2019 W Series Explained

The 2019 W Series was the inaugural motor racing season of the W Series, an all-female Formula Regional-level racing series.[1]

Calendar

A single championship race was held at six rounds of the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters,[2] with an additional non-championship race at TT Circuit Assen to test different event formats.[3]

RoundCircuitDateMap
1 Hockenheimring, HockenheimMay 4
2 Circuit Zolder, Heusden-ZolderMay 18
3June 8
4 Norisring, NurembergJuly 6
5 TT Circuit Assen, AssenJuly 20–21
6 Brands Hatch, West KingsdownAugust 11
Sources:[4] [5]

Driver selection

55 drivers were initially entered in a qualifying longlist for the 2019 season, with a further six added later on.[6] [7] [8] An evaluation was held at the Wachauring in Melk, Austria over 26–28 January, with series judges—including David Coulthard, Alexander Wurz and Lyn St. James[9] selecting a shortlist of drivers that would get to test the Tatuus–Alfa Romeo T-318. Drivers completed 10 'modules' that tested their skills in racecraft, fitness, media training and sponsorship pitches, before a final knockout series of races that would decide the 28 drivers that advanced to the next stage at the in Almería, Spain.[10] The final stage held over 22–27 March, which saw additional fitness testing and data analysis alongside traditional testing, would decide the 18-driver line-up as well as four additional substitute drivers who would be on standby in the event of a regular driver's absence.

The evaluation format, based on the FIA Institute Young Driver Excellence Academy programme, drew mixed opinions from the competitors. Eliminated driver Charlotte Poynting labelled the process "confusing" and that the judges "obviously weren't looking for the fastest drivers", whereas compatriot Caitlin Wood claimed the evaluation was "as fair as they could make it".[11] [12]

Eliminated drivers

Withdrew before evaluation
Eliminated after evaluation
Eliminated after testing

Qualified drivers

All drivers competed with the TatuusAlfa Romeo F3 T-318 operated by Hitech GP and fitted with Hankook tires.[13]

DriversStatusRounds
2 Esmee HawkeyAll
3 Gosia RdestAll
5 Fabienne WohlwendAll
7 Emma Kimiläinen1, 4–6
11 Vicky PiriaAll
19 Marta GarcíaAll
20 Caitlin WoodAll
21 Jessica HawkinsAll
26 Sarah MooreAll
27 Alice PowellAll
31 Tasmin PepperAll
37 Sabré CookAll
49 Megan Gilkes1–3, 5–6
55 Jamie ChadwickAll
58 Sarah Bovy2–3, 6
67 Shea HolbrookAll
77 Vivien Keszthelyi2–4, 6
85 Miki KoyamaAll
95 Beitske VisserAll
99 Naomi SchiffAll
Source:[14] [15]

Megan Gilkes, normally a regular driver, was demoted to reserve driver duties at Round 4. Vivien Keszthelyi, normally a reserve driver, was promoted to regular driver duties at Round 4.[16]

Season summary

Championship favourite Jamie Chadwick dominated proceedings at the series' first event at the Hockenheimring, topping both practice sessions, qualifying on pole position and winning the single race – however she did briefly lose the lead to Alice Powell during a safety car period. Said safety car was deployed for an incident between Emma Kimiläinen and Megan Gilkes; Kimiläinen stalled from fourth on the grid and was then crashed into by Gilkes at the hairpin later in the lap. Powell and Marta García completed the podium, with García and Miki Koyama (who drove from 17th to 7th) receiving industry praise for their performances.[17] [18] [19]

Kimiläinen was withdrawn from the second round at Zolder due to a neck injury, and was replaced with both reserve drivers – Sarah Bovy and Vivien Keszthelyi. Neither driver finished the race; local driver Bovy suffered an engine failure on the grid, whilst Keszthelyi was spun into the wall by Sabré Cook whilst trying to avoid an incident between Gosia Rdest and Esmee Hawkey. Beitske Visser jumped Chadwick at the start and won the race despite two safety car periods and having briefly removed her steering wheel on the grid, with Chadwick holding off a fast-finishing Powell for third.[20]

Fabienne Wohlwend qualified on pole position at the third round in Misano, but a slow start resulted in a first-corner collision with Alice Powell that sent the Briton airborne and out of the race. Aside from a half-spin for Naomi Schiff, the rest of the race was uneventful and Wohlwend trailed home Visser and race-winner Chadwick.[21]

Powell's championship hopes took another nosedive at the fourth round in Nuremberg, starting at the back due to a broken gearbox in qualifying and failing to finish with a fuel-pump issues. García claimed a lights-to-flag win ahead of Visser and Chadwick, with Wohlwend holding off the returning Kimiläinen for fourth. Gosia Rdest showed promise having topped a practice session and qualified fourth, but finished a lap down after breaking her front wing on the opening lap.[22]

Kimiläinen claimed the series first 'grand slam' with pole position, the fastest lap and race win at the fifth round in Assen. Powell jumped the Finn off the line and was aided by a safety car for an incident between Koyama and Tasmin Pepper, but Kimiläinen retook the lead with ten minutes remaining. Wohlwend's slim title hopes were dashed when she hit the back of Rdest and broke her front wing; Caitlin Wood, Rdest and Jessica Hawkins claiming their best results of the season in fifth, sixth and seventh respectively.[23] A non-championship race was held the following day, with the grid based on reversed championship standings – Megan Gilkes beat Powell by 0.003secs in an incident-filled heat.[24]

Chadwick and Visser entered the finale at Brands Hatch as the only championship contenders, with Chadwick only needing a podium to seal the title. Having led the early running from pole, Chadwick was bullied out of the lead by Powell and Kimiläinen. A spin for Koyama resulted in a late-race safety car, and on the restart Visser made a bold pass on Chadwick for third at Dingle Dell – but with Visser unable to make further progress and Chadwick holding off Wohlwend for fourth, the Brit won the first W Series championship by 10 points.[25]

Results and standings

Results summary

RoundCircuitPole PositionFastest LapRace WinnerReport
1Hockenheim Jamie Chadwick Miki Koyama Jamie ChadwickReport
2Zolder Jamie Chadwick Beitske Visser Beitske VisserReport
3Misano Fabienne Wohlwend Beitske Visser Jamie ChadwickReport
4Nuremberg Marta García Emma Kimiläinen Marta GarcíaReport
5Assen Emma Kimiläinen Emma Kimiläinen Emma KimiläinenReport
Sabré Cook Megan Gilkes
6 Jamie Chadwick Emma Kimiläinen Alice PowellReport

Championship standings

Scoring system

Points were awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:

Race Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points251815121086421

Drivers' Championship

DriverHOC
ZOL
MIS
NOR
ASS
BRH
Points
1 Jamie Chadwick121334110
2 Beitske Visser412243100
3 Alice Powell23RetRet2176
4 Marta García34619866
5 Emma KimiläinenRetWD51253
6 Fabienne Wohlwend673415551
7 Miki Koyama7846Ret2030
8 Sarah Moore559Ret101024
9 Vicky Piria1595128624
10 Tasmin Pepper8678Ret1222
11 Sabré Cook13158713912
12 Jessica Hawkins111315Ret7712
13 Caitlin Wood1011141151111
14 Gosia Rdest9Ret131461310
15 Esmee Hawkey12Ret11911162
16 Naomi Schiff1410181012152
17 Vivien KeszthelyiRet1013141
18 Shea Holbrook1612161516170
19 Megan GilkesRet141714180
20 Sarah BovyDNS12190
DriverHOC
ZOL
MIS
NOR
ASS
BRH
Points
Source:[26]
Bold – Pole
Italics – Fastest Lap

Notes and References

  1. News: All-female motor racing series offers potential F1 pathway. CNN. 2018-10-24.
  2. Web site: DTM announces 2019 calendar and W Series on support bill . www.autosport.com . Autosport . 12 October 2018.
  3. News: Additional non-championship race to be held at Assen. W Series. 28 June 2019.
  4. Web site: W Series Results 2019. Motorsport Stats. 3 April 2022.
  5. Web site: Assen Non-Championship Race Report. W Series. 21 July 2019. 3 April 2022.
  6. News: W Series names long-list of drivers. W Series. 28 November 2018. 29 November 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181129235149/https://wseries.com/w-series-names-long-list-of-drivers/. dead.
  7. News: 55 women make the first cut for 2019 W Series. Autoweek. 29 November 2018.
  8. News: Six new drivers enter W Series selection. W Series. 18 December 2018. 19 December 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181219134413/https://wseries.com/six-new-drivers-enter-w-series/. dead.
  9. News: W Series a day away from historic announcement. W Series. 27 January 2019. 28 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190128082928/https://wseries.com/w-series-a-day-away-from-historic-announcement/. dead.
  10. News: W Series name 28 drivers through to the next stage. W Series. 28 January 2019. 29 January 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190129010504/https://wseries.com/w-series-name-28-drivers-through-to-the-next-stage/. dead.
  11. News: Poynting 'confused' by 'vague' W Series selection process. Speedcafe. 29 January 2019.
  12. News: CAFE CHAT: Caitlin Wood. Speedcafe. 17 February 2019.
  13. News: Khorounzhiy . Valentin . Top F3 team to run all W Series cars . 18 May 2019 . . . 18 May 2019.
  14. News: W Series announces its driver line-up. W Series. 28 March 2019. 2 September 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190902093304/https://wseries.com/w-hub/w-series-announces-its-driver-line-up/. dead.
  15. News: Race numbers revealed. W Series. 14 April 2019.
  16. News: @WSeriesRacing on Twitter. Twitter. 6 July 2019.
  17. News: Hockenheim W Series: Chadwick fends off Powell in opener. Motorsport.com. 4 May 2019.
  18. News: @wbuxtonofficial on Twitter. @wbuxtonofficial on Twitter. 4 May 2019.
  19. News: @_markgallagher on Twitter. @_markgallagher on Twitter. 4 May 2019.
  20. News: Zolder W Series winner Visser detached steering wheel before start. Autosport. 20 May 2019.
  21. News: Misano W Series: Chadwick resists Visser to extend points lead. Autosport. 8 June 2019.
  22. News: Norisring W Series: Garcia scores maiden victory. Motorsport.com. 6 July 2019.
  23. News: Assen W Series: Kimilainen passes Powell to score first win. Motorsport.com. 20 July 2019.
  24. News: Megan Gilkes wins reversed grid Assen W Series race from pole. Autosport. 21 July 2019.
  25. News: Brands Hatch W Series: Powell wins finale, Chadwick champion. Motorsport.com. 11 August 2019.
  26. News: 2019 season results and standings. W Series. 13 September 2021.