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Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
World Rally Championship manufacturer team
For Toyota's WRC team which competed between 1975–1999, seeToyota Team Europe. For other Toyota Gazoo racing teams and divisions, seeToyota Gazoo Racing.
Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT
Full nameToyota Gazoo Racing World Rally Team
BaseFinlandJyväskylä, Finland[a]
JapanJapan[b]
Team principal(s)Jari-Matti Latvala
Juha Kankkunen
DriversFranceSébastien Ogier
United KingdomElfyn Evans
FinlandKalle Rovanperä
JapanTakamoto Katsuta
ItalyLorenzo Bertelli
Co-driversFranceVincent Landais
United KingdomScott Martin
FinlandJonne Halttunen
Republic of IrelandAaron Johnston
ItalySimone Scattolin
ChassisToyota GR Yaris Rally1
Toyota GR Yaris Rally2
TyresHankook
World Rally Championship history
Debut2017 Monte Carlo Rally
Manufacturers' Championships6 (2018,2021,2022,2023,2024,2025)
Drivers' Championships5 (2019,2020,2021,2022,2023)
Rally wins61

TheToyota Gazoo Racing World Rally Team is a competitor of theWorld Rally Championship (WRC) based in Finland, serving as the entry for the car manufacturerToyota.[1][2][3] Its team principal is former WRC driverJari-Matti Latvala and its drivers for 2023 include reigning championKalle Rovanperä, alongsideElfyn Evans,Takamoto Katsuta andSébastien Ogier.[4][5] The team made its debut during the2017 season, where it entered theToyota Yaris WRC.[6]

The team is a separate operational unit to the Toyota Gazoo Racing team that competes in theWorld Endurance Championship, but both are a part ofToyota Gazoo Racing Europe.[7][8]

In2018, the team won the championship for manufacturers, Toyota's first since1999, followed by more wins in 2021 and 2022.[9] The team have also delivered championship titles for drivers and co-drivers from 2019 to 2023.[10]

History

[edit]
Toyota Yaris WRC premiere at the2016 Paris Motor Show
The brand newToyota Yaris World Rally Car, set to compete in the2017 WRC season, at the 2016 Paris Motor Show. On the left isAkio Toyoda, CEO of Toyota Motor Corporation, next to four time World Rally Drivers' ChampionTommi Mäkinen

In January 2015, Toyota officially announced its intention to return to the World Rally Championship in 2017. The manufacturer had last competed in the series in1999 before withdrawing ahead of the2000 season to focus on itsFormula One project. For the new project, development of the Yaris WRC was delegated toToyota Motorsport GmbH (TMG), the division that ranToyota Team Europe and the previous WRC campaigns in the 1980s and 1990s with Group B and Group A Celicas, and theToyota Corolla World Rally Car.[11]

In July 2015 however, Toyota PresidentAkio Toyoda elected to reassign responsibility for the project toTommi Mäkinen, who based the team in his native Finland. Only the engine would be built by TMG, and by this time new World Rally Car regulations due for 2017 forced Mäkinen to shelve the Yaris WRC prototype and start anew.[12][13][14][15]

Also in 2015, Toyota consolidated all its motorsport activities to operate under the banner ofToyota Gazoo Racing, with TMG being renamedToyota Gazoo Racing Europe.[16]

2017

[edit]
Esapekka Lappi on the way to victory in the2017 Rally Finland

Toyota made their return to the WRC after eighteen years of absence in2017 season withToyota Yaris WRC.[6][2]

Following the withdrawal ofVolkswagen Motorsport from the sport,Jari-Matti Latvala and co-driverMiikka Anttila joined Toyota Gazoo Racing,[3] where they were team-mates withJuho Hänninen, who returned to the championship for the first time since 2014, and his co-driverKaj Lindström.[17] ReigningWRC2 championsEsapekka Lappi andJanne Ferm made their début in a WRC specification car, contesting a partial campaign from theRally of Portugal.[3][18]

Toyota Yaris WRC - Jari-Matti Latvala - Buenos Aires Motorshow 2017

The team took their first podium at theMonte Carlo Rally, and took their first win at the next round inRally Sweden. The team's best result of the season came inFinland, with Lappi taking his first WRC win, Hänninen his first podium finish, although Latvala had to retire from the lead with a mechanical problem.

The team finished the season third in the manufacturers' championship.

