Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

D1 Grand Prix

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Japanese Racing Series
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "D1 Grand Prix" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(October 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
D1 Grand Prix
CategoryDrifting
Country Japan
Inaugural season2001
Drivers' championNaoki Nakamura
(2024)
Teams' championShibata Racing Team
Official websiteD1GP.co.jp(in Japanese)
Current season

TheD1 Grand Prix (D1グランプリ,D1 guranpuri), abbreviated asD1GP and subtitledProfessional Drift, is a production cardrifting series from Japan. After several years of hosting amateur drifting contests, Daijiro Inada, founder ofOption magazine andTokyo Auto Salon, and drifting legend,Keiichi Tsuchiya hosted a professional level drifting contest in 1999 and 2000 to feed on the ever increasing skills of drifting drivers who were dominating drifting contests in various parts of Japan. In October 2000, they reformed the contest as a five-round series. In the following year for the following round, the introduction of the two car tsuiou battle, run in asingle-elimination tournament format, a common tradition fortōge races which became popular with car enthusiasts.

Since then, the series has spread from the United States to United Kingdom and Malaysia to New Zealand with an ever increasing fanbase all over the world.[citation needed] The series has become a benchmark for all drifting series as its tsuisou format became widely adopted in drifting events throughout the world and is the most highly regarded of all series.[citation needed] The series helped to turn not just its personnel but also many of its drivers into celebrities with appearances in TV shows and car magazines all over the world along with scale models andvideo game appearances for their cars. It was credited for the increase several-fold in tuning businesses specialising in drift set-ups.[citation needed]

History

[edit]
D1 Grand Prix Sponsor Box for the2006 season

The art of drifting can be traced to the early days of motorsport when pre-warGrand Prix anddirt track racing drivers such asTazio Nuvolari used an at-the-limit form of driving called the four-wheel drift.

The bias ply racingtires of the 1960s-1980s lent themselves to driving styles with a highslip angle. As professional racers in Japan drove this way, so did the street racers.

As streettōge racing became increasingly common, one of the first drifting contests was hosted by the JapaneseCarboy magazine in 1986 and then in 1989, the year after the first introduction of theVideo Option series Daijiro Inada(稲田大二郎) decided on introducing a rival drifting event which was judged byKeiichi Tsuchiya known as theIkaten. Through the years, the standards of drifting drivers has risen rapidly and drivers began to dominate the series. As a result, Inada decided on a new series to accommodate the more experienced and skilled drivers. In 2000, a new series calledAll Japan Professional Drift Championship (全日本プロドリフト選手権,Zen Nihon Puro Dorifuto Sensyuken) consisting ofKeiichi Tsuchiya(土屋圭市) andManabu Orido(織戸 学) as judges, andManabu Suzuki(鈴木 学) as commentator. Other personnel consisted of Kitahara, as the tech inspector, and Takayasu Ozaku(more commonly known asZaku the perverted cameraman) as the series' long serving cameraman. Racing driverTarzan Yamada made appearances in earlier rounds and Inada himself would usually make guest appearances in the opening ceremony and judging stand.

The first ever event was atEbisu Circuit inFukushima, Japan, in October 2000 with an entry of forty and a crowd of three thousand. Drivers were judged individually and were treated as the first round of the2001 season, shortly renamed asD1 Grand Prix. From round two onward, the series took a different turn. Unlike drift events which judged the cars individually each round then eliminating the rest, the series introduced the one-to-one round battle called thetsuiso (twin run) round which has been the tradition forTōge races and has since been adopted for drifting events all over the world. Aftermarket parts manufacturers BLITZ,HKS and A'PEXi soon began to get involved by sponsoring drivers entering the competition.

In2002, the number of cars competing in the tsuiou rounds was reduced from ten to eight, and was reduced to 6 by round two, as the second tansou rounds increased to twelve. That was increased to sixteen by round four which stands to this day.

The series remained domestic until 2003 when an exhibition round was hostedin Southern California atIrwindale Speedway, produced by American marketing company, Slipstream Global. That same year,Grassroots Motorsports also presented the D1 Grand Prix with the Editors' Choice Award.[1] Slipstream Global would later create theFormula Drift Championship in 2004. With a sellout crowd of ten thousand, which broke the record for the venue and the series, this venue became the series' opening round in 2004. The California round saw the introduction of the English speaking commentator Toshi Hayama, who also dealt with the organisation of the non-Japanese events.

That year also saw the car accessories storeAutobacs as the title sponsor, and brought the first non-circuit event atOdaiba in Japan in January2004, held in aFuji Television car park. It also later ran as a championship round. In December 2004, the D1GP was held in the infield road circuit of theCalifornia Speedway inFontana, California, as a non-championship US vs. Japan event, running alongside theJGTC race as part of the non-championship GT Live event.Manabu Orido resigned as a judge at the end of the season to become a driver.

The other regular staff for the2005 season were D1 girls Kazumi Kondo(近藤和美) and Hatsuno Sugaya(菅谷はつ乃) who previously had careers asJGTCrace queens. For the 2006 season, Hatsuno was replaced by Jyuri Tamashiro(玉城珠里).

As the series has always been Japanese dominated with few non-Japanese making it to the best 16, in the first round of the2005 season, after narrowly beatingMasato Kawabata who spun during their tsuiso round battle,Rhys Millen became the first non-Japanese driver to advance to the best 8 round. He lost toYasuyuki Kazama after a sudden death tsuiso battle. That year saw the introduction of theD1 Street Legal category which was unveiled at theOdaiba round, for cars which are built to be driven on the road.

