2023 Indian Racing League

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The 2023 Indian Racing League was a single seater motor racing championship held across India.[1] The season was heavily disrupted by Cyclone Michaung making landfall at the Indian east coast.

After three of the planned four rounds were held, the season was concluded early, with the No. 24 Goa Aces car piloted by Raoul Hyman and Sohil Shah winning the Entrant Championship and the Bangalore Speedsters victorious in the Teams' Championship

Teams and drivers[edit]

All drivers competed with single-seater Wolf GB08 Thunder cars, fitted with a 215 bhp (160 kW) Aprilia engine.[2]

Team No. Driver Rounds
Hyderabad Blackbirds 1 India Akhil Rabindra[3] All
Portugal Álvaro Parente[4] 1
Switzerland Neel Jani[5] 2–3
9 Spain Laura Camps Torras[6] All
India Anindith Reddy[7] All
Godspeed Kochi 2 India Nikhil Bohra[8] All
Malaysia Alister Yoong[9] All
5 India Ruhaan Alva[10] All
Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend[11] All
Chennai Turbo Riders 6 Canada Nicole Havrda[12] 1–2
India Mohamed Ryan[13] All
33 United Kingdom Jon Lancaster[14] All
India Sai Sanjay[15] All
Goa Aces 7 Czech Republic Gabriela Jílková[16] All
India Amir Sayed[17] All
24 South Africa Raoul Hyman[18] All
India Sohil Shah[19] All
Bangalore Speedsters 16 India Ashwin Datta[20] All
United Kingdom Oliver Webb[21] All
70 India Kyle Kumaran[22] All
United Kingdom Sarah Moore[23] All
Speed Demons Delhi 18 Malaysia Mitchell Gilbert[24] All
India Sandeep Kumar[25] All
22 India Akash Gowda[26] All
United Kingdom Chloe Chong[27] 2–3

Team changes[edit]

Chennai Turbo Riders were initially confirmed to be re-named "Chennai Supersonics", but the "Turbo Riders" moniker was later reinstated.[28]

Driver changes[edit]

Oliver Webb was the only returning driver at Bangalore Speedsters. Bianca Bustamante, Rishon Rajeev, Anshul Gandhi and Webb's substitute driver Yash Aradhya all left the team. The team signed W Series driver Sarah Moore and MRF F2000 drivers Kyle Kumaran and Ashwin Datta to replace them.

Chennai Turbo Riders replaced their Indian drivers. Parth Ghorpade, Vishnu Prasad and his injury substitute Sandeep Kumar were replaced by 2022–23 MRF F2000 champion and runner-up Sai Sanjay and Mohamed Ryan. Kumar moved to Speed Demons Delhi as a last-minute replacement for Shahan Ali Mohsin, who moved to the F4 Indian Championship, whilst F1 Academy driver Chloe Chong replaced Célia Martin as original signing Belén García did not compete.[29]

Raoul Hyman rejoined Goa Aces after having to sit out the second half of the 2022 season to conduct Super Formula testing. This saw his replacement, Kevin Mirocha, leave the series.

British GT driver Jordan Albert, who was entered for reigning Teams' Champion Godspeed Kochi for the cancelled opening round of the 2022 season, did not return to the series.

Hyderabad Blackbirds announced GT driver Álvaro Parente for the first half of the season, replacing Thomas Canning. Neel Jani is expected to return to the team in the second half having contested most of the 2022 season. Lola Lovinfosse was originally confirmed to be competing for the team, but was replaced with Laura Camps Torras the day before the season started.

Calendar[edit]

All events were held in India and were run in tandem with the F4 Indian Championship.

No. Circuit Date Map of circuit locations
1 R1 Madras International Circuit, Irungattukottai
(Full layout)
4 November
R2 5 November
2 R1 1 December
R2 2 December
3 R1 Madras International Circuit, Irungattukottai
(Short layout)
9 December
R2 10 December

Calendar changes[edit]

Duplicate rounds in Hyderabad and Irungattukottai were initially dropped in favour of new races at the Buddh International Circuit and a new street circuit around Island Grounds in Chennai.[30][31] An updated calendar was released later on that dropped the planned round at Buddh International Circuit in favor of a second round at Irungattukottai.[32] In the week leading up to the opening round, the first round was announced to also be moved to Irungattukottai because of the code of conduct surrounding elections in Telangana.[33] Because of concerns regarding the arrival of Cyclone Michaung in the area, the penultimate round at Irungattukottai was postponed on short notice, with two more races to be added over the weekend at Chennai to compensate for it.[34] This event did not come about, also because of the cyclone, with all races instead held at Madras.[35] After six of the planned eight races were held over three wekeends at Madras, the season was concluded early.[36]

