5 81
4   Kevin Eriksson 39 Set Promotion 3 6 4 5 7 6 75
5   Alexander Westlund 55 Set Promotion 5 3 6 4 5 7 74
6   Austin Dyne 99 AD Racing 6 2 10 8 8 4 66
7   Geoff Sykes 65 Olsbergs MSE 7 4 9 7 2 8 66
8   Harry Cheung 88 Cohesive Front Racing 9 7 8 9 6 46
9   Halid Avdagic 4 Olsbergs MSE 8 8 7 29
10   Reinis Nitišs 15 Olsbergs MSE 5 6 23
11   Tyler Benson 60 Olsbergs MSE 10 9 10 22
12   Eric Faren 21 Olsbergs MSE 2 18
13   Brent Lee 35 Olsbergs MSE 9 8

References edit

  1. ^ "GRC Adds Penalty Box to 2013 Competition". Global-Rallycross.com. Archived from the original on 2013-05-14. Retrieved 2013-04-21.
  2. ^ Horsey, John (August 4, 2013). "Officials warn overly aggressive drivers". XGames.com. ESPN. Retrieved May 23, 2014.
  3. ^ "2013 GRC Schedule". Global-Rallycross.com. Archived from the original on 2014-02-26. Retrieved 2014-03-01.
  4. ^ "Rain forces cancellation of Global Rallycross at X Games Barcelona". Archived from the original on 2013-06-19. Retrieved 2013-05-31.
  5. ^ "Doran scores fastest time in RallyCross seeding". ESPN.com. April 20, 2013.
  6. ^ "Carlos Sainz estará en los X Games Barcelona". Motor y Racing. May 14, 2013.
  7. ^ "2004 Dakar Rally Winner Nani Roma To Compete in Barcelona". Global Rallycross. May 3, 2013. Archived from the original on May 7, 2013. Retrieved May 12, 2013.