Masato Kawabata | |
Birth Date: | 15 October 1977 |
Birth Place: | Osaka, Osaka Prefecture |
Current Series: | D1 Grand Prix |
Current Team: | Team TOYO TIRES DRIFT |
Former Teams: | TRUST |
Wins: | 17 |
Prev Series: | FIA Intercontinental Drifting Cup Russian Drift Series |
Prev Series Years: | 2017-2019 2019,2021 |
Titles: | D1GP Series Champion FIA Intercontinental Drifting Cup |
Title Years: | 2017 |
is a Japanese professional drifting driver, currently competing in the D1 Grand Prix series for Team TOYO TIRES DRIFT.
Kawabata first received his license at 18 and at that point he bought the Nissan 180SX. He practiced alone until he met late D1 driver Atsushi Kuroi who started to teach and advise Kawabata. At age 19, Kawabata entered a drift magazine sponsored contest and took first place. At 21, GP Sports started to sponsor Kawabata with a full line of aero parts and later he work for them moving from his hometown to Niigata where GP Sports based. Kawabata and first appeared in the D1 Grand Prix in round 4 of 2002.[1]
Kawabata was hired by Trust to replace Hideo Hiraoka and drove an S15 Silvia built by GP Sports, he took his first win at Fuji Speedway in [2] and went on to finish 4th in the overall points. In 2007 he did even better however winning two rounds and the overall title by one point over Nobushige Kumakubo.
In 2008 he change his car to 180SX in second round in Fuji which he drove until 2013 where he win his second title
In 2014 TRUST return and collaborate with Toyo Tires and he started to participate in D1GP with Nissan GT-R in 2014 and also left GP Sports in same year. The following year the Kawabata clinched his third D1GP title in penultimate round.
2016 was difficult year for him as Daigo Saito went to dominate the series. Despite able to beat Saito in exhibition event he went winless for the second time in 3 years and he finished the season 2nd in standings. He also started his own shop called True Man Racing (True Man is rough english translation of his name) and collaborating with fellow D1 driver Hideyuki Fujino they released a bodykit for Nissan 180SX called Kick Blue.
Following the defeat from previous year Trust built Kawabata new GT-R for 2017 season while his previous car was driven by returning Masao Suenaga, Toyo Tires as tires sponsor also released new Proxes R888R for competition. He win the third round in Tsukuba which his only win in the season, he end the season 5th in standings. But in same year he became the first driver to win FIA Intercontinental Drift Championship held in Odaiba which is first ever drift event held by FIA.
In 2018 Kawabata win 6 straight Solo Run creating a new record but unfortunately in Battle Run he failed to win a single run and lost the D1GP title to Masashi Yokoi.
In 2019, following Trust withdrawal he competing in the D1GP with Toyota GR Supra and became the first person to win D1GP round with it the following year. Unfortunately his performance keep getting worse as season goes. He change his car to new Toyota GR86 in 2022 built by his teammate Hideyuki Fujino where he gave GR86 first ever win in Drift competition, finished the season as runner-up claiming two wins and the Solo Run champions.
In, at round 2, held in Fuji Speedway, during a sudden death round against Daigo Saito, Saito dipped into the inner apex of the 300R corner and jumped the curb of the track. His car's front wheels lost traction, which resulted in the car to understeer and collect Kawabata's Silvia into the tyre barrier in the process, effectively destroying both cars.
The impact between the cars and when they were hurled into the track protection barrier happened at speeds of over 150 km/h. Kawabata immediately come out from his car but fell to the ground just as he walk out and had to be taken to hospital for treatment for whiplash injuries, Saito miraculously evaded any physical damages. the
Kawabata won the battle which he was unable to continue, leaving Atsushi Kuroi without an opponent. For the following round, he returned with a new car and took the win at the next round at Sportsland SUGO.[3] [4]
Year | Entrant | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | Position | Points | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Nissan 180SX | BHH | EBS | EBS | SGO DNQ | TKB DNQ | SEK | NIK | NC | 0 | ||||
Silk Road | Nissan 180SX | TKB DNQ | BHH DNQ | SGO DNQ | FUJ TAN | EBS TAN | SEK | TKB DNQ | NC | 0 | |||
Silk Road | Toyota Sprinter Trueno AE86 | IRW TAN | 23rd | 4 | |||||||||
GReddy/GP Sports/Toyo Tires | Nissan Silvia S15 | SGO TAN | EBS DNQ | APS 9 | ODB DNQ | EBS 16 | TKB DNQ | ||||||
GReddy/GP Sports/Toyo Tires | Nissan Silvia S15 | IRW 16 | ODB 4 | SGO 9 | APS 7 | EBS TAN | FUJ 3 | TKB 5 | 4th | 55 | |||
GReddy/GP Sports/Toyo Tires | Nissan Silvia S15 | IRW 5 | SGO 16 | FUJ 6 | APS TAN | EBS 4 | SUZ 8 | FUJ 1 | IRW 16 | 4th | 69 | ||
GReddy/GP Sports/Toyo Tires | Nissan Silvia S15 | EBS 2 | FUJ 4 | SUZ 6 | SGO 1 | EBS 5 | APS 1 | FUJ 16 | 1st | 100 | |||
GP Sports/Toyo Tires | Nissan 180SX RPS13 | EBS 1 | FUJ TAN | SUZ 15 | OKY 11 | APS 3 | EBS | FUJ | 6th | 54 | |||
Team TOYO TIRES DRIFT | Nissan 180SX RPS13 | EBS 14 | APS 10 | OKY 5 | OKY 5 | EBS 15 | EBS 15 | FUJ 1 | FUJ 1 | 6th | 93 | ||
TOYO TIRES DRIFT TRUST RACING | Nissan R35 | ODB 2 | FUJ 2 | TKB 3 | TKB 8 | EBS 9 | EBS 3 | ODB 2 | 2nd | 133 | |||
TOYO TIRES GLION TRUST RACING | Nissan R35 | ODB 5 | ODB 4 | TKB 1 | MSI 13 | EBS 14 | EBS 7 | ODB 6 | 5th | 106 |
Year | Entrant | Car | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Position | Points | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2019 | Forward Auto | Nissan 180SX | MRW | ATR | NRING | ADM | RRING | SOC 6 | 26 | 262 | ||
2021 | Forward Auto | Nissan 180SX | MRW 19 | NRING 13 | IGORA 11 | ATR 7 | RRING | ADM | SOC | 19 | 328 |