Format changes[edit]

Unlike the previous season, two qualifying sessions and two races were held per event – with the "feature race" including driver swaps discontinued. Two drivers were entered in each car, with each driver contesting one of the two event days – consisting of one 20-minute practice session, one 10-minute qualifying session and a 25-minute + 1 lap race per day.[37]

Season summary[edit]

The 2023 season began as the 2022 season left off – under a cloud of mismanagement, as the first round had to be relocated from the Hyderabad Street Circuit to the Madras International Circuit less than a week before the start of the season due to the knock-on effects of the 2023 Telangana Legislative Assembly election. The first race of the season was postponed by a day due to torrential rain, with Kochi's Ruhaan Alva claiming a lights-to-flag victory as Hyderabad's reigning champion Akhil Rabindra crashed with Alva's teammate Alister Yoong on the opening lap. Bangalore's Sarah Moore became the series' first female race winner in the wet second race, following both Goa's pole-sitter Sohil Shah and Kochi's Nikhil Bohra spinning out of the lead early in the race before Bohra punted Goa's Gabriela Jílková out of the race lead on the final lap.[38][39]

The second round was heavily disrupted by bad weather - originally, the weekend was supposed to be a double round with four races, but after multiple delays, only two races were held. Goa's Raoul Hyman dominated the first day, claiming pole position by over 1.3 seconds and leading the first race from start to finish. Bangalore's Oliver Webb was his closest opposition, but did not attack him. Hyderabad's Akhil Rabindra came third. Bohra took pole position for the second race, where the start was aborted when Bangalore's Ashwin Datta stalled. Bohra pulled away at the restart, with only Chennai's Jon Lancaster managing to stay close to him, but the Brit was unable to get into the lead. Rabindra completed the podium, while Moore in fourth was able to consolidate a three-point championship lead over Lancaster and Sai Sanjay.[40]

As Cyclone Michaung then hit India, the third round was relocated from Chennai to Madras. Shah earned pole position for the first race, defended his lead at the start and led until he made a mistake and ran off track. This promoted Bohra into the lead and he did not look back from then on, taking the win. Hyderabad's Anindith Reddy came second, while Lancaster had a brilliant race, starting last and finishing on the podium after overtaking Jílková at the final corner. Webb took pole position for the second race, but Hyman took the lead through the first corner. He held on all throughout the race to win, thereby allowing him and Shah to take the championship lead. Webb had to be content with second, while Hyderabad's Neel Jani came third. As the final two planned races of the season were cancelled, Hyman and Shah took the championship title.[41][42]

While the season started with little information given by official sources regarding topics like the sporting format, coverage improved throughout the season. The heavy, short-term disruptions posed by the landfall of Cyclone Michaung were handled and communicated well. Still, the reduction from a planned eight-race schedule across three locations down to six races at a single venue hurt the championship, and a champion confirmed away from the track through cancellation of the rest of the rounds is never a good look.

Results and standings[edit]

Results summary[edit]

Round Circuit Pole position Fastest lap Winning driver Winning team
1 R1 Madras International Circuit India Ruhaan Alva South Africa Raoul Hyman India Ruhaan Alva Godspeed Kochi
R2 India Sohil Shah India Nikhil Bohra United Kingdom Sarah Moore Bangalore Speedsters
2 R1 South Africa Raoul Hyman South Africa Raoul Hyman South Africa Raoul Hyman Goa Aces
R2 India Nikhil Bohra United Kingdom Jon Lancaster India Nikhil Bohra Godspeed Kochi
3 R1 India Sohil Shah India Sohil Shah India Nikhil Bohra Godspeed Kochi
R2 United Kingdom Oliver Webb South Africa Raoul Hyman South Africa Raoul Hyman Goa Aces

Championship standings[edit]

Scoring system[edit]

Points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers as follows:

Race Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th  Pole FL
Points 25 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1 1 1

Drivers sharing a car add the points they get in their respective races to a shared total.

Entrant championship[edit]

Pos Entrant Drivers MIC1 MIC2 MIC3 Pts
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
1 No. 24 Goa Aces South Africa Raoul Hyman 2 1 1 87
India Sohil Shah Ret 6 8
2 No. 33 Chennai Turbo Riders United Kingdom Jon Lancaster 3 2 3 83
India Sai Sanjay 3 5 6
3 No. 2 Godspeed Kochi India Nikhil Bohra 4 1 1 79
Malaysia Alister Yoong Ret 8 4
4 No. 70 Bangalore Speedsters India Kyle Kumaran 5 3 5 78
United Kingdom Sarah Moore 1 4 7
5 No. 16 Bangalore Speedsters India Ashwin Datta 6 DNS 10 58
United Kingdom Oliver Webb 4 2 2
6 No. 1 Hyderabad Blackbirds India Akhil Rabindra Ret Ret 3 5 56
Portugal Álvaro Parente WD1
Switzerland Neel Jani 4 3
7 No. 7 Goa Aces Czech Republic Gabriela Jílková 7 6 4 42
India Amir Sayed 7 8 7
8 No. 9 Hyderabad Blackbirds Spain Laura Camps Torras 5 Ret 9 38
India Anindith Reddy 6 Ret 2
9 No. 5 Godspeed Kochi India Ruhaan Alva 1 9 Ret 28
Liechtenstein Fabienne Wohlwend Ret Ret Ret
10 No. 18 Speed Demons Delhi Malaysia Mitchell Gilbert Ret 5 Ret 28
India Sandeep Kumar 8 7 6
11 No. 22 Speed Demons Delhi India Akash Gowda Ret 2 7 Ret 25
United Kingdom Chloe Chong Ret 10
12 No. 6 Chennai Turbo Riders Canada Nicole Havrda Ret 10 7
India Mohamed Ryan Ret Ret 9 8
Pos Entrant Drivers R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 Pts
MIC1 MIC2 MIC3
  • ^1 – Parente qualified and Rabindra raced.

Teams' championship[edit]

Pos Driver MIC1 MIC2 MIC3 Pts
R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2
1 Bangalore Speedsters 4 1 2 5 7 2 136
5 6 3 DNS 10 5
2 Goa Aces 2 7 1 6 4 1 129
7 Ret 6 8 8 7
3 Godspeed Kochi 1 4 8 1 1 4 107
Ret Ret Ret 9 Ret Ret
4 Chennai Turbo Riders 3 3 5 2 3 6 90
Ret Ret Ret 10 9 8
5 Hyderabad Blackbirds 6 5 4 4 2 3 89
Ret Ret Ret Ret 5 9
6 Speed Demons Delhi 8 2 7 3 6 10 58
Ret Ret Ret 7 Ret Ret
Pos Driver R1 R2 R1 R2 R1 R2 Pts
IRU1 IRU2 MIC3
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole

Italics – Fastest Lap

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Indian Racing League". RPPL Motorsports. Retrieved 12 October 2023.
  2. ^ Bhadra, Akaash. "Formula Regional Indian and Formula 4 are the first FIA-sanctioned championships in India to qualify for Formula 1 super license points". Evo India. Retrieved 19 August 2021.
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  8. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 11 October 2023.
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  18. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 12 October 2023.
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  20. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 13 October 2023.
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  22. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 13 October 2023.
  23. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 13 October 2023.
  24. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 17 October 2023.
  25. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 30 October 2023.
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  27. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 17 October 2023.
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  29. ^ "📢 DRIVER ANNOUNCEMENT". Indian Racing League on Instagram. 27 October 2023.
  30. ^ "New Chennai street circuit to host F4 India night race". Autocar India. 17 August 2023.
  31. ^ "FMSCI: 2023 Provisional Calendar of Events" (PDF).
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  33. ^ "Indian Racing League on X: "Press release"". X. 31 October 2023. Retrieved 31 October 2023.
  34. ^ "Indian Racing League on Instagram: "Event Update"". Instagram. 3 December 2023. Retrieved 3 December 2023.
  35. ^ Wood, Ida (6 December 2023). "Indian F4 round three cancelled, round four relocated due to wet weather". Formula Scout. Retrieved 6 December 2023.
  36. ^ "Indian Racing League Official on X: "🚨Announcement🚨 Round 3 of the Indian Racing League will conclude the championship for 2023."". X. 12 December 2023. Retrieved 12 December 2023.
  37. ^ "Indian Racing Festival 2023 - Hyderabad". insider.in. Retrieved 28 October 2023.
  38. ^ "Election issue leads to Indian F4 relocating this week's inaugural round". Formula Scout. 31 October 2023.
  39. ^ "Sarah Moore shines in Indian Racing League". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  40. ^ RACERS (2 December 2023). "Sarah Moore claims another top-5 in Indian Racing League". Racers. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  41. ^ RACERS (9 December 2023). "IRL: Gabriela Jílková close to a podium finish in Round 3 race 1". Racers. Retrieved 8 January 2024.
  42. ^ RACERS (10 December 2023). "Laura Camps secures another top-10, Chloe Chong gets first point in IRL". Racers. Retrieved 8 January 2024.

External links[edit]