2022 Formula Regional European Championship

The 2022 Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine was a multi-event, Formula Regional open-wheel single seater motor racing championship held across Europe. The championship featured a mix of professional and amateur drivers, competing in Formula Regional cars that conform to the FIA Formula Regional regulations for the championship. This was the fourth season of the championship and the second after a merger with Formula Renault Eurocup which resulted to the change of the engine supplier to Alpine. The season commenced on 22 April at Autodromo Nazionale Monza and concluded on 23 October at Mugello Circuit, after ten rounds.

Prema Racing won their third teams' championship at Barcelona, with two races to spare. Their driver Dino Beganovic won the drivers' championship, with one race to spare. Leonardo Fornaroli, driving for Trident, won the rookie title.

Teams and drivers

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Twelve teams were pre-selected on 12 November 2021; JD Motorsport's entry and assets were taken over by Trident.[1] On 23 February 2022, new team Race Performance Motorsport was announced to have taken over DR Formula's entry.[2]

Teams No. Driver Status Rounds
  Prema Racing 3   Paul Aron[3] All
18   Dino Beganovic[4] All
58   Sebastián Montoya[5] R All
88   Hamda Al Qubaisi[6] F 1–8
  Amna Al Qubaisi[7] G F 9–10
  Trident 4   Roman Bilinski[a][10] R All
70   Tim Tramnitz[11] R All
72   Leonardo Fornaroli[12] R All
  Monolite Racing 5   Macéo Capietto[13] R All
6   Pietro Armanni[14] R All
24   Cenyu Han[15] R 1–5
  Nicola Marinangeli[16] 7–10
  G4 Racing 7   Axel Gnos[17] 1–7, 9–10
  Gillian Henrion[18] G 8
8   Matías Zagazeta[19] R All
22   Tereza Bábíčková[20] G F 8
92   Owen Tangavelou[21] R 1–5
  FA Racing by MP 9   Esteban Masson[22] R 1–6
  Francesco Braschi[16] R 7–10
12   Victor Bernier[23] R All
35   Nicolás Baptiste[24] R All
  Arden Motorsport 10   Joshua Dürksen[25] R All
19   Noel León[26] R All
91   Eduardo Barrichello[27] All
  Van Amersfoort Racing 11   Levente Révész[28] All
13   Joshua Dufek[29] R All
27   Kas Haverkort[30] All
  R-ace GP 15   Léna Bühler[31] F 1–3
16   Lorenzo Fluxá[32] All
26   Hadrien David[33] All
85   Gabriel Bortoleto[34] All
  MP Motorsport 17   Sami Meguetounif[35] R All
30   Michael Belov[b][36] 1–5
  Mari Boya[16] 7–10
77   Dilano van 't Hoff[37] 1–3, 5, 7–10
  Francesco Braschi[38] R 6
  KIC Motorsport 21   Piotr Wiśnicki[39] R 1, 3–10
  Patrik Pasma[40] 2
28   Francesco Braschi[41] R 1–5
  Sebastian Øgaard[42] G 8–10
68   Santiago Ramos[43] R 1–9
  William Alatalo[44] G 10
  ART Grand Prix 42   Laurens van Hoepen[45] R All
46   Gabriele Minì[46] All
64   Mari Boya[47] 1–6
  Esteban Masson[16] R 7–10
  RPM 55   Pietro Delli Guanti[48] 1–7
  Pierre-Louis Chovet[49] G 8–10
65   Keith Donegan[31] 1–5
  Owen Tangavelou[50] R 6–10
75   Andrea Rosso[51] 6
  Santiago Ramos[44] R 10
Icon Status
R Rookie
F Female
G Guest drivers ineligible for points

Race calendar

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The calendar was revealed on 25 October 2021.[55]

Round Circuit Date Supporting
1 R1   Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, Monza 23 April Italian GT Championship
R2 24 April
2 R1   Imola Circuit, Imola 7 May Main event
R2 8 May
3 R1   Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo 28 May Monaco Grand Prix
R2 29 May
4 R1   Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet 4 June GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup
R2 5 June
5 R1   Circuit Zandvoort, Zandvoort 18 June GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup
R2 19 June
6 R1   Hungaroring, Mogyoród 9 July International GT Open
R2 10 July
7 R1   Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot 29 July Spa 24 Hours
R2 30 July
8 R1   Red Bull Ring, Spielberg 10 September International GT Open
R2 11 September
9 R1   Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló 15 October International GT Open
R2 16 October
10 R1   Mugello Circuit, Scarperia e San Piero 22 October Italian GT Championship
R2 23 October