2018

[edit]

Ahead of the2018 season,Ott Tänak andMartin Järveoja leftM-Sport to join the team, replacing the crew of Hänninen and Lindström who took new positions within the team. Hänninen remained in a test driver role and Lindström replacedJarmo Lehtinen as the team's sporting director.[19][20]

In August, the team relocated its service base to a new facility inEstonia, located 8 km from the capital ofTallinn. Headquarters, development, testing and administration remained in Finland.[21]

Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT won the2018 World Rally Championship manufacturers title. With Tommi Mäkinen heading the team, he became the first person in the history of the championship to win both as a driver and as a team principal.[22] Tänak took four rally wins, including three consecutively. Jari-Matti Latvala won once.[23]

2019

[edit]

In2019, Esapekka Lappi and Janne Ferm left to joinCitroën after two years with the team.[24]Kris Meeke andSebastian Marshall were recruited to drive a third car in the championship.[25] Tänak and Järveoja won the driver's and co-driver's championships, although Toyota would finish runners-up toHyundai in the manufacturers' championship.

2020

[edit]
Elfyn Evans on the way to victory in the2020 Rally Sweden

In the 2020 season, Toyota had a brand new line up with six-time WRC championSébastien Ogier joining fromCitroën who had pulled out of the 2020 season withElfyn Evans fromM-Sport andKalle Rovanperä fromŠkoda Motorsport all joining Toyota for this season, as 2019 championOtt Tänak left to joinHyundai, andKris Meeke left the team as well.

TheCOVID-19 coronavirus pandemic temporarily halted the2020 WRC season; in the end, seven rounds were completed,[26] with Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia emerging victorious. They had intended to retire at the season's end; however, in November 2020 it was announced that the pair would continue competing for one more year.[27] Toyota once again finished as runners-up to Hyundai in the manufacturers' standings.

In September, Toyota Gazoo Racing completed the purchase of the team and operational assets from Tommi Mäkinen Racing. Mäkinen himself stepped down from the team principal role and became a motorsports advisor to the Toyota Motor Corporation.[28]

2021

[edit]

Ogier, Rovanperä and Evans were retained for the 2021 season. Development driver Takamoto Katsuta also completed his first full season with the team, notching his first WRC podium with 2nd place in Safari Rally Kenya. Former driver Jari-Matti Latvala assumed the role of team principal following Mäkinen's departure.

Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia won their 8th respective drivers' and co-drivers' world titles following victory at the season-ending Rally Monza. The pair subsequently retired from full-time rallying, having deferred their decision to do so after the truncated 2020 season. With 9 victories from 12 events, Toyota Gazoo Racing also took home the manufacturers' title, completing their first championship double since their return to the sport.

The facility in Estonia closed at the end of the 2021 season, with team operations being run from one base in Jyväskylä, Finland.[29]

2022

[edit]
Toyota GR Yaris in 2022

Newtechnical regulations were introduced for the 2022 season, mandating the use of a hybrid system and a move to a tubular spaceframe chassis. TheToyota GR Yaris Rally1 Hybrid therefore succeeded the Toyota Yaris WRC.

Esapekka Lappi made a return to Toyota full-time, following a one-off appearance at Rally Finland the previous year. Kalle Rovanperä, Elfyn Evans and Takamoto Katsuta all remained with the team; Katsuta, however, was registered for manufacturer points under the Toyota Gazoo Racing World Rally Team Next Generation entry, rather than the main team.[30] Following his retirement from full-time rallying, reigning world champion Sébastien Ogier continued to make appearances for Toyota on a part-time basis, this time withBenjamin Veillas in the co-drivers' seat.

Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen would go on to record six wins in 2022, culminating in their first World Drivers' and Co-Drivers' Championships. Having become the youngest winner of a WRC round in 2021, Rovanperä also became the youngest world champion to date, doing so a day after his 22nd birthday and eclipsing Colin McRae's previous record by almost five years.[31]

Strong results elsewhere enabled Toyota Gazoo Racing to successfully defend their Manufacturers' title. They recorded a 1-2-3-4 finish at Safari Rally Kenya, becoming the first team to do so on a WRC round sinceCitroen Total WRT achieved the same result at2010 Rally Bulgaria.

2023

[edit]

Ogier continued racing for the team part-time in 2023, albeit alongsideVincent Landais instead of Benjamin Veillas. Following Esapekka Lappi's switch to Hyundai,[32] Takamoto Katsuta was promoted to score manufacturer's points on rounds where Ogier did not compete. Team principal Jari-Matti Latvala also made a one-off return to the WRC during Rally Finland, recording a fifth-place finish.

At the season-opening Rallye Monte Carlo, Ogier took the outright record for wins on the event from Sebastien Loeb. It also marked the first WRC victory for co-driver Landais.[33] By the end of the season, Toyota had secured their third consecutive Manufacturers' World Championship, scoring podiums on all but one of the season's 13 rallies.[34] Kalle Rovanperä and Jonne Halttunen also successfully defended their World Drivers' Champion titles.

After the season's conclusion, Rovanperä announced his intention to compete part-time in 2024, with a return to Toyota's team full-time planned for 2025.[35]

2024

[edit]
Sami Pajari and Enni Mälkonen driving their GR Yaris Rally2 during2024 Rally Japan
Toyota GR Yarishybrid in 2024

Toyota's driver line-up remained familiar throughout 2024. Elfyn Evans and Takamoto Katsuta contested a full season, with Rovanperä and Ogier on part-time programmes, although the latter would eventually compete in all but three of the season's rallies. WRC2 crewSami Pajari andEnni Mälkonen also drove the top-line cars on three events; at their home event in Finland, they recorded their first WRC stage win and a career-best 4th place overall finish.[36]

Although Toyota ceded the driver's title to Hyundai's Thierry Neuville, the Japanese marque eventually secured the Manfuacturers' Championship by just three points at the season-ending Rally Japan.[37]2024 also marked the debut of the Toyota GR Yaris Rally2, a car developed toRally2 regulations at the team's headquarters in Finland.Jan Solans secured its (and his) maiden WRC2 victory in Portugal,[38] while Pajari and Mälkonen drove the car on the way to the WRC2 Drivers' Championship title.

2025

[edit]
Kalle Rovanperä andJonne Halttunen won2025 Rally Finland for the first time in their careers.

Rovanperä returned to full-time competition in 2025, taking his place alongside full-time competitors Elfyn Evans and Takamoto Katsuta, and part-timer Sébastien Ogier. WRC2 champion Sami Pajari was promoted to a full season in a Rally1 car, electing to partner withMarko Salminen.[39] As with Katsuta in 2022, the pair are scoring points for a separate entity in the Manufacturers' Championship, this time titled Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT2.

With Jari-Matti Latvala competing in theEuropean Historic Rally Championship,Juha Kankkunen was appointed Deputy Team Principal as cover for his countryman when required.[40]

Driver development program

[edit]

The TGR WRC Challenge Program (TGR-DC) was first established in 2015 to identify and nurture talented young Japanese drivers with the potential to rise up to the WRC.[41][42] The first two to join the program were driversHiroki Arai andTakamoto Katsuta. Co-driverSayaka Adachi was added to the program in 2017.[43]

The WRC Challenge Program was renewed in 2022, when three drivers –Hikaru Kogure,Nao Otake andYuki Yamamoto – joined the program.[44] The third generation was started in 2024, withShotaro Goto andTakumi Matsushita being added to the roster. Kogure and Yamamoto currently compete withToyota GR Yaris Rally2s, while Goto and Matsushita driveRenault Clio Rally4s in Finnish and European events. The program is run from the team's headquarters inJyväskylä. Trainers for the program include Finnish former rally driversJouni Ampuja,Mikko Hirvonen, andJuho Hänninen.[45]

The WRC Challenge Program's first and only graduate is Takamoto Katsuta, who currently competes for Toyota's manufacturer team in theWorld Rally Championship.

Members

[edit]
Current TGR-DC members
DriverYears
JapanYuki Yamamoto2022–
JapanShotaro Goto2024–
JapanTakumi Matsushita2024–
EstoniaJaspar Vaher2025–
Former TGR-DC members
MemberYears
JapanHiroki Arai2015–2018
JapanTakamoto Katsuta2015–2023
JapanSayaka Adachi2017–2018
JapanNao Otake2022–2023
JapanHikaru Kogure2022–2025

WRC results

[edit]
Main article:Toyota World Rally Championship results

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Team base
  2. ^Car homologations throughJapan Automobile Federation

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Toyota: Está de regresso um 'gigante' da história do WRC". 14 January 2017.
  2. ^ab"Toyota GAZOO Racing Outlines 2016 Motorsports Activities".Toyota. 4 February 2015. Retrieved17 April 2016.
  3. ^abc"Toyota confirms all Finnish WRC line-up".speedcafe.com. 13 December 2016. Retrieved13 December 2016.
  4. ^"Toyota: Latvala named team principal at Toyota". www.wrc.com. 18 December 2020.
  5. ^"Toyota Gazoo Racing reveal 2023 line-up".WRC - World Rally Championship. Retrieved2023-01-12.
  6. ^ab"Toyota announces WRC return in 2017".Toyota GB Blog. Toyota GB. 30 January 2015. Retrieved7 March 2016.
  7. ^"TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Outlines 2017 Motorsports Activities | PRESS RELEASE | 2017 | OTHER MOTORSPORTS | TOYOTA GAZOO Racing".TOYOTA GAZOO Racing. Retrieved2 August 2017.
  8. ^"TGR WRT".Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT. Retrieved2023-01-12.
  9. ^Van Leeuwen, Andrew (18 November 2018)."Rally Australia: Latvala wins as Ogier, Toyota claim WRC titles".autosport.com.Motorsport Network. Retrieved8 December 2018.
  10. ^"juwra.com | Drivers championship".juwra.com. Retrieved2023-03-05.
  11. ^Blog, Toyota (2015-01-30)."Toyota announces WRC return in 2017".Toyota UK Magazine. Retrieved2023-03-05.
  12. ^"Q&A: Tommi Makinen".
  13. ^"Tommi Makinen to lead Toyota Yaris WRC team in 2017 - Drive".
  14. ^"WRC: Toyota Yaris WRC prototype caught testing in Spain". 25 October 2016.
  15. ^Blog, Toyota (2015-07-07)."Tommi Mäkinen leads Toyota GAZOO Racing's WRC return in 2017".Toyota UK Magazine. Retrieved2023-03-05.
  16. ^Blog, Toyota (2015-04-09)."Toyota consolidates all of its motorsport activities under GAZOO Racing".Toyota UK Magazine. Retrieved2023-03-05.
  17. ^Evans, David (18 October 2016)."WRC 2017: Juho Hanninen gets first seat in Toyota's new Yaris".autosport.com.Haymarket Publications. Retrieved18 October 2016.
  18. ^Beer, Matt; Evans, David (18 April 2017)."Toyota to add third Yaris WRC for Lappi from Rally Portugal".autosport.com.Motorsport Network. Retrieved19 April 2017.
  19. ^Evans, David (18 October 2017)."Toyota signs Ott Tanak from M-Sport for 2018 WRC season".autosport.com.Motorsport Network. Retrieved18 October 2017.
  20. ^"Tänak joins Toyota".www.wrc.com. 2017-10-18. Retrieved2018-08-23.
  21. ^"Toyota completes Estonia switch - wrc.com".www.wrc.com. Retrieved28 August 2018.
  22. ^"Tommi Mäkinen on rallin Midas – näin Puuppolan päälliköstä tuli historiallinen maailmanmestari Toyotan tallipäällikkönä".Aamulehti (in Finnish). 18 November 2018. Retrieved8 December 2018.
  23. ^Season 2018 ewrc-results.com
  24. ^"Esapekka Lappi Joins Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT".media.citroenracing.com.Citroën Total Abu Dhabi WRT. 17 October 2018. Retrieved17 October 2018.
  25. ^"TOYOTA GAZOO Racing confirms WRC driver line-up for 2019".toyotagazooracing.com. Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT. 17 October 2018. Retrieved17 October 2018.
  26. ^Shacki."Season 2020 rally - eWRC-results".eWRC-results.com. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  27. ^"Ogier delays his WRC retirement plans and will stay at Toyota for 2021". Archived fromthe original on 2023-04-05. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  28. ^"Toyota takes charge of WRC programme from 2021".WRC - World Rally Championship. Retrieved2023-02-09.
  29. ^"Toyota Gazoo Racing to move operation to one base".Motorsport Week. 2021-06-18. Retrieved2023-02-09.
  30. ^CORPORATION, TOYOTA MOTOR."TOYOTA GAZOO Racing announced its 2022 motorsport team setups | 2021 | PRESS RELEASE".TOYOTA GAZOO Racing. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  31. ^Barry, Luke (2022-10-02)."Rovanperä becomes youngest ever WRC champion".DirtFish. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  32. ^"Lappi, Breen complete Hyundai 2023 WRC switch". Archived fromthe original on 2023-03-13. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  33. ^Barry, Luke (2023-01-22)."Ogier breaks Monte Carlo Rally win record".DirtFish. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  34. ^"juwra.com | Toyota - Season 2023".www.juwra.com. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  35. ^Evans, David (2023-11-20)."Rovanperä steps down to part-time WRC program in 2024".DirtFish. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  36. ^Shacki."Stage results Secto Rally Finland 2024".eWRC-results.com. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  37. ^CORPORATION, TOYOTA MOTOR."WRC 2024 Rd.13 Day 4 | 2024 | PRESS RELEASE | WRC".TOYOTA GAZOO Racing. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  38. ^www.acp.pt."Ogier seals sixth Portugal win; Solans takes WRC2".www.rallydeportugal.pt (in Portuguese). Retrieved2025-03-27.
  39. ^Evans, David (2024-11-25)."Toyota signs Pajari for fourth full-time 2025 seat".DirtFish. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  40. ^Evans, David (2024-11-25)."Toyota appoints Kankkunen as deputy team principal".DirtFish. Retrieved2025-03-27.
  41. ^"ABOUT WRC Challenge Program". Retrieved12 October 2024.
  42. ^"WRC Challenge Program - Toyta GAZOO Racing". Retrieved12 October 2024.
  43. ^"Sayaka Adachi to co-drive Jarkko Nikara in Finnish Rally Championship". 12 January 2017. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  44. ^Wood, Ida (7 February 2022)."Toyota inducts three new drivers to its WRC Challenge Program".Dirtfish. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  45. ^Evans, David (4 January 2022)."How Toyota selected its latest stars".Dirtfish. Retrieved12 October 2024.

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