The series' only guest commentator was the TV presenter, singer,Super GT driver and amateur drifter Hiromi Kozono(ヒロミ; real kanji name 小園 浩巳) who guest commentated at the 2005 Odaiba Allstar event.

In October 2005, the D1GP ventured to Europe with an exhibition round atSilverstone,Northamptonshire, UK. This event provided an upset, as after putting on a good performance in the first run, the IrishmanDarren McNamara advanced to the best 8 round after overtaking the series regular Hiroshi Fukuda on the first run. LikeRhys Millen in the first round, McNamara fell victim toKazama after losing four to six then tying in the other round. With a crowd attendance of five thousand, in the following year the D1GP ran its own national series in the UK.

At the non-championship D1 USA vs Japan Allstar Exhibition at Irwindale Speedway in December 2005, the series had its first non-Japanese winner for both car and driver: Vaughn Gittin with hisFord Mustang GT. At the following season opener in March2006,Samuel Hübinette with hisDodge Viper SRT/10 took things further by making it into the best 8 by beating Gittin in a sudden death tsuiso battle, Hubinette made it to the semi-final when he defeatedTakahiro Ueno, only to be beaten byNobushige Kumakubo in hisSubaru Impreza GDB. Kumakubo went on into the finals to be beaten byYasuyuki Kazama, who won his third successive first round championship event.

In 2006, the D1GP ventured into the highly lucrative Asian market by hosting a feeder series inMalaysia, as well as in New Zealand, both of which are currently[when?] only running a drivers' search event, which gives the drivers who do well in any of the national series a chance to compete at the final non-championship event held in Irwindale in addition to the final round which only the three UK series drivers was invited by Tsuchiya, who was impressed by their skills during the UK exhibition event. McNamara, the only of the three drivers to qualify in the points-scoring final round and to enter with his own car, finished in the last 8 in both events, only to lose toNomura in both through a sudden death match. As that was the only year to have a franchise in the UK, McNamara would compete in the US series.

Yoshinori Koguchi drifting the Koguchi Power180SX at D1GP Fuji Speedway 2007

In2007, the former D1GP driver, Hisashi Kamimoto retired from driving to join as judge.[2] The D1 Gals of 2006 was replaced by the "D1 Sisters" who were audition winners and representative of the agencyD-Sign, consisting of Hiromi Goto, Yuria Tachiki, Asami Kikuchi and Ayaka Tashiro.[3]

Since the series began,Video Option has always covered all of the official D1GP events. Its English language sister titleJDM Option, which was established in 2004, also covers the events. In 2007, the sports channel,J SportsESPN began screening highlights of the series with Suzuki and Nomura as presenters, with the D1 Sisters making guest appearances.

For the 2009 season, the US arm underwent a new management team to kickstart a new domestic series[4] Tsuchiya, who was also on the executive board, stepped down when the organization went under new management.[5]

In December 2010,Keiichi Tsuchiya and Daijiro Inada both decided to resign from D1GP due to consistent irresponsible management.[6]

The following year saw the first time D1GP will continue without Tsuchiya nor Inada Hisashi Kamimoto who was part of the judge is promoted to chief judge and assisted byAkira Iida,Shinichi Yamaji,Eiji Yamada and Ryusuke Kawasaki, the Tanso Champions is awarded for the driver with the best Solo run driver and Tanso Winner is awarded for the best qualifier for each round. In the same yearYouichi Imamura winning his 4th and last title making him driver with the most D1GP title.

2014 saw the ban onnitrous oxide, a gas commonly seen to add power to engines in motorsport, causing teams to use larger turbochargers or displacement engines.

Since 2018 D1GP has streamed all of its round and its feeder series D1 Lights from YouTube for free with Japanese and English language stream on their official channelD1GP MOVIE CHANNEL.

In 2022 D1 Grand Prix started the "Next 10 Years" Project in order to develop an appeal for D1 for the upcoming 10 years by creating a competition that could be enjoyed even more and make an environment which makes it easier for the teams and drivers to compete in the competition and at the same time creating new standards for safety and fairness and competition.[7]

Road to D1

[edit]
A Toyota Corolla Levin AE86 adorning an official D1GP sunvisor during a practice run

Usually, drivers in Japan have to make it to the top of the championship table in one of four major national drifting series':

  • Advan Drift Meeting
  • A'PEX Cup
  • ORC Drift Championship
  • BN Sports D1 Drift Championship

Outside Japan, drivers have to enter aDriver Search. Once they have qualified, they receive aD1 License, which enables them to enter the qualifying rounds and the newly introduced national series, plus the exhibition events that they are invited to.

In a championship event, usually entries are restricted to one hundred cars. Each car gets an allocation of three individualtansou (solo run) qualifying runs: only the best one counts. At the end of the day, the top twenty qualifiers join the ten seeded cars who are determined by the top ten on the D1GP championship tables. The seeded drivers are usually a red background on their number to identify them.

On race day, after two sets of practice runs are done through, competitors will go through a starting ceremony which they will be introduced to the crowds and then a driver will be rounded up in group of fours and be given a set of three qualifying runs to make it into the best 16tsuiso (twin run) round battles, which involves two cars drifting simultaneously. The Tansou groups would be given, Priority A, B and C. "A" indicates seeded drivers and "C" indicates as qualifiers. The Tansou rounds always starts with the series leader and then goes through to the last driver with the highest number, which usually indicates that he is a qualifier. At the end of the drivers three rounds, only the best run counts and on each run, they are judged with an assistance of aDriftBox, which determines angle, keeping to the correct racing line and speed. That will be given a score up to a maximum of 100.0, should a driver score that point, he will be given a bonus score of 1 point which will be added to his score they accumulates during the tsuiou round.