Results

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Round Circuit Pole position Fastest Lap Winning driver Winning team Rookie winner
1 R1   Monza   Dino Beganovic   Dino Beganovic   Dino Beganovic   Prema Racing   Sebastián Montoya
R2   Paul Aron   Paul Aron   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Sebastián Montoya
2 R1   Imola   Gabriele Minì   Gabriele Minì   Dino Beganovic   Prema Racing   Sebastián Montoya
R2   Gabriele Minì   Dino Beganovic   Gabriele Minì   ART Grand Prix   Tim Tramnitz
3 R1   Monaco   Hadrien David   Mari Boya   Hadrien David   R-ace GP   Laurens van Hoepen
R2   Dino Beganovic   Mari Boya   Dino Beganovic   Prema Racing   Laurens van Hoepen
4 R1   Paul Ricard   Dino Beganovic   Paul Aron   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Tim Tramnitz
R2   Gabriele Minì   Hadrien David   Gabriele Minì   ART Grand Prix   Roman Bilinski
5 R1   Zandvoort   Paul Aron   Hadrien David   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Sebastián Montoya
R2   Paul Aron   Paul Aron   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Sebastián Montoya
6 R1   Hungaroring   Kas Haverkort   Kas Haverkort   Kas Haverkort   Van Amersfoort Racing   Roman Bilinski
R2   Hadrien David   Gabriele Minì   Hadrien David   R-ace GP   Tim Tramnitz
7 R1   Spa-Francorchamps   Dino Beganovic   Paul Aron   Dino Beganovic   Prema Racing   Sami Meguetounif
R2   Paul Aron   Hadrien David   Gabriel Bortoleto   R-ace GP   Tim Tramnitz
8 R1   Red Bull Ring   Paul Aron   Kas Haverkort   Kas Haverkort   Van Amersfoort Racing   Joshua Dufek
R2   Hadrien David   Gabriele Minì   Hadrien David   R-ace GP   Joshua Dufek
9 R1   Barcelona   Paul Aron   Gabriel Bortoleto   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Joshua Dufek
R2   Gabriel Bortoleto   Hadrien David   Gabriel Bortoleto   R-ace GP   Joshua Dürksen
10 R1   Mugello   Paul Aron   Gabriele Minì   Paul Aron   Prema Racing   Victor Bernier
R2   Gabriel Bortoleto   Gabriele Minì   Gabriele Minì   ART Grand Prix   Owen Tangavelou

Season summary

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First half

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The fourth season of the championship began in late April at Monza with Dino Beganovic on pole for the wet season opener. He kept the lead at the start, while Lorenzo Fluxá next to him dropped back behind Gabriele Minì and Michael Belov, before repassing the Russian. A collision in turn one resulted in the first safety car. On the restart, Belov got Fluxá back while Minì collided with Beganovic, destroying his front wing and with it his chances for a points finish. The top three remained unchanged for the rest of the race, untroubled by two further safety car periods. Paul Aron claimed pole for the second race, and led from the start ahead of Minì, who was overtaken by Beganovic at the start. Aron's lead remained steady, he mastered two safety cars, one mid-race and one close to the end. Beganovic kept close to Aron, but was not able to challenge the leader. Still, his second place together with his win the day before meant he took the championship lead, 15 points ahead of Belov. Sebastián Montoya led the rookie standings.[56][57]

