Formula Regional Oceania Championship Explained

Category:Open-wheeler racing
Inaugural:2005
Drivers:20 (2023)
Teams:4 (2023)
Constructors:Tatuus
Engines:Toyota
Tyres:Hankook
Country/Region:Oceania
Champion Driver: Roman Bilinski
Champion Team:M2 Competition
Current Season:2024 Formula Regional Oceania Championship

The Formula Regional Oceania Championship is New Zealand's premier formula racing category. The series includes races for every major trophy in New Zealand circuit racing including the New Zealand Motor Cup and the Denny Hulme Memorial Trophy. The cars are also the category for the New Zealand Grand Prix – one of only two races in the world with FIA approval to use the Grand Prix nomenclature outside Formula One. The series was formerly known as the Toyota Racing Series until 2023.

Summary

Toyota Racing Management
Foundation:2004
Location City:Hampton Downs, Auckland
Location Country:New Zealand
Area Served:New Zealand
Key People:Nico Caillol
Sarah Brown

The Toyota Racing Series is an incubator and showcase for the next generation of New Zealand racing talent. The Series offers emerging drivers the chance to gain valuable experience with carbon-fibre composite chassis, aerodynamics and slick tyres.

The Series has the full endorsement of Motorsport New Zealand, the sport's governing body. Until the beginning of 2017, the series was managed by Toyota Racing Management a company under the leadership of Barrie Thomlinson.

Previously, the country's leading drivers had to go offshore to step up to this level. High-profile graduates from the series to date include Brendon Hartley, formerly in Formula One with Scuderia Toro Rosso Honda, and Earl Bamber.[1] The series has also seen the likes of Daniil Kvyat, Will Stevens, Lance Stroll and Lando Norris compete on their way to Formula One.

For 2008, the series has also gone "green". Fuels for all cars racing in the series are now an E85 biofuel blend of 85 per cent ethanol made from whey, a dairy industry by-product; and petrol. Reduced emissions, reduced carbon "footprint" and reduced use of fossil fuels are all being showcased in this unique New Zealand programme. The 2008 New Zealand Grand Prix thus becomes the first ever biofuel grand prix in the world.The short summer series (five weekends in five weeks, all in January and February) during the Southern Hemisphere summer has made the series attractive to development drivers from the Northern Hemisphere, as the series takes place during the off-season, serving as single-seater motorsport's equivalent of professional baseball's "winter ball" leagues in the Caribbean and Australia. Drivers from both Europe and the Americas actively participate in the series, as it allows them to develop their skills in an atmosphere similar to the winter ball leagues. A June 2019 FIA World Motor Sport Council decision now allows development drivers to tally Toyota Racing Series with their regular series towards FIA Super Licence points required to be in a Formula One car, meaning the driver can participate in this series, then participate in a series that starts after the end of the Toyota Racing Series, and accumulate points from both series towards F1 approval.[2]

The series was renamed to Castrol Toyota Formula Regional Oceania Championship for the 2023 season, joining the other various Formula Regional series around the world.[3]

Circuits

The current championship consists of five rounds, each comprising three races.

NumberCircuitsRoundsYears
1 202005–2021, 2023–2024
2 Teretonga Park172005–2020, 2023
3 Bruce McLaren Motorsport Park142006–2013, 2015–2019, 2023–2024
Hampton Downs Motorsport Park142010–2021, 2023–2024
5 Timaru International Motor Raceway102005–2014
Euromarque Motorsport Park102005–2006, 2008, 2015–2018, 2024
7 Pukekohe Park Raceway82005–2007, 2009, 2020
8 Highlands Motorsport Park42014, 2019–2020, 2023–2024
9 Hamilton Street Circuit22008–2009

Car

2015–2019

The Toyota Racing Series ran a Tatuus FT-50 chassis with modified versions of 1.8L Toyota four cylinder 2ZZ-GE production engines which can produce 200bhp, a six speed Sadev sequential transmission with limited slip differential with a carbon fibre body and a Carbon monocoque chassis built by Tatuus in Italy to full FIA F3 specification.[4] The cars use Michelin S308 tyres (Front 20x54x13, Rear 24x57x13) and weigh approximately 480 kg.

