Guia_Race

Macau Guia Race

The Macau Guia Race - Kumho TCR World Tour Event of Macau, previously Guia Race of Macau, WTCC Guia Race of Macau , WTCR Macau Guia Race and Macau Guia Race - TCR Asia Challenge, is an international touring car race, and currently a round of the TCR World Tour. It is held on the temporary 6.2 km Guia Circuit on the streets of Macau, the Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China as part of the Macau Grand Prix weekend. Before 2005 when the World Touring Car Championship began, the Guia race had been run annually as a one-off international touring car race.

Quick Facts Race information, Most wins (drivers) ...

History

Since its first running in 1972, the race has been won by international touring car greats such as Tom Walkinshaw, Johnny Cecotto, Roberto Ravaglia, Emanuele Pirro, Joachim Winkelhock and Andy Priaulx.

Historically it is also one of the most popular races of the weekend as it featured cars that are commonly seen on the Hong Kong and Macau roads.

TCR

Since 2018, it has been run under the TCR championship banner, first as World Touring Car, then China Touring Car from 2020 to 2022.

In 2023, it was part of the TCR World Tour, as the final round, with the top 8 TCR Asia Challenge drivers calculated by points be part of the race.[1] [2]

Previous championship status

Prior to being a World Touring Car Championship round, the Guia Race had previously been an FIA Championship round. In 1994, it was a round of the Asia-Pacific Touring Car Championship. The race also acted as a point scoring round for the Asian Touring Car Championship from 2000 to 2003. From 2005 to 2019, it was the final round of the World Touring Car Championship. It often attracts local drivers competing alongside the series regulars, such as André Couto and Ao Chi Hong.

Technical regulation changes

The race has run to different touring car rules as European touring car championships went through their own changes. The race was run to European Group 5 regulations in the early eighties, then adopted FIA Group A rules between 1983 and 1990. It then ran to DTM rules from 1991 to 1993 before changing to Super Touring rules in 1994. From 2000, it started using Super Production regulations until 2004, when it sampled Super 2000 machinery before being upgraded to a round of the FIA WTCC.

Since 2018, it has been run to TCR regulations.

Sporting regulation changes

The race has changed in format over the years, from the 30 lapper back in the Group A era to the current, double race format with each race lasting 9 laps. Prior to becoming a round of the WTCC in 2005, the race was staged over two legs, with the winner being declared as the driver with the best time aggregated from both legs.

Sponsors

The race has been sponsored by the Sociedade de Turismo e Diversões de Macau (STDM) since 2004. STDM boss Stanley Ho has presented the trophies to the race winners on the podium since the sponsorship began.

Results

More information Year, Winner ...
^A The car was in fact, a Porsche 911 Carrera RSR 3.0 with 935 bodykit.[7][8]
Notes
  1. The first race counted as Race 1 for the TCR China Touring Car Championship, but as the Qualification Race for the Macau Guia Race.
  2. The second race counted as Race 2 for the TCR China Touring Car Championship, but as the Main Race for the Macau Guia Race.
  3. The 2022 TCR Asia Challenge is the Guia Race of 2022.

Most wins

After the "official" inaugural race in 1972

By driver

More information Wins, Driver ...

By nationality of drivers

More information Win(s), Nation ...

By manufacturer

More information Win(s), Manufacturer ...

See also


References

  1. "Latest Activity | Macau Grand Prix".
  2. "Macau 2022 results". macau.grandprix. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  3. "Filipe de Souza is the first Macau driver to win the Guia Race". plataformamedia. 2022-11-21. Retrieved 2023-11-14.
  4. "Third Audi victory at anniversary in Macau Guia Race". audi mediacenter. 2022-11-21. Retrieved 2023-11-14.

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