At the end when all drivers are judged, the judges picks the sixteen drivers for the tsuiou round, the highest scoring driver will be paired up against the sixteenth highest scorer, the second highest will be paired against the fifteenth highest and so on. Between this and the followingtsuiou round, there is apit walk session at the paddock area for spectators, usually off-limits to them, where they can get close to the D1 personnel, drivers and cars. This usually lasts up to an hour which the crowds disembark back to the crowd area ready for the tsuiou round.

During a tsuiso round battle, one car follows another through the course, attempting to keep up with or even pass the car in front. It does not matter if the drifting line is wrong: it matters who has the most exciting drift. Normally, the leading car usually produces a maximum angle drift, but still closes off the inside line to prevent passing. The chasing car usually drifts with less angle, but very close to the lead car. However, the chasing car does not even have to keep up. In fact, in some cases, if a car that was left behind on the straight manages produces a beautiful drift, it could win that round. A spin, under-steer, or collision, results in a disqualification and a zero score for the offending party in that battle.

At thefinal round, the two finalists will be gathered in front of the judging stand, which they park up together and stand by their car to be formally addressed by the judges, the driver would return to the starting line to continue with their last sets of tsuiou rounds. Until 2004, there was a third place playoff for the losing semi finalists, which has been dropped. Should there be no sudden death rounds being called up, the finalists would return in front of the judging area with the losing drivers, who would return from the starting line; where the winner's name will be called up be the lead judge, which a large trophy and bottle ofchampagne will be presented to them by the D1 Gals. A cheque would usually be presented to the top 3 drivers, the winner's cheque is usually worth ¥1million or $5000 in US events. After the name is announced, in some event, the driver would be given a toss-up by competitors, a common tradition in some sports and usually the spectators will be invited onto the track.

Each D1 Licence is valid for an entire season. Drivers who finish in the top 16 of points will retain their licence for the next year. Drivers who finish below are relegated and must attempt to qualify for a licence at a qualifying school (such as Driver Search or a national drifting series).

Typical D1GP vehicle regulations

[edit]

Considering the fact that the D1GP is a series geared towards production cars only, there are a number of different race regulations that the vehicle must undergo in order to be eligible to compete. They are:

  • Only rear wheel drive is permitted. The vehicle must be a standard production, road-going model from a major vehicle manufacturer. It may also be converted fromfront-wheel drive, orall wheel drive.
    • Vehicles constructed by a vehicle manufacturer solely for the purpose of racing are prohibited.
  • The vehicle must retain the original chassis/body—only stock body constructed from a vehicle manufacturer is allowed.
    • No tube frame vehicles or tube frame chassis extensions are permissible unless part of theOEM structure
    • Space frame chassis are not permitted, additional triangulation and bracing of suspension turret/mounting points is allowed so long as the car vehicle contains its original monocoque chassis.
    • Vehicles must retain their originalVIN in itsOEM position as well as theOEM chassis plate where applicable --VIN must not be altered, clearly visible and readable.
    • Convertible vehicles must have a hard top installed and a roll cage which will be effective in the event of a vehicle rolling onto its roof. The hard top must be securely fastened to the body.
    • The vehicles appearance must be similar to that of the original vehicle.
  • Semi-Slick Tires/DOT-R Compounds (S-Tires) were prohibited after the first season as they are not road legal, after Nobuteru Taniguchi used them to win the championship in 2001. The series now only permits commercially available road tires approved by the organization.
  • Catalytic converters must be installed to keep the vehicle to the maximum noise limit at race circuits.

In the past, Drivers’ Search rules were more lenient to that of the championship rules until 2005, which the same rules apply to this day.

D1 Street Legal

[edit]

As the D1GP category was moving away from its grassroots during the earlier days, and budgets and development costs were getting higher, the organisers introduced theD1 Street Legal (D1ストリートリーガル (D1 sutoriito riigaru inkatakana), asD1SL) category at the Odaiba round in 2005 for road driven cars which were different from the main category as they are trailer driven between races.

Being a budget series, this meant that there is tighter restrictions on how a car can be modified. For example, the car must have a working car stereo system and must have the original engine which it was originally supplied with. Also there is no wide body extension and wings must be within the width of the car. The car must also retain many of its original features, especially dashboard, doors, etc. which sometimes can be replaced/removed/modified in the D1GP category. In all the car has to prove its road-worthiness by its entrant providing ashaken certificate.

Initially, the new series was treated to two exhibition rounds in 2005, and was given a full seven round the following year. Although the series is geared towards novice drifters, it also attracts D1GP star drivers including the Suenaga brothers,Masao and Naoto, many of its former D1GP regulars, and fan-favourites likeKen Nomura.

In 2006, the organisers started a divisional series calledD1SL Divisional Series which does not require a D1 License and is broken up in four regions: north, south, east, and west, with rounds that consist of 3 to 4 events in each region and a point scoring system that is the same as the other series'. The winner of the series at the end is awarded a D1 License.

In 2017, the organisers announced the end of the D1 Street Legal series, being replaced by the D1 Lights series from 2018 onwards.[8]

Typical D1 Street Legal vehicle regulations

[edit]

Although the items that are prohibited in D1GP also applies in D1SL, additional prohibited items in D1SL cars include:

  • Sequential transmission.
  • Fuel cells.
  • Carbon/beamless/FRP door replacements, must beOEM doors with side impact bars intact if possible.
  • Airjacks.
  • Tubbed fenders/one-off metal body components, must be one that is available to the public.
  • Custom/standalone relay/fuse switchboxes.
  • Acrylic glass/polycarbonate window inserts and replacements, must be OEM glass.
  • complete dash replacement parts, must be stock.

