Hong Kong Touring Car Championship

The Hong Kong Touring Car Championship (Chinese: 香港房車錦標賽) was established by the Hong Kong Automobile Association in 2002. Currently, all the races are held at the Zhuhai International Circuit in Guangdong province, China , at the Guangdong International Circuit in the same province or during the Macau Grand Prix near Hong Kong .

Contents

The Championships

The Super Production Class and N2000 Class Championships each consists of 8 races at Zhuhai. For the Super Production Class, each race is 12 laps of 4.3 mi (7 km) while N2000 races are 10 laps only.

Points are awarded to the top 8 finishers in Super Production Class: 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1.

Points are awarded to the top 15 finishers in N2000 Class: 40-35-32-30-28-26-25-24-23-22-21-20-19-18-17

Macau Grand Prix Qualification

2006

Provisionally, top 10 drivers in the Super Production Class qualify for the Macau Cup Race.

N2000 drivers will be invited to take part in the Tourism Cup Race, exact number of invitations are not yet clear.

1600cc cars are no longer eligible.

2005

In 2005, the championship was run for 1600cc cars, N2000 cars and Super Production cars. 1600cc drivers must use N2000 cars when they race in the Tourism Cup in Macau after they qualify. Super Production class drivers would enter the Macau Cup Race instead of the Guia Race.

2002

The championship was separated into two classes: 1600cc Group A and Super Production. Both would qualify drivers for the Macau Grand Prix event, 1600cc drivers would be allowed entry into the Macau Cup while Super Production drivers would enter the Guia Race.

Super Production Class Champions

The first ever championship for Super Production cars was won by Henry Lee Junior in a Ford Focus, sponsored by Valvoline and run by GR Asia.

Paul Poon became the second champion when he won in a China Dragon Racing run Honda Civic EP3 in 2003. The car was bought by Paul from Mardi Gras Motorsport in the United Kingdom.

Kenneth Look has won the championship for 3 years consecutively, in 2004, 2005 and 2006.

N2000 Class

2004 Controversy

Championship leader Paul Poon was hit by Kenneth Look's teammate, Ronny Shum, in the fifth race of the 2004 championship and retired from the race, allowing Kenneth Look to win. The HKAA's failure to penalize Ronny Shum resulted in China Dragon Racing pulling out of the next race en masse after the warm-up lap. Kenneth Look subsequently won the 2004 title without much real opposition.

In November, the HKAA demanded an apology from China Dragon Racing for bringing the sport into disrepute before allowing them to enter the Guia Race in Macau.

Super Production Class Champions

N2000 Class Champions

References

External links