Baltic Touring Car Championship

The Baltic Touring Car Championship or BaTCC is a touring car racing series held each year in the Baltic states. The championship is regulated by a board containing two representatives each from the automobile associations of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Eligible cars for the championship have often changed over recent years. In 2022 there are class entries for TCR, GT classes, Touring car classes(up to 1600ccm, up to 2000ccm, up to 3000ccm and up to 4000ccm), V1600 and mono class BMW 325 CUP. BaTCC championship is held together with Baltic Endurance Championship or BEC 6H. Teams participate in 6 hour endurance races in different racing categories. The minor league for BEC 6H is the Nankang Endurance Academy 2 hour race for less powerful cars.

Baltic Touring Car Championship
CategoryTouring cars
CountryBaltic States
Inaugural season2000
Tyre suppliersHankook
Drivers' championLithuania BGT PRO Ignas Jomantas

France BMW 325 Leo Messenger

Lithuania BTC1 Dovydas Akstinas

Estonia BTC2 Simo Lind

Lithuania BTC3 Gediminas Bilinskas

Lithuania BTC4 Ramunas Capkauskas

United Kingdom BGT AM Drew Holland

Latvia V1600 Raivis Meilands
Makes' championMercedes
Teams' championHmobile by AMG Customer Racing
Official websitehttp://www.batcc.eu
Current season

Races are held in race tracks in Baltic States and Finland. Audru ring in Estonia, Bikernieki in Latvia, Nemuno Ziedas in Lithuania and Botniaring in Finland.

The race day format features two races per round, with standing starts BMW 325 CUP and Touring cars and rolling start for GT and TCR cars.

For 2021 season for the first time The Nations Cup and the Team standings were introduced.

Racing classes edit

The following shows the key specifications issues for each class. BTC and TCR category have two 15-20 min races per event. While BEC Championship has one 6 hour race per event.

BTC edit

BTC1 cars with engine capacity from up to 1600cm3.

BTC2 cars with engine capacity up to 2000cm3.

BTC3 cars with engine capacity up to 3000cm3.

BTC4 cars with engine capacity up to 4000cm3. Class BTC4 maximum engine capacity is allowed 4000cm3 which includes all the ratios of the Technical Regulations. (Example: 2000cm3 bi-turbo engine has a ratio 1,7 which means actual engine capacity would equal 3400 cm3).

 
BTC cars in action

BGT AM or Baltic GT AM class is meant for series production cars with front mounted engines and SRO GT4 cars. Air restrictor for turbo cars.

BGT PRO or Baltic GT PRO class is series production cars and non series production cars (with tubular frame bodywork, or semi-tubular bodywork, or monocoque bodywork), LM GTE, GT3 cars.

TCR edit

 
TCR BaTCC at Botniaring, Round 2 Finland.

TCR BaTCC is an official TCR series consisting of four rounds, two races in each round.

Baltic Endurance Championship edit

 
BEC Start of the race at DeWALT GP in Riga, May 2019

A2000 Racing cars with engine capacity up to 2000 cm3

A3000 Racing cars with engine capacity up to 3000 cm3

A3000+ Racing cars with engine capacity over 3000 cm3

GT PRO – series production cars and non series production cars (with tubular frame bodywork, or semi-tubular bodywork, or monocoque bodywork), LM GTE, GT3 cars;

GT AM – series production cars with front mounted engines and SRO GT4 cars;

911 – Porsche GT3 Cup cars;

TCR – TCR cars.

Calendar 2024 edit

  1.   Audru Ring, Season Opener, May 3-5
  2.   Biķernieki Complex Sports Base, DeWALT Grand Prix, June 14-16
  3.   Nemuno Žiedas, Kaunas Grand Prix, July 6-7
  4.   Audru Ring, Parnu Summer Race, Aug 16-18
  5.   Tor Poznań, Season Finale, September 20-22

Champions edit

Season Baltic GT Champion TCR Champion BTC 2 Champion BTC 1 Champion Super 1600 Champion National Class Champion BEC Champion
1999   Indrek Sepp (S2000)
2000   Indrek Sepp (B2000)   Martin Merisaar
2001   Arnis Jursevskis (B2000)   Martin Merisaar
2002   Aivis Ohtla (B2000)   Jānis Vorobjovs
2003   Girts Krüzmanis (B2000)   Robertas Kupčikas
2004   Girts Krüzmanis (B2000)   Marius Milevskis
2005   Indrek Sepp (S2000)   Madis Kasemets   Jānis Kārkliņš
2006   Antti-Veikko Pakalen (S2000)   Mindaugas Neliubsys   Normunds Šubeckis
2007   Egons Lapins (B2000)   Lauris Vidžis   Agris Petrovskis
2008   Egons Lapins (Superproduction)   Karolis Doleba   Uldis Timaks
2009   Marcis Birkens (Superproduction)   Roland Feodorov   Vitālijs Kalmi
2010   Marcis Birkens (Superproduction)   Andres Hall   Kristaps Mietulis
2011   Uldis Timaks (Superproduction)   Raul Karu   Didzis Pope
2012   Vitālijs Kalmi (GT Open)   Mantas Neverdauskas   Igors Zubkovs
2013   Artjoms Kočlamazašvili (GT Open)   Nikolay Zhuravlev   Lauris Vīgants
2014   Eidmantas Nekrošius (GT Open)   Jānis Ciekals   Viktors Vasiļjevs
2015   Dainius Matijošaitis (GT Open)   Andrius Jasonauskas   Edvinas Mardosas   Kristaps Mietulis   Garijs Rožkalns   Rotoma Racing (BMW M3)
2016   Saulius Beržis (GT Open)   Alvydas Malakauskas   Julius Skirmantas   Mārtiņs Sesks   Jānis Vanks   RIMO Racing (BMW 330D)
2017   Pavel Shchapov (GT Open)   Ernesta Globyte   Andrey Yushin   Steven Puust   Jānis Vanks   Skuba Dream (Porsche GT3)
2018   Marko Rantanen (GT Open)   Ernesta Globyte   Peeter Peek   Dmitry Savateev   Jānis Vanks   GSR Motorsport (VW Golf GTI TCR)
2019   Raivo Tamm (GT Open)   Dziugas Tovilavicius   Jyrki Jonkkari   Marius Miskunas   Richardas Martinkevičius No class   Circle K milesPLUS Racing Team (Porsche GT3 CUP)
Season GT PRO Champion GT AM Champion TCR Champion BMW 325 CUP Champion TCR Endurance Champion BEC Champion
2020   Vilnis Batraks   Edvinas Einikis Cancelled   Matiss Mezaks Cancelled Cancelled
2021   Sim Racer   Laurynas Kriksciunas   Valters Zviedris   Karolis Jovaisa   Noker Racing Team   RD Signs
2022   Thomas Kangro   Kastytis Volbekas   Ivars Vallers   Valters Zviedris   Black Rose Racing   Porsche Baltic GT3
2023   Ignas Jomantas   Drew Holland   Darius Zitlinskas   Leo Messenger   Jurmala - Optibet Racing   Hmobile by AMG Customer Racing

Circuits used edit

References edit

External links edit