Other restrictions in the category are that:

  • Spoilers must stay within the width of the vehicle.
  • Brakes must be stock dimensions; no swaps from other models of same make are allowed.
  • Vehicles must retain OEM parts (ac/navigation/heater)
  • A functioningcar audio system must be in place.
  • A 6-point roll cage with 4-point harness must be in place (same as that of D1GP).
  • Restriction of engine swaps from other model into other model, as S15 Silvia Spec-S to Spec-R specification (SR20DE→SR20DET) may be permitted but aRB26DETT into an HR32 Skyline GTS-t is not unless the model is a BNR32, nor even is converting an AE85 to AE86 is permitted. Engines from other manufacturer's car (e.g. Darren McNamara's 13B-REW powered AE86) are not permitted as well. A bolt onturbocharger orsupercharger is permitted, the engine in the car can be determined by theVIN plate

D1 Lights

[edit]

D1 Lights replaced D1 Street Legal from 2018 onwards, unlike D1 Street Legal the car now must be a competition only car and no longer street registered. This were implemented to help better bridge the gap between D1 Grand Prix and its feeder series.

The safety of the series is also increased after a spotter was fatally struck by a wheel that came loose during a practice session in the final round of 2016 D1 Street Legal.[9] This accident led to the round being completely cancelled and the D1 Street Legal not continuing in 2017.

The series kicked off with a pre-season event at Nikko Circuit, followed by the first round at Maze Circuit. Daisuke Saito became the first winner of D1 Lights, the first series champion was Junya Ishikawa who graduated to D1GP the following year, while Naoki Nakamura who won twice regained his D1GP license and also graduated to D1GP.

In 2019 for the first time D1GP and D1 Lights were held in the same venue during same weekend at Autopolis, which was the final round for both series. The same would happen again twice in the following year, with the season opener and in Ebisu West.

D1 Lights initially live streamed on D1GP Movie Channel but moved to Video Option's YouTube channel in 2023.

On final two round of 2024 season, D1 Lights experimented with Top 24 tournament last seen in 2014 D1GP season and targeted to be use from 2025 and beyond.[10]

As of 2024, all D1 Lights champion had graduated to D1 Grand Prix with 2024 season had all previous Lights champion up to 2023 competed in the series which was not seen with D1 Street Legal.

D1 National Series

[edit]

During the 2005 exhibition event at Silverstone, a domestic series was announced with a plan to run the UK round as part of the world series for the following year, though plans for a point scoring round at that location never materialised. The series took over where theAutoglym Drift Championship left off, which was formerly run by the OPT Drift Club, an offshoot of a tuning business called Option Motorsport. The club held a championship in 2002 calledD1UK (the previous moniker), though not related to the magazine, for the 2004 season, the business was forced to drop the Option and D1 name for legal reasons.

The difference between the Autoglym series, which was sponsored by the car care product manufacturer, and theD1GB is that the former had a separate championship for beginners called Clubmans which was run in a tansou (solo run) format only and did not require the common safety amenities (e.g. rollcages), and the latter is a main championship for experienced drivers which consists of the usual tsuiso (twin run) rounds. The other difference is, D1 regulation is more stringent on car modifications. The club was since absorbed into the D1 franchise as a national series.

The GB series, was followed by a Malaysia series (D1MY), though the series and drivers' search began earlier than its UK counterpart due to the difference in climate with its first round in March, compared with the UK series in May. The MY series tends to have the privilege of having Tsuchiya to judge the rounds, whereas the UK series only had Dorikin and Manabu Suzuki as judges in Round 2, on the weekend of the D1GP exhibition event. The New Zealand series are currently run as a drivers' search rounds, which awards a D1 License to the winners and allow the top four to compete in the world exhibition event in the US in December.

At the end of the season, the series went through a major technical hitch as the D1 organisation refused to foot the fee to import the top 5 cars to Irwindale as promised, therefore the organizers of the D1GB dissolved its association with the D1 organisation[11] and formed theEuropean Drift Championship (EDC) which uses the same rule as the series itself. As a compromise, the D1 organisation instead gave the top three drivers a chance to compete in US based cars for both the point scoring and World All-Star round. The D1 franchise would itself move to the US after three seasons of being opening points scoring round.

Drifting team list

[edit]

Broadcast

[edit]

D1 Grand Prix coverage were never televised but the event coverage covered inVideo Option and separate playback inVHS andDVD format. However the production of it stopped as Sunpros DVD product such as Video Option andDrift Tengoku were shifted to YouTube in 2018.

Live Stream of the event initially started inNiconico platform but also moved toYouTube in 2018 with the stream available asVOD after the stream is finished. Initially the livestream was stream onD1GP MOVIE CHANNEL but in 2023 the channel only stream for paying membership with free livestream moved toVideo Option channel.

Manabu Suzuki is in charge of main commentator since the series first started. He usually accompanied by Naoki Tsuji but he is moved to YouTube commentary for the free livestream. Ryusuke Kawasaki and Ken Nomura also often accompanied Suzuki in commentary booth.

Free livestream is also available in English with Japan-based Australian YouTuber Alexi Smith aka Noriyaro and American D1 Divisional driver Kyle Cooney as commentary, voicing over the Japanese stream on same channel.

Live stream for DOSS Scoring system also available for free.

