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GT4 European Series

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sports car championship
GT4 European Series
CategoryGrand Tourer (SRO GT4)
CountryEurope
Inaugural season2007
GT ClassesGT4
Drivers49
Teams27
Tyre suppliersPirelli
Official websiteGT4 European Series
Current season

TheGT4 European Series is asports car championship created and organised bySRO Motorsports Group. It is a pro/am championship which utilizesSRO GT4 class cars, and runs alongside theGT World Challenge Europe as a support series.

History

[edit]

Following the successful introduction of theFIA GT3 European Championship in 2006, the formula was expanded to include usage by other nationally based professional championships such as theBritish GT Championship,Belcar,Australian GT Championship and GermanADAC GT Masters. While the FIA GT3 European Championship continues, the SRO felt that a true amateur championship was needed in order to complement GT3 which allowed a certain level of professional driver to compete. Many national series also adopted the GT4 regulations as a lower class, and the European Cup eventually lacked the competitors needed to continue. During the2016 24 Hours of Spa, theStéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) announced that the European Cup would be divided in 2 different series for 2017.[1] They are called theGT4 European Series Northern Cup and theGT4 European Series Southern Cup. The Northern Cup will be the same as the European Cup, while the Southern Cup will collect forces with theFFSA GT Championship. Since Stéphane Ratel spoke out about his firm belief in this class, many championships and constructors have followed. In 2018 the Southern Cup was renamed FFSA GT - GT4 France, while the Northern Cup became the sole GT4 European Series again.

Drivers

[edit]

Like GT3, GT4 drivers have a set of criteria which would automatically eliminate them from competition based on their level of experience. Since GT4 class drivers are meant to be true amateurs, these criteria are tighter than that seen in GT3.

Drivers under the age of 30 are not allowed to have had a top-ten finish in any national or international single-seater championship, nor to have had a distinguishable career in a national or international GT championship. These drivers are known as Silver drivers. Drivers over the age of 30 who did not receive their racing licenses until after turning 30 and having no single-seater experience at all are also allowed in the series, under the term Bronze drivers.

Races

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Just as in GT3, each event would consist of two races of equal distance, usually held on different days. Teams were not required to have two drivers and could use the same driver for each race.

Championship

[edit]

The championship used the standard FIA point scheme for the top ten finishers: 25-18-15-12-10-8-6-4-2-1. If a team used different drivers for each race in a single event, both drivers would receive points. A driver and team championship were both held.

If at least five cars of the same make participate in a race, then a manufacturer cup would also be awarded, similar to the style used in GT3.

Champions

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Drivers

[edit]
YearGT4LightSupersport
2007BelgiumEric De DonckerNot awardedNot awarded
2008BelgiumEric De DonckerGermanyChristopher Haase
2009United KingdomJoe OsborneNot awardedAustria Augustin Eder
2010NetherlandsPaul MeijerItalyGianni Giudici
2011NetherlandsRicardo van der EndeItalyGianni Giudici
YearSilver CupPro (2013–2016)
Pro-Am Cup (2017–present)
Am (2013–2016)
Am Cup (2017–present)
2013Not awardedNetherlandsRicardo van der EndeGermany Jörg Viehbahn
2014NetherlandsBernhard van Oranje
NetherlandsRicardo van der Ende
France André Grammatico
2015Netherlands Jelle Beelen
Netherlands Marcel Nooren
Austria Daniel Uckermann
2016GermanyPeter Terting
Germany Jörg Viebahn
France Jérôme Demay
2017NetherlandsRicardo van der Ende
Netherlands Max Koebolt
Netherlands Luc Braams
NetherlandsDuncan Huisman
Italy Giuseppe Ghezzi
2018Netherlands Milan Dontje
Denmark Nicolaj Møller Madsen
Germany Markus LungstrassSwitzerland Niki Leutwiler
2019Netherlands Simon Knap
United StatesAlec Udell
Norway Marcus Påverud
Germany Luca Trefz
Switzerland Pascal Bachmann
Luxembourg Clément Seyler
2020FranceValentin Hasse-Clot
FranceThéo Nouet
DenmarkBastian Buus
Germany Jan Kasperlik
France Nicolas Gomar
France Gilles Vannelet
2021United KingdomCharlie Fagg
United KingdomBailey Voisin
FranceGrégory Guilvert
France Fabien Michal
France Michael Blanchemain
France Christophe Hamon
2022IsraelRoee Meyuhas
FranceErwan Bastard
France Jean-Luc Beaubelique
FranceJim Pla
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile Mikhail Loboda
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile Andrey Solukvtsev
2023Germany Michael Schrey
ItalyGabriele Piana
FranceGrégory Guilvert
France Christophe Hamon
France Alban Varutti
2024United KingdomTom Lebbon
United KingdomJosh Rattican
Germany Max Kronberg
Germany Finn Zulauf
France Pascal Huteau
France Laurent Hurgon

Teams

[edit]
YearOverall
2007Not awarded
2008BelgiumMotorsport98
2009United KingdomRJN Motorsport
2010Netherlands Rhesus Racing
2011Netherlands Ekris BMW/Racing Team Holland by Ekris Motorsport
2013Netherlands Ekris Motorsport
2014Netherlands Racing Team Holland by Ekris Motorsport
2015Netherlands V8 Racing
2016Germany PROsport Performance
YearSilver CupPro-Am CupAm Cup
2017Netherlands Ekris MotorsportNetherlands Las Moras RacingItaly Autorlando Sport
2018GermanyPhoenix RacingGermany Racing OneFranceTFT Racing
2019Netherlands MDM MotorsportGermanyLeipert Motorsport [de]Belgium Street Art Racing
YearOverall
2018Germany Racing One
2019GermanyLeipert Motorsport [de]
2020France AGS Events
YearSilver CupPro-Am CupAm Cup
2021United KingdomUnited AutosportsFranceSaintéloc RacingFrance Team Fullmotorsport
2022FranceSaintéloc RacingFrance AKKodis ASP TeamFrance AKKodis ASP Team
2023Switzerland Hofor Racing by Bonk MotorsportFranceSaintéloc Junior TeamFrance AVR-Avvatar
2024United Kingdom Elite Motorsport with Entire REGermany W&S MotorsportFrance Schumacher CLRT

Similar series

[edit]

Since the introduction of the GT4 European Cup, the GT4 class of cars have been expanded to various national series. TheBritish GT Championship andBelgian GT Championship allow GT4 and Super Sport class cars to compete alongside the GT3 class, while the stand-aloneDutch GT4 Championship ran its first season of competition 2009.[2] The SpanishGT Cup Open Europe series also allows GT4 cars to compete with one-make cars. A GT4 championship plans to be run in Brazil in 2010.[3] Norway introduced a national championship called GTF in 2014 featuring GT4 regulated cars. TheSuper Taikyu Series in Japan also includes a GT4 class called ST-Z. The United States–based ACCUS offers theGT4 America Series promoted by SRO and sanctioned by the United States Auto Club for one-hour sprint races, and theMichelin Pilot Challenge sanctioned by the International Motor Sports Association for longer races (2-4 hours).

Circuits

[edit]

Bold denotes a circuit will be used in the2025 season.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"GT4 European Series Splits; Extended Schedule for 2017".sportscar365.com. Jake Kilshaw. December 29, 2016. RetrievedJuly 29, 2016.
  2. ^"GT4 European Cup - News". Gt4cup.com. 2008-06-25. Archived fromthe original on 2011-08-07. Retrieved2011-08-08.
  3. ^"FIA GT Championship - News". Fiagt.com. Archived fromthe original on 2013-01-23. Retrieved2011-08-08.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toGT4 European Cup.
GT Series seasons organized by theSRO Motorsports Group
International
      BPR Global GT Series (1994–1996)
FIA GT Championship (1997–2009)
FIA GT1 World Championship (2010–2012)
                            Intercontinental GT Challenge (2016–present)
Asia
FIA GT World Cup (2015–2019, 2023–present)
        Blancpain GT Series Asia (2017–2018)
Blancpain GT World Challenge Asia (2019)
GT World Challenge Asia (2022–present)
SRO Japan Cup (2022–present)
Thailand Super Series (2025)
Europe
                FIA GT3 European Championship (2006–2012)
Blancpain Endurance Series (2011–2015)
Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup (2016–2019)
GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup (2020–present)
FIA GT Series (2013)
Blancpain Sprint Series (2014–2015)
Blancpain GT Series Sprint Cup (2016–2018)
Blancpain GT World Challenge Europe (2019)
GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup (2020–present)
Blancpain GT Series (2014–2019)
GT World Challenge Europe (2020–present)
GT Sports Club (2015)
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GT2 European Series (2021–present)
British GT Championship (2004–present)
GT3 Revival Series
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Blancpain GT World Challenge America (2019)
GT World Challenge America (2020–present)
GT Sports Club America (2020)
GT America Series (2021–present)
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                 GT World Challenge Australia (2021–present)
Europe GT4
    GT4 European Cup/Trophy/Series (2007–2016, 2018–present)
GT4 European Series Northern Cup (2017)
GT4 European Series Southern Cup (2017)
French GT4 Cup (2018–present)
GT4 Central European Cup (2018)
GT4 South European Series (2019)
Americas GT4
                 Pirelli GT4 America Series (2019–present)
Asia GT4
                 GT4 International Cup (2018)
SRO GT Cup (2025)
Oceania GT4
                 GT4 Australia Series (2024–present)
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Americas TC
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