The championship stayed in Italy, visiting Imola next, where Minì won pole for race one. He kept the lead all throughout a disrupted race: first, the race was stopped for Sami Meguetounif, who crashed heavy and had to be taken to hospital. On the restart, Beganovic claimed second place from Mari Boya, while leader Minì was handed a ten-second time penalty for a false start. Two more safety cars and another red flag, this time for Axel Gnos, saw the race to its end, promoting Beganovic to the win and Aron to the podium. Minì bounced back the day after to take another pole position. A safety car start for damp conditions saw him control the start ahead of Tim Tramnitz in second, before the German was passed by Beganovic, and then by Kas Haverkort, who would later lose his podium to Gabriel Bortoleto after a penalty for a technical fault. A sudden thunderstorm caused a three-car crash and a red flag, and Minì controlled the restart to claim the win. Beganovic's championship advantage rose to 38 points from Aron.[58][59]

Round three supported the prestigious Monaco Grand Prix, and one qualifying session was held, where Hadrien David and Beganovic claimed pole for the two races. David held the lead in race one, and there were little changes to the order before the red flag was thrown when the track was blocked by Esteban Masson at the Fairmont Hairpin. When the race restarted, passing remained tricky, so Beganovic could do nothing but follow David to the finish to grab his fifth top-two finish in a row. Haverkort came third, having held back Minì all race long. Race two saw the top pair reversed, with Beganovic leading David, before two separate crashes for Roman Bilinski and Macéo Capietto brought out the safety car. There were a few little fights with slight contact further down the field, but almost no passes were made, and the top trio of Beganovic, David and Minì held position until the finish. David's great weekend saw him grab second in the standings, but Beganovic's lead now stood at 55 points over the rest of the field.[60][61]

A week later, Paul Ricard hosted the next round, and Beganovic started the first race on pole. He kept Bortoleto behind at the start, before Joshua Dufek crashed and caused a safety car. On the restart, Aron in third managed to pass Bortoleto. The Prema pair gapped the field fighting for the win, and eventually Aron was able to pass his teammate. On the last lap, Bortoleto in third had to relinquish his podium to Belov. Race two saw Minì on pole, surviving another first-lap safety car ahead of Beganovic, who had already passed Bortoleto. The lead group was close together all race, before another safety car neutralised the race, leaving a short dash to the finish. Beganovic pressured the leader, but was not able to make a move, so came second behind Minì and ahead of Haverkort. His run of now eight top-two finishes was brought to an end however, as his car was found to be non-compliant and he was excluded from race two. This initially gifted Aron a podium, but Beganovic's championship lead was still 45 points over Minì. Beganovic's team appealed the decision. After the team won its appeal in front of the Italian Federation's Court of Appeal in October, the Championship Promoter made a further appeal against the Italian Court's ruling, which was finally denied by the FIA International Court of Appeal. Beganovic was thus reinstated to second place. [62][63][64][65][66]

The first half of the season concluded at Zandvoort with Aron winning the first qualifying. He held David back at the start and kept a consistent gap to the Frenchman, before coming under attack in the latter stages of the race. Keith Donegan had an incident in turn two that resulted in a late safety car, but David was not able to make a move on the leader during the restart. Behind the pair, Haverkort held back Minì to complete the podium. David later lost his podium when he was penalized for misuse of the push-to-pass system. Qualifying for race two again saw Aron come out on top. He was once again strong in the race, holding the lead from Beganovic as Minì jumped from fifth to third before a red flag was thrown when Pietro Delli Guanti's car flew over the barrier at Hugenholtzbocht. Through the rest of the race, Minì passed Beganovic for second, but Aron's lead was uncontested. He completed a perfect weekend, his two wins earned him second in the standings and cut Beganovic's lead down to 36 points.[67][68]

Second half

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Next, the series travelled to the Hungaroring, where Haverkort picked up his maiden pole position in first qualifying. He controlled the start, as Aron in second got overtaken by Minì, before he got pushed off by Dufek and fell down the order. Dufek was then passed himself by Roman Bilinski and Leonardo Fornaroli. This order then settled down and remained the same until the end, earning Haverkort his maiden win in the series. Race two began with David on pole alongside Minì, with the Italian getting overtaken by Bortoleto around turn one, who then tried to pass David for the lead, but failed. This order remained until Joshua Dürksen crashed, bringing out a safety car and setting the field up for a late restart. This was where Minì quickly passed Bortoleto for second before the safety car was called again and the race ended behind it. Beganovic had a rare off-day, qualifying twelfth, then having a troubled race and finishing 16th. This coupled with two second places for Minì meant his lead was slashed to only nine points.[69][70]