Championship winners

[edit]

By Year

[edit]
YearSeriesDriverTeamCar
2001D1GPNobuteru TaniguchiAfter FireNissan Silvia S15[12]
2002D1GPKatsuhiro UeoD'SIFT w/ Cusco JapanToyota Sprinter Trueno AE86[13]
2003D1GPYouichi ImamuraA'PEXiMazda RX-7 FD3S[14]
2004D1GPRyuji MikiTop SecretNissan Silvia S15[15]
2005D1GPYasuyuki KazamaKei-OfficeNissan Silvia S15[16]
2006D1GPNobushige KumakuboTeam Orange w/Yuke's and Cusco JapanSubaru Impreza GDB[17]
D1SLTakashi HagisakoClearanceNissan Silvia PS13[18]
2007D1GPMasato KawabataTeam TOYO with GP SportsNissan Silvia S15[19]
D1SLKazuya MatsukawaZip'sNissan 180SX[20]
2008D1GPDaigo SaitoTeam 22 Nino/Fnatz Professional GarageToyota Mark II JZX100[broken anchor][21]
D1SLNaoto SuenagaEbisu Circuit Drift Xtreme w/Agent KNissan Silvia PS13[22]
2009D1GPYouichi ImamuraTeam Auto Produce Boss w/ PotenzaNissan Silvia S15[23]
D1SLNaoki NakamuraD-MaxNissan Silvia S15[24]
2010D1GPYouichi ImamuraM7 Boss SGC w/ DunlopNissan Silvia S15[25]
D1SLNaoki NakamuraD-MaxNissan Silvia S13[26]
2011D1GPYouichi ImamuraSGC Boss w/ DunlopNissan Silvia S15[27]
D1SLSeimi TanakaD-MaxNissan Silvia S13[28]
2012D1GPNobushige KumakuboYUKE'S Team Orange with BEAST EYENissan Laurel C33[29]
D1SLMasashi YokoiMCR Factory with D-MAXNissan Silvia S14[30]
2013D1GPMasato KawabataTEAM TOYO with GP SPORTSNissan 180SX (RPS13)[31]
D1SLYusuke KitaokaSuper Autobacs Tokorozawa with Ebisu CircuitToyota Chaser JZX100[32]
2014D1GPKuniaki TakahashiGOODYEAR Racing with KUNNY'ZToyota Mark X (GRX130)[33]
D1SLNaoki NakamuraORIGIN Labo. with R・Y・ONissan Silvia S13[34]
2015D1GPMasato KawabataTeam TOYO TIRES DRIFT TRUST RACINGNissan GT-R[35]
D1SLYusuke KitaokaTeam Ito Auto with GOODYEARToyota Mark II JZX100[36]
2016D1GPDaigo SaitoWanli Fat Five RacingToyota Chaser JZX100[37]
D1SLKatsuhiro UeoZ.S.S. with SIFT & ブレインNissan Silvia S15[38]
2017D1GPHideyuki FujinoWisteria Toyo TiresNissan 180SX RPS13[39]
D1SLNot held
2018D1GPMasashi YokoiD-MAXNissan Silvia S15[40]
D1LTJunya Ishikawanichiei racing TKLNissan Silvia S14[41]
2019D1GPMasashi YokoiD-MAX Racing TeamNissan Silvia S15[42]
D1LTKojiro MekuwaReal StyleNissan Silvia S13[43]
2020D1GPMasanori KohashiLingLong Tire Drift Team OrangeNissan Silvia S15[44]
D1LTKojiro MekuwaRealstyle ORIGIN Labo. VALINONissan 180SX RPS13[45]
2021D1GPNaoki NakamuraMUGEN PLUS team ALIVE VALINONissan Silvia S15[46]
D1LTHiroki VitoTEAM VALINO TOPTUL ChampionNissan Silvia S13[47]
2022D1GPMasashi YokoiD-Max Racing TeamNissan Silvia S15[48]
D1LTYuki TanoHouse Innovation Racing TeamNissan Silvia S15[49]
2023D1GPHideyuki FujinoTeam Toyo Tires DriftToyota GR86 ZN8[50]
D1LTHisato YonaiGreenTop × 酒の中村 × AESNissan 180SX RPS13[51]
2024D1GPNaoki NakamuraValino × N-StyleNissan Silvia S13
D1LTKenshiro WadaHouse Innovation Racing TeamNissan 180SX RPS13[52]

By Driver

[edit]

D1GP

[edit]
DriverTitle(s)Season(s)Car(s)
Yoichi Imamura42003,2009,2010, 2011Mazda RX-7 (FD3S), 2003;Nissan Silvia (S15), 2009–2011
Masato Kawabata32007, 2013, 2015Nissan Silvia (S15), 2007;Nissan 180SX (RPS13), 2013;Nissan GT-R (R35), 2015
Masashi Yokoi2018,2019,2022Nissan Silvia (S15)
Nobushige Kumakubo22006, 2012Subaru Impreza WRX (GDB), 2006;Nissan Laurel (C33), 2012
Daigo Saito2008,2016Toyota Mark II (X100), 2008;Toyota Chaser (X100), 2016
Hideyuki Fujino2017,2023Nissan 180SX (RPS13), 2017;Toyota GR86 (ZN8), 2023
Naoki Nakamura2021,2024Nissan Silvia (S15), 2021;Nissan Silvia (S13), 2024
Nobuteru Taniguchi12001Nissan Silvia (S15)
Katsuhiro Ueo2002Toyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85)
Ryuji Miki2004Nissan Silvia (S15)
Yasuyuki Kazama2005Nissan Silvia (S15)
Kuniaki Takahashi2014Toyota Mark X (GRX130)
Masanori Kohashi2020Nissan Silvia (S15)

