british GT chamionship future

british GT chamionship future

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viperman

Original Poster:

956 posts

271 months

Thursday 29th August 2002
quotequote all
sorry to put this in the gtracing thread to, if this is deleted i understand, but an announcement has been made about the future of the Britsh GT championship, NO GT CLASS ANYMORE

"2003 season - Thursday 29 August 2002





The BRDC is currently finalising various elements of the 2003 BRDC British GT Championship.


The 2002 season has again produced a spectacular array of machinery that has entertained trackside and TV audiences alike. The BRDC congratulates all teams, entrants and drivers for their continuing support of the Championship.


The BRDC fully appreciates that maintaining and competing in front-running GT machinery is a very costly business, and, as championship organiser, it has listened to the GT Association and other key players within the category as it maps out the 2003 championship structure. Key to the future of the championship is close racing to increase the appeal of GT racing to trackside and TV audiences and value for money for those investing in the championship.




The BRDC’s aims for the championship for 2003 are as follows:



In consultation with teams, entrants, drivers, suppliers, circuit promoters and operators, to devise an 11-round championship that takes into account logistical and budgetary requirements plus avoids clashes with major conflicting events (Le Mans and FIA GT rounds, for example).



The re-instatement of a championship round at a major European venue.



Introduction of varying race lengths and formats: 60mins – 2 x 45mins – two hours – three hours.



Single Championship Class for current GTO (FIA N-GT) and current GT class cars at an equalised performance level, therefore creating the spectacular prospect of outright racing for the championship crown for as wide a variety of cars as possible.



Introduction of an entry level Cup class for high-performance GT style cars running below the current GTO specification. Designed to broaden the list of eligible vehicles from a range of manufacturers that could potentially include Audi, BMW, Ferrari, Porsche, Panoz, TVR and Vauxhall amongst others.


The proposed Championship class is based upon the forecast of less GT-specification cars running in the 2003 series. The British GT Championship rightly forms a springboard to FIA/International GT competition, and whilst existing GT class teams/entrants may wish to remain in the British GT class, the focal point of the championship must be upon a class that is both competitive and well supported. Similarly the battle for the coveted title of British Champion must be fought on equal terms and in a way that can be clearly understood by teams, drivers, spectators and the media.


The BRDC are keen to show their continued commitment to GT class entrants for 2003 however and if GT-class interest proves to be at a level that it would clearly warrant a separate class (e.g. 60% of the total registered teams by a date to be announced) then in principle there will be no restrictions and the GT/GTO class structure will remain basically as 2002.


The BRDC believes that it will be beneficial for the British GT Championship as a whole if some of the prohibitively high vehicle costs could be reduced via the introduction of the GT Cup class thus making it easier for more teams and drivers to enter and be competitive. It is anticipated that increased entries will come from teams normally confined by costs to participating in one-make championships or at amateur level events. The BRDC will ensure that all drivers entering the series are of a licence standard required for the level of competition and that teams maintain rigorous standards in vehicle and team presentation.




The BRDC looks forward to the prospect of the 2003 British GT Championship and further announcements regarding the calendar together with further technical and sporting information will be made as soon as possible."

(www.f3-gt.com)


anonymous-user

60 months

Thursday 29th August 2002
quotequote all
i'm rather pleased, as the statement shows;

Single Championship Class for current GTO (FIA N-GT) and current GT class cars at an equalised performance level, therefore creating the spectacular prospect of outright racing for the championship crown for as wide a variety of cars as possible.

equalised performance is the key if motorsport is going to attract new fans, and indeed hold onto remaining spectatotrs. whilst i do enjoy watching one, technologically superior, car destroy the field, i also like a good race. The GT championship as it stands is a walkover for Saleen and I enjoy watching the other cars try to bridge the gap but to bring every car level will only help to deliver closer racing.

viperman

Original Poster:

956 posts

271 months

Thursday 29th August 2002
quotequote all
i think it sounds OK, the only thing that will be crap is having a TVR speed 12 lapping at the same speeds as the tuscan-Rs, its not showing the full power of the TVR, viper's, saleen's, lister, but i like this new 'GT cup' class