The 2009 FIA Formula Two Championship season was the first year of the relaunched FIA Formula Two Championship. The championship began on 30 May at the Circuit de Valencia and finished on 1 November at the Circuit de Catalunya, after eight double-header rounds. Andy Soucek was a dominant champion, finishing over 50 points clear of runner-up Robert Wickens.
The season was overshadowed by the death of Henry Surtees during the second race at Brands Hatch.
The series saw the drivers using a chassis that was built at the WilliamsF1 team's headquarters at Grove in Oxfordshire. It was named as the JPH1, incorporating the initials of series boss Jonathan Palmer and Patrick Head, engineering director for Williams. [1] The car was given two shakedown tests at Palmer's Bedford Autodrome by Steven Kane, [2] before the car was officially launched on 2 March at Brands Hatch – the headquarters of MotorSport Vision, who run all the cars in the series. [3]
At each event there were two 30-minute practice sessions, two 30-minute qualifying sessions and two races of varying length; the distances for each announced prior to each race weekend. Points were awarded to the top eight drivers in the race, and were awarded in the same system as Formula One: 10-8-6-5-4-3-2-1, and only a driver's best fourteen scores counted towards the championship. [4] That said, no driver had to drop scores in the championship due to all of them having two or more non-points-scoring races.
The winner of the FIA Formula Two Championship received a full test with the AT&T Williams F1 team, which was run in such a way as to seriously evaluate the driver with regard to their potential as a Formula One driver. Drivers finishing in the first three places in the final classification of the Formula Two Championship qualified for an FIA Super Licence.
No. | Driver [8] | Rounds |
---|---|---|
2 | Sebastian Hohenthal [9] | All |
3 | Jolyon Palmer [10] | All |
4 | Julien Jousse [11] | All |
5 | Alex Brundle [12] | All |
6 | Armaan Ebrahim [13] | All |
7 | Henry Surtees [14] † | 1–4 |
8 | Tobias Hegewald [15] | All |
9 | Pietro Gandolfi [16] | All |
10 | Nicola de Marco [17] | All |
11 | Jack Clarke [18] | All |
12 | Robert Wickens [11] | All |
14 | Mirko Bortolotti [19] | All |
15 | Mikhail Aleshin [20] | All |
16 | Edoardo Piscopo [21] | 1–7 |
17 | Carlos Iaconelli [22] | 1–7 |
18 | Natacha Gachnang [23] | All |
20 | Jens Höing [24] | All |
21 | Kazim Vasiliauskas [25] | All |
22 | Andy Soucek [26] | All |
23 | Henri Karjalainen [27] | All |
24 | Tom Gladdis [28] | All |
25 | Miloš Pavlović [29] | All |
27 | Germán Sánchez [30] | All |
31 | Jason Moore [31] | All |
33 | Philipp Eng [32] | All |
38 | Tristan Vautier [33] | 8 |
44 | Ollie Hancock [34] | 5–8 |
† – Surtees was fatally injured after an accident, during the second race at the fourth round at Brands Hatch. [35] [36] Surtees' slot was filled by Ollie Hancock after round five. [34]
The first group test was held on 6 May, at Snetterton in Norfolk. In the morning, 21 of the series' 24 drivers were within a second of each other. Two sessions were held, one in the morning and one in the afternoon. There was another group test at Silverstone on 18 May, with two dry sessions and one wet session. Two other test days were held during the session, one at Donington Park, and one at Circuit de Catalunya.
The Formula Two calendar consists of eight rounds with two races at each event. [38]
Round | Circuit/Location | Country | Date | Supporting | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | R1 | Circuit Ricardo Tormo, Valencia | Spain | 30 May | WTCC Race of Spain |
R2 | 31 May | ||||
2 | R1 | Masaryk Circuit, Brno | Czech Republic | 20 June | WTCC Race of the Czech Republic |
R2 | 21 June | ||||
3 | R1 | Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps | Belgium | 27 June | International GT Open |
R2 | 28 June | ||||
4 | R1 | Brands Hatch, Kent | United Kingdom | 18 July | WTCC Race of UK |
R2 | 19 July | ||||
5 | R1 | Donington Park | United Kingdom | 16 August | Stand-alone event |
R2 | |||||
6 | R1 | Motorsport Arena Oschersleben | Germany | 5 September | WTCC Race of Germany |
R2 | 6 September | ||||
7 | R1 | Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, Imola | Italy | 19 September | WTCC Race of Italy |
R2 | 20 September | ||||
8 | R1 | Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona | Spain | 31 October | International GT Open |
R2 | 1 November | ||||
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Formula Two is a type of open-wheel formula racing category first codified in 1948. It was replaced in 1985 by Formula 3000, but revived by the FIA from 2009–2012 in the form of the FIA Formula Two Championship. The name returned again in 2017 when the former GP2 Series became known as the FIA Formula 2 Championship.
Henry John Surtees was a British racing driver and the son of John Surtees. He died during a Formula Two race at Brands Hatch when he was struck by a wheel which came off another car which had spun into a wall.
Edoardo Piscopo is an Italian racing driver.
Ollie Hancock is a British racing driver. Hancock is the son of historic racing driver Anthony Hancock, and the younger brother of sportscar racer Sam Hancock.
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