D1 Street Legal & D1 Lights

[edit]
DriverTitle(s)Season(s)Car(s)
Naoki Nakamura32009, 2010, 2014Nissan Silvia (S15), 2009; Nissan Silvia (S13), 2010, 2014
Yusuke Kitaoka22013, 2015Toyota Mark II (JZX100)
Kojiro Mekuwa2019, 2020Nissan Silvia (S13), 2019; Nissan 180SX (RPS13), 2020
Takashi Hagisako12006Nissan Silvia (S13)
Kazuya Matsukawa2007Nissan 180SX (RPS13)
Naoto Suenaga2008Nissan Silvia (S13)
Seimi Tanaka2011Nissan Silvia (S13)
Masashi Yokoi2012Nissan Silvia (S14)
Katsuhiro Ueo2016Nissan Silvia (S15)
Junya Ishikawa2018Nissan Silvia (S14)
Hiroki Vito2021Nissan Silvia (S13)
Yuki Tano2022Nissan Silvia (S15)
Hisato Yonai2023Nissan 180SX (RPS13)
Kenshiro Wada2024Nissan 180SX (RPS13)

Tanso (solo run) champions

[edit]
YearDriverTeamCar
2011Daigo SaitoPremium Japan with DaigoToyota Chaser JZX100[27]
2012Kuniaki TakahashiGoodyear Racing with Kunny'zToyota Mark X (GRX130)[53]
2013Masato KawabataTeam Toyo with GP SportsNissan 180SX (RPS13)[31]
2014Masao SuenagaTeam RE Amemiya SunocoMazda RX-7 (FD3S)[33]
2015Akinori UtsumiRC926 with Toyo TiresNissan Silvia (S15)[35]
2016Daigo SaitoWanli Fat Five RacingToyota Chaser (JZX100)[37]
2017Hideyuki FujinoWisteria Toyo TiresNissan 180SX (RPS13)[39]
2018Masato KawabataToyo Tires Glion Trust RacingNissan GT-R[40]
2019Yusuke KitaokaTeam MoriToyota Mark II (JZX100)[42]
2020Masashi YokoiNankang Tire Drift Team D-MaxNissan Silvia (S15)[44]
2021Naoki NakamuraMUGEN PLUS team ALIVE VALINONissan Silvia (S15)[46]
2022Masato KawabataTeam Toyo Tires DriftToyota GR86 (ZN8)[48]
2023Hideyuki FujinoTeam Toyo Tires DriftToyota GR86 (ZN8)[50]
2024Naoki NakamuraValino × N-StyleNissan Silvia (S13)

(Non Championship) All Star winners

[edit]
This sectiondoes notcite anysources. Please helpimprove this section byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged andremoved.(September 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
YearEvent titleDriverTeamCar
2004US vs JapanNobushige KumakuboTeam Orange, ADVANNissan Silvia S15
2005US vs JapanVaughn GittinFalken, Drift AllianceFord Mustang GT
2006World All StarKen NomuraBlitz, URAS, DirezzaNissan Skyline ER34
2007All Star DuelVaughn GittinFalken, Drift AllianceFord Mustang GT
2015World ChampionsMasato KawabataTeam Toyo Tires Drift Trust RacingNissan GT-R

Statistics

[edit]
  • Youngest Driver to compete — Ken Gushi, age 16, 2004 Round 1.
  • Youngest Driver to enter Best 4 — Emmanuelle Amandio, age 20yrs 10mths, 2013 Round 4
  • Youngest Driver to win (D1GP) — Youichi Imamura, age 24yrs 5mths, 2000 Round 1.
  • Youngest Driver to win (D1 Lights) — Ryuu Nakamura, age 18yrs 2mths, 2024 Round 7.
  • Youngest Championship Winner — Youichi Imamura, age 27yrs 5mths, 2003 Season.
  • Oldest Driver to enter Best 16 (Non-Championship) —Rod Millen, age 55, 2005 D1 USA vs Japan Allstar Exhibition.
  • Oldest Driver to compete (D1SL) — Daijiro Inada, age 59, 2006 Round 2.
  • Oldest Driver to win (D1GP) — Katsuhiro Ueo, age 51yrs 1mths, 2023 Round 3.
  • Oldest Driver to win (D1SL) — Kazuyoshi Okamura, age 47, 2006 Round 5.
  • Oldest Championship Winner — Hideyuki Fujino, age 49yrs 4mths, 2023 Season.
  • Most Wins in a single Season — 5 wins, Daigo Saito, 2015 Season; Masanori Kohashi, 2020 Season.
  • Most Tanso/ Solo run in a single Season — 6 wins, Masato Kawabata, 2018 Season.
  • Most Points in a single Season — 206pts, Naoki Nakamura, 2021 Season.
  • Most Championship Wins — 4 wins, Youichi Imamura (2003, 2009–2011)
  • Narrowest title margin — 1pt; Yasuyuki Kazama (97pts) over Masao Suenaga (96pts), 2005 Season and Nobushige Kumakubo (110 pts) over Ken Nomura (109 pts), 2006 Season; Masato Kawabata (100pts) over Nobushige Kumakubo (99pts), 2007 Season.
  • Widest title margin — 45pts; Masanori Kohashi (174pts) over Masashi Yokoi (129pts), 2020 Season.
  • Highest number of entries – 124 (Rd 6, 2005).
  • Lowest number of entries – 25 (Rd 5, 2001).