2020–present

The Toyota Racing Series switched to a new chassis called Tatuus FT-60, identical to the Tatuus F.3 T-318 used in Europe, whereas the new engine 8AR-FTS will be a 2.0L turbocharged unit developing 270bhp.[5] The cars have halo for the protection purposes and it weigh approximately 665 kg with driver.[6]

Champions

Source:[7]

scope=colSeasonscope=colDriverscope=colTeamscope=colPolesscope=colWinsscope=colPodiumsscope=col width="40"Fastest lapsscope=colPointsscope=colClinchedscope=col width="50"Margin
2005 Brent CollinsBrent Collins Motorsport14104937Race 18 of 1833
2005–06 Daniel GauntInternational Motorsport5717101491Race 21 of 23479
2006–07 Daniel GauntInternational Motorsport391681448Race 21 of 23328
2007–08 Andy KnightKnight Motorsport661621230Race 23 of 2333
2008–09 Mitch CunninghamGiles Motorsport751341110Race 17 of 18121
2010 Mitch EvansGiles Motorsport83105915Race 15 of 153
2011 Mitch EvansGiles Motorsport67145973Race 13 of 15168
2012 Nick CassidyGiles Motorsport05104934Race 13 of 15176
2013 Nick CassidyM2 Competition02106915Race 14 of 15112
2014 Andrew TangNeale Motorsport1394794Race 15 of 154
2015 Lance StrollM2 Competition04102906Race 14 of 16108
2016 Lando NorrisM2 Competition86115924Race 14 of 15135
2017 Thomas RandleVictory Motor Racing3277855Race 15 of 155
2018 Robert ShwartzmanM2 Competition3193916Race 15 of 155
2019 Liam LawsonM2 Competition45115356Race 15 of 1510
2020 Igor FragaM2 Competition3493362Race 15 of 156
2021 Matthew PayneM2 Competition6595287Race 8 of 958
2022Season cancelled due to COVID-19 pandemic
2023 Charlie WurzM2 Competition4461343Race 15 of 1514
2024 Roman BilinskiM2 Competition56125385Race 14 of 1543

Multiple Winners

!Wins!Driver!Years
2 Daniel Gaunt2005–06, 2006–07
Mitch Evans2010, 2011
Nick Cassidy2012, 2013
!Wins!Team!Years
9M2 Competition2013, 2015, 2016, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2023, 2024
4Giles Motorsport 2008–09, 2010, 2011, 2012
2International Motorsport2005–06, 2006–07
1Brent Collins Motorsport 2005
Knight Motorsport 2007–08
Neale Motorsport 2014
Victory Motor Racing 2017
!Wins!Country!Drivers!Years
11 New ZealandBrent Collins 2005
Daniel Gaunt2005–06, 2006–07
Andy Knight 2007–08
Mitch Cunningham2008–09
Mitch Evans2010, 2011
Nick Cassidy2012, 2013
Liam Lawson2019
Matthew Payne2021
1 SingaporeAndrew Tang2014
CanadaLance Stroll2015
United KingdomLando Norris2016
AustraliaThomas Randle2017
RussiaRobert Shwartzman2018
BrazilIgor Fraga2020
AustriaCharlie Wurz2023
PolandRoman Bilinski2024

Trophies

The winner of the feature race of each round in the championship is awarded a trophy:

  1. Lady Wigram Trophy
  2. The Spirit of the Nation Cup
  3. The NZ Motor Cup
  4. Denny Hulme Memorial Trophy
  5. Dan Higgins Trophy
  6. The New Zealand Grand Prix Trophy

The overall winner of the championship (based on championship points) receives the Chris Amon Trophy[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Toyota - Toyota Racing New Zealand . Toyotaracing.co.nz . 2015-03-12.
  2. https://www.fia.com/news/fia-announces-world-motor-sport-council-decisions-14 FIA World Motor Sport Council June 2019
  3. Web site: Formula Regional Oceania status confirmed for Castrol TRS . 2022-12-13 . Toyota NZ . en-nz.
  4. Web site: Toyota - Toyota Racing New Zealand . Toyotaracing.co.nz . 2015-03-12.
  5. Web site: Toyota FT-60 hits the track . 10 December 2022.
  6. Web site: Tatuus Cars . www.tatuus.it . 10 December 2022.
  7. Web site: Toyota - Toyota Racing New Zealand . Toyotaracing.co.nz . 2015-03-12.
  8. Web site: Toyota Racing Series: Feature Race Trophies. Toyota NZ. 2017-01-15.