Spa-Francorchamps played host to round six of the championship, and Beganovic was back on form, taking pole for race one. He held off pressure from Minì in second at the start, and had no pressure from then on. Shortly before the end, Minì had a puncture that ended his race. He would have lost his second place, were it not for a timely red flag called two laps later, with the results declared from lap 12 and Minì in second. Third was Meguetounif, fighting with Aron all race. After the race, Minì was disqualified on technical grounds, promoting Eduardo Barrichello to his maiden podium. Race two saw Aron on pole, before getting passed by David, Bortoleto and Beganovic. David was first over the line, but the stewards judged his pass for the lead to be made under yellow flags, handing him a penalty and thereby giving Bortoleto the win. A win and a podium meant Beganovic could overturn his recent negative trend and grow his points margin to 23 ahead of Minì. The rookie standings were now led by Fornaroli.[71][72][73][74]

After the summer break, racing returned at Spielberg with Aron on pole for race one. Heavy rain disrupted the race start and caused a stoppage. On the restart, many drivers, including the lead group, soon pitted for dry tires. This left Barrichello in the lead, before getting passed by returnee Pierre-Louis Chovet, while Haverkort had moved up from 12th on the grid to second. A safety car was then brought out when Aron and Montoya collided after pitting. While slick tires initially were faster than rain tires, returning rain meant the advantage of the dry tires was gone. On the restart Haverkort and Dufek went past Chovet to finish first and second. The second race also was not very straightforward, disrupted by three safety car periods. David was still able to keep his competition behind, leading from pole until the end and leaving Beganovic and Dufek to fight each other behind, the pair eventually finishing in that same order. Two podiums for Beganovic to none for Minì meant the Swede built up his points gap to 53.[75][76]

The penultimate round of the season was held at Barcelona, and Aron was once again on pole for the first race. He held off Dilano van 't Hoff at the start, who had to defend from Barrichello and David. Over the race, David was able to dispatch third and second place and began closing in on Aron. Through the last three laps, Aron repeatedly came under attack from David, but was able to keep the frenchman behind and win the race. Qualifying for race two saw Bortoleto grab his maiden pole. David started third and was able to get by Chovet straight away, but his attempt to gain the race lead was interrupted by the safety car being called. On the restart, Bortoleto initially gapped David, but the latter managed to close the gap again, with the pair fighting for a few laps until another safety car was called late in the race and the race ended under yellow flag conditions. Beganovic had a mediocre weekend, with only one points finish, so his gap to Minì dropped to 38 points, leaving the championship to be decided at Mugello.[77][78]

The championship decider at Mugello began with Aron on pole for race one and Beganovic needing at least fourth place to seal the title. Aron ran a flawless lights-to-flag race to get maximum points, but was not able to deny Beganovic his championship. The Swede started third and drove with his championship in mind, not attacking Victor Bernier in second all too aggressively. He held on to fourth after Dufek passed him on a late safety car restart, thereby clinching his first single-seater title. Bortoleto was on pole for the final race of the season. Minì started third and had to win with Aron not scoring to secure second in the championship. He dispatched Dufek right at the start and gained the lead after the first third of the race. From then on, he controlled the race, while Aron started 16th and came home pointless, ceding second in the standings to Minì by a single point. Dufek in fourth was on course to win the rookie title, before an error on a safety car restart saw him drop to seventh, giving Fornaroli in eighth the title.[79][80]

Beganovic's consistency was the key for his championship, only failing to score points on three occasions, as well as his very strong start to the season that saw him finish in the top two for the first seven races in a row. Minì and Aron both had stretches where they seemed able to close up to Beganovic, but his early advantage meant he led the standings from the first race until the end. In the fight for the rookie title, Montoya had the strongest start, but a run of eight pointless races in the end saw him drop to third. Entry numbers never dropped below 35, showing continually high interest in the championship. The introduction of a push-to-pass system proved to better competition, although still held back somewhat by the heavy Tatuus chassis.

Championship standings

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Points system

Points were awarded to the top 10 classified finishers.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th 
Points 25 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1

Drivers' standings

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Pos. Driver MNZ
 
IMO
 
MCO
 
LEC
 
ZAN
 
HUN
 
SPA
 
RBR
 
CAT
 
MUG
 
Points
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
1   Dino Beganovic 1 2 1 2 2 1 2 2 4 3 7 16 1 3 4 2 11 10 4 3 300
2   Gabriele Minì 15 3 28 1 4 3 5 1 3 2 2 2 DSQ 6 7 4 5 7 Ret 1 242
3   Paul Aron 27 1 3 6 25 DNQ 1 4 1 1 6 7 4 4 Ret 16 1 4 1 11 238
4   Hadrien David 4 7 10 4 1 2 6 5 12 7 8 1 18 2 13 1 2 2 8 4 222
5   Kas Haverkort 5 4 5 DSQ 3 4 9 3 2 15 1 12 7 12 1 14 4 5 6 9 184
6   Gabriel Bortoleto 6 9 7 3 6 5 4 6 Ret 8 9 3 14 1 15 5 7 1 Ret 2 174
7   Michael Belov 2 5 15 5 5 6 3 7 7 6 91
8   Leonardo Fornaroli 10 15 8 8 9 12 20 24 8 5 4 5 6 8 19 10 9 8 5 8 83
9   Joshua Dufek 18 13 12 10 DNQ 22 Ret 26 23 10 5 6 10 21 2 3 8 Ret 3 7 79
10   Mari Boya 7 6 2 21 7 7 7 8 5 12 12 14 13 10 10 Ret 25 29 17 12 67
11   Eduardo Barrichello 26 20 19 17 11 13 21 16 18 32 Ret 18 3 5 5 8 6 12 23 23 51
12   Lorenzo Fluxá 3 23 11 11 DNQ 18 8 9 15 14 14 13 5 Ret 9 Ret 16 9 13 5 49
13   Sebastián Montoya 8 8 4 Ret 17 14 11 12 6 4 16 8 16 13 32 17 13 15 12 20 44
14   Joshua Dürksen 19 14 6 12 12 10 13 13 Ret 18 15 Ret 21 14 6 6 10 6 9 13 40
15   Tim Tramnitz 11 12 9 7 16 Ret 10 11 Ret Ret Ret 4 8 7 33† 9 22 13 11 14 35
16   Sami Meguetounif 9 11 Ret DNS 15 11 15 20 13 16 17 Ret 2 11 11 15 20 21 16 28 21
17   Victor Bernier 14 17 NC 32† DNQ 17 23 Ret 9 13 18 Ret 15 17 26 13 Ret Ret 2 15 20
18   Roman Bilinski 13 18 14 14 18 Ret 16 10 11 11 3 Ret 11 19 17 Ret 21 14 21 25 16
19   Dilano van 't Hoff Ret 19 21 18 DNQ 20 WD WD 27 24 20 Ret 3 Ret 20 10 16
20   Owen Tangavelou 22 26 31† 16 DNQ 19 14 Ret 17 19 19 9 9 9 14 11 17 Ret DNS 6 15
21   Laurens van Hoepen Ret Ret 20 13 8 8 18 14 19 21 11 15 20 15 8 Ret 18 19 10 17 15
22   Macéo Capietto 12 10 13 9 13 Ret 26 Ret 16 9 26 10 19 16 16 28 23 20 7 18 12
23   Noel León 21 25 22 15 10 9 17 21 24 17 13 17 22 Ret 12 12 12 17 24 27 3
24   Esteban Masson 17 22 23 20 14 15 32 Ret 14 Ret 10 11 17 22 22 Ret 19 16 19 22 1
25   Pietro Delli Guanti Ret 24 16 Ret 19 16 12 15 10 Ret 21 29† 25 18 1
26   Francesco Braschi 29 30 27 24 24 DNQ 24 18 26 23 23 23 23 23 18 27 26 11 Ret Ret 1
27   Santiago Ramos 25 Ret 32 19 23 DNQ 22 17 22 22 20 27 12 Ret 24 22 33† 26 18 19 0
28   Levente Révész 23 27 17 22 22 DNQ 25 Ret 21 24 22 19 28 20 21 18 14 30 25 Ret 0
29   Nicolás Baptiste 16 29 Ret 26 DNQ 25 33 29 27 26 30 28 30 27 25 21 31 22 15 21 0
30   Keith Donegan 31† 16 25 25 20 DNQ 27 19 Ret 29 0
31   Axel Gnos Ret WD 18 29 DNQ 24 28 25 25 30 29 22 WD WD 29 28 26 32 0
32   Matías Zagazeta 20 28 26 28 DNQ 21 19 23 20 20 25 21 24 25 31 26 24 18 30 29 0
33   Pietro Armanni 32† Ret 30 27 21 DNQ 31 22 28 31 24 25 31 Ret 30 19 32† 23 28 24 0
34   Andrea Rosso 27 20 0
35   Piotr Wiśnicki 24 21 DNQ 23 30 28 29 25 28 24 29 Ret 28 23 28 25 27 Ret 0
36   Patrik Pasma 24 23 0
37   Nicola Marinangeli Ret 26 23 25 30 27 29 31 0
38   Hamda Al Qubaisi 30 Ret Ret 31 27 DNQ 29 27 30 27 31 26 26 Ret 29 24 0
39   Léna Bühler Ret Ret WD WD 26 DNQ 0
40   Cenyu Han 28 31 29 30 28 DNQ Ret 30 31 28 0
Guest drivers ineligible to score points
  Pierre-Louis Chovet 3 7 15 3 14 16
  Gillian Henrion Ret 20
  William Alatalo 22 26
  Sebastian Øgaard 27 29 27 24 31† 30
  Amna Al Qubaisi Ret 31 Ret Ret
  Tereza Bábíčková Ret WD
Pos. Driver R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 Points
MNZ
 
IMO
 
MCO
 
LEC
 
ZAN
 
HUN
 
SPA
 
RBR
 
CAT
 
MUG
 
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole

Italics – Fastest Lap

† — Did not finish, but classified

Rookie

Teams' standings

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For teams entering more than two cars only the two best-finishing cars were eligible to score points in the teams' championship.

Pos. Team MNZ
 
IMO
 
MCO
 
LEC
 
ZAN
 
HUN
 
SPA
 
RBR
 
CAT
 
MUG
 
Points
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
1   Prema Racing 1 1 1 2 2 1 1 3 1 1 6 7 1 3 4 2 1 4 1 3 531
8 2 3 6 17 14 2 11 4 3 7 8 4 4 29 16 11 10 4 11
2   R-ace GP 3 7 7 3 1 2 4 4 12 7 8 1 5 1 9 1 2 1 8 2 421
4 9 10 4 6 5 6 5 15 8 9 3 15 2 13 5 7 2 13 4
3   ART Grand Prix 7 3 2 1 4 3 5 1 3 2 2 2 17 6 7 4 5 7 10 1 315
15 6 20 14 7 7 7 7 5 12 11 14 20 15 8 Ret 18 16 19 17
4   Van Amersfoort Racing 5 4 5 10 3 4 9 2 2 10 1 6 8 12 1 3 4 5 3 7 266
18 13 12 22 22 22 25 25 21 15 5 12 11 20 2 14 8 30 6 9
5   Trident 10 12 8 7 9 12 10 9 8 5 3 4 7 7 17 9 9 8 5 8 136
11 15 9 8 16 Ret 16 10 11 11 4 5 9 8 19 10 21 13 11 14
6   MP Motorsport 2 5 15 5 5 6 3 6 7 6 17 23 3 10 10 15 3 21 16 10 133
9 11 21 18 15 11 15 19 13 16 23 Ret 14 11 11 Ret 20 29 17 12
7   Arden Motorsport 19 14 6 12 10 9 13 12 18 17 13 17 4 5 5 6 6 6 9 13 94
21 20 19 15 11 10 17 15 24 18 15 18 22 14 6 8 10 12 23 23
8   FA Racing by MP 14 17 23 20 14 15 23 28 9 13 10 11 20 17 18 13 26 11 2 15 22
16 22 NC 26 DNQ 17 32 Ret 14 28 18 28 24 23 25 21 31 22 15 21
9   RPM 31† 16 16 25 19 16 12 14 10 25 19 9 9 9 3 7 15 3 14 6 16
Ret 24 25 Ret 20 DNQ 27 18 Ret Ret 21 20 26 18 14 11 17 Ret 18 16
10   Monolite Racing 12 10 13 9 13 Ret 26 21 16 9 24 10 18 16 16 19 23 20 7 18 12
28 31 29 27 21 DNQ 31 29 28 30 26 25 32 26 23 25 30 23 28 24
11   KIC Motorsport 24 21 24 19 23 23 22 16 22 23 20 24 13 Ret 24 22 27 24 22 26 0
25 30 27 23 24 DNQ 24 17 26 24 28 27 30 Ret 27 23 28 25 27 30
12   G4 Racing 20 26 18 16 DNQ 19 14 22 17 19 25 21 25 25 31 20 24 18 26 29 0
22 28 26 28 DNQ 21 19 24 20 21 29 22 WD WD Ret 26 29 28 30 32
Pos. Team R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 Points
MNZ
 
IMO
 
MCO
 
LEC
 
ZAN
 
HUN
 
SPA
 
RBR
 
CAT
 
MUG
 

Notes

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  1. ^ Bilinski is a Polish-British driver who competed under a British licence in rounds 1–7 and a Polish licence from round 8.[8][9]
  2. ^ Michael Belov is Russian, but he competes as a neutral competitor as Russian national emblems were banned by the FIA due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

References

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  1. ^ "Pre-selection of the 12 teams for the 2022 season". Formula Regional by Alpine. 12 November 2021. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ "New team RPM joins 2022 Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine grid". Formula Regional EU by Alpine. 23 February 2022. Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  3. ^ "Paul Aron completes Prema Racing's FRECA line-up". Prema Powerteam. 14 February 2022. Retrieved 14 February 2022.
  4. ^ "Dino Beganovic To Race For PREMA In 2022 Formula Regional European Championship By Alpine". Prema Powerteam. 21 December 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2021.
  5. ^ "Sebastian Montoya steps up to Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine with PREMA Racing". Prema Powerteam. 20 January 2022. Archived from the original on 11 June 2022. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  6. ^ Wood, Ida (4 April 2022). "Hamda Al Qubaisi joins Prema in Formula Regional Europe". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  7. ^ "R09 Barcelona - Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine Race Preview". Prema Team. Retrieved 11 October 2022.
  8. ^ "2022-FRECA-Rd01-Monza-Doc. 02-Cars and Drivers Admitted" (PDF). Formula Regional EU by Alpine. 21 April 2022. Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  9. ^ "2022-FRECA-Rd08-Red-Bull-Ring-02-Official-Entry-List" (PDF). Formula Regional EU by Alpine. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
  10. ^ Wood, Ida (16 February 2022). "Trident adds GB3 race-winner Roman Bilinski to FREC line-up". Formula Scout. Retrieved 16 February 2022.
  11. ^ "Trident Motorsport annuncia Tramnitz per la stagione 2022 nel Campionato Europeo di Formula Regional by Alpine". Trident Motorsport (in Italian). 11 February 2022. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
  12. ^ MotorSport, Trident. "Con Fornaroli Trident Motorsport completa la line-up per il Campionato Europeo Formula Regional by Alpine". Trident Motorsport (in Italian). Retrieved 23 February 2022.
  13. ^ Satis, Jérémy (22 March 2022). "Macéo Capietto monte en FRECA avec Monolite". AutoHebdo (in French). Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  14. ^ Wood, Ida (7 February 2022). "Monolite Racing expands to three cars in FREC, signs Armanni". Formula Scout. Retrieved 7 February 2022.
  15. ^ "Han Cenyu to make Formula Regional by Alpine debut with Monolite". Formula Regional EU by Alpine. 22 March 2022. Retrieved 22 March 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d "Rivoluzione sulla griglia di Spa Scambio Masson-Boya, Braschi in FA - REGIONAL BY ALPINE". www.italiaracing.net (in Italian). Retrieved 26 July 2022.
  17. ^ Wood, Ida (14 March 2022). "Axel Gnos confirmed at G4 for second FREC season". Formula Scout. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
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