All-Time winners list

[edit]

excludes non-championship, D1SL & non-Japanese National events

Driver

[edit]
Drivers all-time winning table (Tsuiso)
[edit]
Rank[54]DriverCar(s)Total
1Daigo SaitoToyota Mark II (JZX100), Toyota Chaser (JZX100), Chevrolet Corvette C6 (X245A), Toyota GR Supra (J29/DB)20
2Masato KawabataNissan Silvia (S15), Nissan 180SX (RPS13), Nissan GT-R (R35), Toyota GR Supra (J29/DB), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)19
3Youichi ImamuraToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE86), Mazda RX-7 (FD3S), Nissan Silvia (S15)15
4Masashi YokoiNissan Silvia (S15)12
Masao SuenagaMazda RX-7 (FD3S), Nissan GT-R (R35), Nissan Silvia (S15)
6Naoki NakamuraNissan Silvia (S15), Nissan Silvia (S13), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)10
Masanori KohashiNissan Silvia (S15)9
8Nobushige KumakuboNissan Silvia (S15), Subaru Impreza (GDB), Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX (CT9A), Nissan Laurel (C33)7
Yasuyuki KazamaNissan Silvia (S15)
10Hideyuki FujinoNissan 180SX (RPS13), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)5
Katsuhiro UeoToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85), Nissan Silvia (S15)
Yukio MatsuiMazda RX-7 (FD3S)
Tetsuya HibinoToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85), Toyota GT86 (ZN6), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)
Ken NomuraNissan Skyline (ER34)
Nobuteru TaniguchiNissan Silvia (S15)
16Naoto SuenagaMitsubishi Lancer Evolution X (CZ4A), Nissan Silvia (S15)4
17Yoshinori KoguchiNissan 180SX (RPS13), Nissan Silvia (S15)3
Koudai SobagiriInfiniti Q60 (V37)
19Hokuto MatsuyamaToyota GR Supra (J29/DB)2
Akinori UtsumiNissan Silvia (S15)
Tomohiro MurayamaNissan Silvia (S14)
Manabu OridoToyota Supra (JZA80), Toyota GT86 (ZN6)
Kuniaki TakahashiToyota Mark X (GRX130)
Tsuyoshi TezukaNissan Skyline GT-R (BNR32)
Kazuhiro TanakaNissan Silvia (S15), Subaru Impreza (GDB)
26Maopo YamanakaToyota GR Supra (J29/DB)1
Kojiro MekuwaNissan 180SX (RPS13)
Shingo HatanakaToyota Chaser (JZX100)
Kenji TakayamaLexus GS (GRS191)
Kazuya MatsukawaToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85)
Masayoshi TokitaToyota Crown (GRS180)
Atsushi KuroiNissan Silvia (S13)
Hideo HiraokaNissan Silvia (S15)
Toshiki YoshiokaToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85)
Ryuji MikiNissan Silvia (S15)
Ken MaedaToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE86)
Kouichi YamashitaNissan Silvia (S15)
Masatoshi AsamotoMazda RX-7 (FD3S)
Takahiro UenoToyota Soarer (JZZ30)
Mitsuru HaruguchiMazda RX-7 (FC3S)
Tanso all-time winning table (Awarded since 2011 season)
[edit]
RankDriverCarTotal
1Naoki NakamuraNissan Silvia (S15), Nissan Silvia (S13), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)14
2Masato KawabataNissan 180SX (RPS13), Nissan GT-R (R35), Toyota GR Supra (J29/DB)13
3Hideyuki FujinoNissan 180SX (RPS13), Toyota GR86 (ZN8)11
4Daigo SaitoToyota Mark II (JZX100), Toyota Chaser (JZX100), Chevrolet Corvette C6 (X245A),

Toyota GR Supra (J29/DB)

10
5Masashi YokoiNissan Silvia (S15)8
Koudai SobagiriInfiniti Q60
7Hokuto MatsuyamaToyota GR Supra (J29/DB)6
8Seimi TanakaNissan Silvia (S15)5
Tetsuya HibinoToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85), Toyota Supra (JZA80), Honda S2000 (AP1),

Nissan Silvia (S14)

10Yukio MatsuiNissan Silvia (S15), Mazda RX-7 (FD3S)4
11Akinori UtsumiNissan Silvia (S15)3
Teruyoshi IwaiDaihatsu Charmant (A35), Mazda Roadster (NA6CE)
13Kuniaki TakahashiToyota Mark X (GRX130)2
Manabu OridoToyota Supra (JZA80), Toyota GT86 (ZN6)
Youichi ImamuraNissan Silvia (S15), Toyota GT86 (ZN6)
Naoto SuenagaNissan Silvia (S15)
16Tsuyoshi TezukaNissan Skyline GT-R (BNR34)1
Kazuya MatsukawaToyota Sprinter Trueno (AE85)
Masao SuenagaMazda RX-7 (FD3S)
Akira HirajimaNissan Silvia (S15)
Yoshinori KoguchiToyota GT86 (ZN6)
Shinji SagisakaToyota Altezza (SXE10)
Yusuke KitaokaToyota Mark II (JZX100)
Masanori KohashiNissan Silvia (S15)
Kojiro MekuwaNissan 180SX (RPS13)
Junya IshikawaToyota GR86 (ZN8)
Takahiro UenoLexus RC (XC10)

Bold : Active Drivers

Italics : Active in other series

Car all-time winning table

[edit]

(Tsuiso = dual run; tanso = solo run)[55]

PositionCarTotal20112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024
Overall
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
Tsuiso
Tanso
1stNissan Silvia S1583224434221322102221202012151527486314200
2ndNissan 180SX RPS1327000000012122111210000002311020200110000
3rdMazda RX-7 FD3S26032220212100001002100010110200011000000
4thToyota GR86 ZN821000000000000000000000000000000000214545
5thToyota Mark II JZX10020000000011021221120030210000010000000000
6thToyota Supra DB16000000000000000000000000000011212121104
7thNissan GT-R R3513000000000000000000121012006000000000000
8thToyota Sprinter AE8610121020001100200000000000000000000000000
9thNissan Silvia PS139000000100000000000000000000000000210041
10thInfiniti Q607000000000000000000000000000000001031200
11thToyota Chaser JZX1006000000000000000000000310010000000000000
12thNissan Skyline ER345000102101000000000000000000000000000000
Toyota 86 ZN65000000000000000100112000000000000000000
14thToyota Mark X GRX1304000000000000111001000000000000000000000
15thSubaru Impreza GDB3000002100000000000000000000000000000000
Nissan Laurel C333000000000011010000000000000000000000000
Nissan Silvia S143000000000000000000000200000010000000000
18thNissan Skyline GT-R BNR322000000011000000000000000000000000000000
Toyota Supra JZA802000000000010100000000000000000000000000
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X CZ4A2000000000000020000000000000000000000000
Toyota Sprinter AE852000000000000000001100000000000000000000
Mazda Roadster NA6CE2000000000000000000000020000000000000000
Chevrolet Corvette X245A2000000000000000000000001100000000000000
24thToyota Soarer JZZ301100000000000000000000000000000000000000
Mazda RX-7 FC3S1100000000000000000000000000000000000000
Honda S2000 AP11000000000000000000000000100000000000000
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution IX CT9A1000000010000000000000000000000000000000
Toyota Crown GRS1801000000000100000000000000000000000000000
Lexus GS GRS1911000000000000000001000000000000000000000
Nissan Skyline GT-R BNR341000000000000001000000000000000000000000
Daihatsu Charmant A351000000000000000010000000000000000000000
Toyota Altezza SXE101000000000000000000001000000000000000000
Toyota GR Corolla E2101000000000000000000000000000000000000010
Lexus RC XC101000000000000000000000000000000000000010
Sources:[42][44][56]

Gallery

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Home".grassrootsmotorsports.com.
  2. ^D1 Grand Prix Drifting - THANKSGIVING WEEKEND DOUBLE-HEADERArchived 2007-10-19 at theWayback Machine
  3. ^JDM OPTION / Vol.38 - Driftworks Drifting ShopArchived October 27, 2007, at theWayback Machine
  4. ^"Have no Fear, 2009 D1 series is here! : Breaking Drift News". Wreckedmagazine.com. Archived fromthe original on 2012-02-18. Retrieved2012-08-15.
  5. ^"Formula Drift is seeing a big influx". Press-Telegram. Archived fromthe original on 2012-02-14. Retrieved2012-08-15.
  6. ^http://www.k1planning.com/info/other/post-4.html[dead link]
  7. ^"D1 NEXT 10 YEARSプロジェクト始動!!" (in Japanese). 28 February 2022. Retrieved2022-11-18.
  8. ^"新ドリフトシリーズ開催のお知らせ".d1gp.co.jp. 5 December 2017. Retrieved23 December 2017.
  9. ^"Professional Drifting Has Its First Known Fatality".Jalopnik. 2016-12-05. Retrieved2022-08-18.
  10. ^"D1LT RD.8&9 エビス 見どころ" (in Japanese). 2024-09-20. Retrieved2024-09-27.
  11. ^D1GB Drivers Not to Appear at D1GP All-Stars Drifting: Drift LiveArchived 2007-02-24 at theWayback Machine
  12. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2001 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  13. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2002 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  14. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2003 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  15. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2004 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  16. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2005 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  17. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2006 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  18. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2006 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  19. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2007 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  20. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2007 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  21. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2008 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  22. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2008 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  23. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2009 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  24. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2009 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  25. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2010 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  26. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2010 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  27. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2011 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  28. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2011 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  29. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2012 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  30. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2012 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  31. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2013 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  32. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2013 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  33. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2014 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  34. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2014 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  35. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2015 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  36. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2015 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  37. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2016 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  38. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2016 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  39. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2017 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  40. ^ab"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2018 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  41. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2018 Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2022-08-27.
  42. ^abc"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2019 D1 GRAND PRIX SERIES RANKING".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  43. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2019 D1 Lights Series Ranking".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2022-08-27.
  44. ^abc"2020年D1グランプリシリーズランキング".d1gp.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-06-16.
  45. ^"2020年D1ライツシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2022-08-27.
  46. ^ab"2021年D1グランプリシリーズランキング".d1gp.co.jp (in Japanese). Retrieved2021-11-25.
  47. ^"2021年D1ライツシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2022-08-27.
  48. ^ab"D1GP RD.9 エビス 結果速報" (in Japanese). Retrieved2022-11-13.
  49. ^"2022年D1ライツシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2022-10-04.
  50. ^ab"2023年D1グランプリシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2023-11-12.
  51. ^"2023年D1ライツシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2023-11-12.
  52. ^"2024年D1ライツシリーズランキング" (in Japanese). Retrieved2024-10-12.
  53. ^"D1最終戦:王座は熊久保が獲得「東北に恩返しを」 | autosport web".www.as-web.jp. Retrieved2021-06-16.
  54. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - What's D1 Grand Prix - Career earning points".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2022-02-15.
  55. ^"Slide into Action".Metropolis Japan. 2011-03-03. Retrieved2021-06-17.
  56. ^"D1 OFFICIAL WEBSITE - 2020 Event Schedule".www.d1gp.co.jp. Retrieved2021-06-17.
D1 Grand Prix (2001–present)
Seasons
Media
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=D1_Grand_Prix&oldid=1280384915"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp