2015 FIA GT World Cup

Last updated

Race details
Guia Circuit en.svg
Date22 November 2015
Official name62nd Suncity Group Macau Grand Prix
Location Guia Circuit, Macau
CourseTemporary street circuit
6.120 km (3.803 mi)
DistanceQualifying Race
12 laps, 61.200 km (38.028 mi)
Main Race
14 laps, 85.684 km (53.242 mi)
Qualifying Race [1]
Pole [2]
Driver Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Craft-Bamboo Racing
Time2:18.032
Fastest Lap
Driver Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Craft-Bamboo Racing
Time2:18.930 (on lap 10)
Podium
First Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Mercedes AMG Driving Academy
Second Flag of Italy.svg Edoardo Mortara Audi Sport Team Phoenix
Third Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Craft-Bamboo Racing
Main Race [3]
Pole
Driver Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Mercedes AMG Driving Academy
Fastest Lap
Driver Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Craft-Bamboo Racing
Time2:19.736 (on lap 11)
Podium
First Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Mercedes AMG Driving Academy
Second Flag of Germany.svg René Rast Audi Sport Team WRT
Third Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Craft-Bamboo Racing

The 2015 FIA GT World Cup was the race's inaugural edition and the eighth time Grand Touring (GT) sports car machinery participated in Macau's autonomous territory. On November 22, it was staged in the streets of the city as a non-championship race as part of the GT Asia Series in GT3-spec cars. The Automobile General Association Macau-China appointed the Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to assist in establishing a grid. The race itself consisted of two races: a 12-lap qualification race that determined the starting grid for the 14-lap main race.

Contents

Mercedes AMG Driving Academy driver Maro Engel won the main race from pole position after winning the Qualification Race the previous day after on-track victor Edoardo Mortara was penalised ten seconds for brake testing him. Mortara accelerated faster than Engel during the rolling start, but he quickly lost the lead to the former. Engel then dominated the rest of the race, which was stopped two laps early due to a multi-car accident behind the safety car, and the result was recalculated two laps back. René Rast finished second in his Audi R8 LMS, while Stefan Mücke completed the podium in his Craft-Bamboo Racing entered Aston Martin Vantage V12.

Entry list and rules

To enter the FIA GT World Cup in Macau, drivers had to compete in a Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA)-regulated championship based on GT3 regulations. [4] On 11 September 2015, Audi, Aston Martin, Mercedes-Benz, McLaren and Porsche were announced as the five manufacturers accepted to enter the event that was open to any car model meeting GT3 rules. [5] Manufacturers could enter up to three drivers through privateer teams, [5] and the teams representing manufacturers could field both gold and platinum ranked drivers; [6] bronze and silver-rated entrants were considered on a case-by-case basis by the FIA GT World Cup Committee. [4] On October 7, 2015, the FIA GT World Cup entry list was released. The first list of participants had 22 drivers, including 2014 Macau GT Cup race winner Maro Engel, two-time Macau Grand Prix victor Edoardo Mortara, and 24 Hours of Le Mans co-winner Earl Bamber. [7] René Rast, a World Endurance Championship participant, was called in as a late replacement for Laurens Vanthoor, who withdrew from the race on doctor's orders after injuring his hip at the Misano World Circuit's Blancpain Sprint Series round. [8]

Background

The 2015 FIA GT World Cup was the event's maiden running and the eighth time Grand Touring (GT) cars contested in Macau. It took place on November 22, 2015, at the 6.2 km (3.9 mi) 22-turn Guia Circuit, after three days of practise and qualifying. [9] The motorsport promoter Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) elected not to renew its contract with the FIA two years before the 2015 FIA GT World Cup, and in early 2013, the SRO's founder, Stéphane Ratel, proposed creating a race for the finest teams and drivers. [10] [11] These proposals were dormant for a while until an FIA World Motor Sport Council meeting in Doha saw the idea resurface and eventually confirmed by the sport's governing body on 20 March 2015. [10] It was the first collaboration between Ratel and the FIA since the FIA GT1 World Championship disbanded. [12] The FIA GT World Cup was granted its status after the World Touring Car Championship stopped travelling to Macau, [12] and it replaced the Baku World Challenge which was discontinued that year when Formula One announced it would hold a race in the city from 2016. [13] The Automobile General Association Macao-China, the race's promoter, asked the SRO to assist in forming a grid. [13]

Practice and qualifying

Stefan Mucke (pictured in 2011) took pole position in the closing minutes of qualifying. Stefan Mucke Le Mans drivers parade 2011 crop.jpg
Stefan Mücke (pictured in 2011) took pole position in the closing minutes of qualifying.

There was one 30-minute practice session each on Thursday afternoon and Friday morning before Sunday's race. [14] Renger van der Zande set the quickest lap for the Mercedes AMG Driving Academy SLS GT3 in the first practise session at 2 minutes, 20.796 seconds, two-tenths of a second faster than anybody else. In second place was his brandmate Engel. Mortara finished third in the lone Audi Sport Team Phoenix R8 LMS entry. Darryl O'Young's Aston Martin V12 Vantage finished fourth. Bamber was the fastest Porsche competitor, finishing fifth. Positions six through ten were filled by Stefan Mücke, André Couto, Keita Sawa, Rast, and Richard Lyons. [15] Engel led for the majority of the second practice session until Mücke passed him with a time of 2 minutes, 20.082 seconds, the fastest lap of the weekend at the time. Van Der Zande finished second, 0.021 seconds slower, with Adderly Fong third Engel was fourth, and Bamber fifth, repeating his first practise session performance.  Positions six through ten were filled by O'Young, Mortara, Álvaro Parente, his teammate Kévin Estre, and Rast. [16]

Friday afternoon's half-hour qualifying session determined the starting order for the qualification race through each driver's fastest lap times. [4] [14] Before he hit an inside kerbstone at Mandarin Corner and lost control of his car, which then drifted into a barrier (the first of three stoppages), Engel was the early leader in qualifying. [17] [18] Engel took responsibility for the collision and apologised to his team. [17] Van Der Zande's crash into a wall at Paiol caused qualifying to be turn red-flagged qualifying for the second time to repair the barriers. [18] [19] With less than 12 minutes remaining. Audi devised a strategy to let Mortara to drive in clear air for a pole position effort. But Cuoto experienced oversteer and severely damaged his car in an incident at Mandarin curve, which ricocheted between the barriers. [18] [19] Cuoto's crash, which left him unhurt, led to the session's third and last interruption. With six minutes left in qualifying, Mortara started recording fast sector times to take provisional pole before Mücke passed him with a lap of 2 minutes, 18.032 seconds. [18] Mücke was joined on the grid's front row by Mortara. [17] Engel's accident left him in third. Rast was fourth, Van Der Zande fifth and O'Young sixth. O'Young's teammate Lyons was seventh. Bamber, Fong and Parente were eighth to tenth, respectively. [18] Estre was the fastest driver not to qualify in the top ten, ahead of teammate Cuoto, Sawa, Marchy Lee, the Thai duo of Pasin Lathouras and Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak, Dylan Derdaele, Jeffrey Lee, Weng Sun Mok and Philip Ma. John Shen and Jacky Yeung completed the 22 qualifiers. [18]

Qualifying classification

Final qualifying results
Pos.ClassNo.DriverTeamManufacturerTimeGap
1P97 Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 2:18.032
2P6 Flag of Italy.svg Edoardo Mortara Flag of Germany.svg Audi Sport Team Phoenix Audi 2:18.144+0.112
3P1 Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 2:18.168+0.136
4P7 Flag of Germany.svg René Rast Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Audi Sport Team WRT Audi 2:18.315+0.283
5G2 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Renger van der Zande Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 2:18.746+0.714
6S55 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Darryl O'Young Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 2:19.427+1.395
7G99 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Richard Lyons Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 2:19.637+1.605
8G19 Flag of New Zealand.svg Earl Bamber Flag of Hong Kong.svg LKM Racing Porsche 2:19.687+1.655
9S8 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Adderly Fong Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 2:19.972+1.940
10P25 Flag of Portugal.svg Álvaro Parente Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 2:20.048+2.016
11P15 Flag of France.svg Kévin Estre Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 2:20.255+2.223
12G5 Flag of Macau.svg André Couto Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 2:20.584+2.552
13S88 Flag of Japan.svg Keita Sawa Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 2:21.136+3.104
14S30 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Marchy Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Audi Hong Kong Audi 2:21.679+3.647
15S10 Flag of Thailand.svg Pasin Lathouras Flag of Italy.svg AF Corse Ferrari 2:22.249+4.217
16S9 Flag of Thailand.svg Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak Flag of Thailand.svg Est Cola Racing Team Porsche 2:25.318+7.286
17S20 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Dylan Derdaele Flag of Japan.svg Gulf Racing JP Porsche 2:26.550+8.518
18B33 Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg Jeffrey Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 2:26.952+8.920
19B3 Flag of Singapore.svg Weng Sun Mok Flag of Singapore.svg Clearwater Racing McLaren 2:28.204+10.172
20S98 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Philip Ma Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 2:30.907+12.875
21B68 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg John Shen Flag of Hong Kong.svg Modena Motorsports Porsche 2:34.703+16.671
22B77 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Jacky Yeung Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 2:35.302+17.270
Source: [2] [20]
Categorisation
IconClass
PPlatinum
G Gold
SSilver
BBronze

Qualifying race

Maro Engel (pictured in 2009) won the qualification race to start from pole position in the main race which he won. Maro Engel Norisring 2009.jpg
Maro Engel (pictured in 2009) won the qualification race to start from pole position in the main race which he won.

At 12:15 Macau Standard Time (UTC+08:00), the qualifying race to set the main race's starting order began under dry and cloudy conditions with the air and track temperatures at 26 °C (79 °F) and 27 °C (81 °F). [1] [4] [14] At the start, Mücke stopped Mortara's overtake to retain the lead into Mandarin turn, before Engel used his straightline speed to pass Mortara for second position approaching Lisboa corner. [21] [22] Rast dropped to fifth as brandmate Marchy Lee gained another position before turning into Lisboa corner. [23] Despite matching his pace earlier in the race, Engel was unable to challenge Mücke because the leader controlled his speed; both men pulled away from the trailing Mortara and Van Der Zande. Fong lost control of his Bentley Continental GT and crashed heavily at the Solitude Esses on the third lap. The safety car was deployed a lap later to neutralise the order because his car was stranded in the centre of the track. [21] [22]

At the lap eight restart, Mücke got away cleanly to lead the race back up to speed, with Engel and Mortara close behind. Simultaneously, fourth-placed Van Der Zande sought but failed to move up the order. [21] Engel had to take evasive action when Mücke accelerated and then abruptly braked. After the race, Engel expressed his surprise at Mücke's actions. [24] The leaders were unable to execute any further manoeuvres, and the margins at the front grew progressively until the qualification race ended. Mücke led the race from start to finish. He was then found to have brake tested Engel in violation of the regulations and was given a ten-second time penalty. [21] [22] Engel was given the victory and took pole position for the main race. Mortara joined him on the grid's front row. Mücke's penalty demoted him to third place. Van Der Zande was fourth, Rast was fifth, and Lyons was sixth. Following closely were Bamber, O'Young, Parente, and Estre, who rounded out the top ten. Sawa, Marchy Lee, Lathouras, Inthraphuvasak, Derdaele, Jeffrey Lee, Sun Mok, Sheng, Yeng, Cuoto, and Ma were the final 21 classified finishers. [1]

Qualifying race classification

Classification of the qualifying race
Pos.ClassNo.DriverTeamManufacturerLapsTime/Retired
1P1 Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 1234:38.768
2P6 Flag of Italy.svg Edoardo Mortara Flag of Germany.svg Audi Sport Team Phoenix Audi 12+5.212
3P97 Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 12+8.303
4G2 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Renger van der Zande Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 12+8.331
5P7 Flag of Germany.svg René Rast Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Audi Sport Team WRT Audi 12+9.112
6G99 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Richard Lyons Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 12+10.312
7G19 Flag of New Zealand.svg Earl Bamber Flag of Hong Kong.svg LKM Racing Porsche 12+11.225
8S55 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Darryl O'Young Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 12+12.375
9P25 Flag of Portugal.svg Álvaro Parente Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 12+13.004
10P15 Flag of France.svg Kévin Estre Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 12+13.634
11S88 Flag of Japan.svg Keita Sawa Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 12+20.312
12S30 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Marchy Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Audi Hong Kong Audi 12+22.110
13S10 Flag of Thailand.svg Pasin Lathouras Flag of Italy.svg AF Corse Ferrari 12+22.290
14S9 Flag of Thailand.svg Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak Flag of Thailand.svg Est Cola Racing Team Porsche 12+36.772
15S20 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Dylan Derdaele Flag of Japan.svg Gulf Racing JP Porsche 12+56.464
16B33 Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg Jeffrey Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 12+1:01.009
17B3 Flag of Singapore.svg Weng Sun Mok Flag of Singapore.svg Clearwater Racing McLaren 12+1:01.682
18B68 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg John Shen Flag of Hong Kong.svg Modena Motorsports Porsche 12+1:17.517
19B77 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Jacky Yeung Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 12+1:51.644
20G5 Flag of Macau.svg André Couto Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 11+1 Lap
21S98 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Philip Ma Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 11+1 Lap
RetS8 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Adderly Fong Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 2Accident
Source: [20] [1]

Main race

The race began under dry and sunny weather at 12:55 local time. [3] [14] The air temperature was 28 °C (82 °F) and a track temperature at 28 °C (82 °F). [3] Fong withdrew from the race because his chassis was too damaged from the previous day's qualification race crash. [22] Mortara made a quick getaway after the race's rolling start and stopped Engel's initial pass to take the lead before the Mandarin Oriental corner. Mortara lost the lead to Engel when he steered into the inside as they approached the Reservoir Kink bend. After a brisk start, his teammate van der Zande took second position. [25] [26] Mücke then took third from Mortara before Lisboa corner. [27] Estre collided with Lyon's rear at the turn, and both drivers retired. After crashing into a barrier at San Francisco Bend, Bamber retired on the lap. [27] At the end of the first lap, Engel led teammate Van der Zande, followed by, Mortara, Mücke, Parente, O'Young, Sawa, Marchy Lee and Lathouras. The first five were covered by five seconds with the rest of the field 18 seconds behind them. [28]

It's unbelievable, I’m overjoyed as the best GT drivers were up against each other in this race, so I’m proud to be the first winner of the FIA GT World Cup! But I’m especially proud of my team. I made a big mistake in qualifying on Friday and I thought right there, standing in the wall, that my weekend might be over and I blew the opportunity we had here. To win this race is amazing because I just love this place, I love this track. I had to make a really good start and I knew I had to hold the inside line and stay in front or try to get ahead in the Mandarin corner, otherwise it would be difficult. I just managed to pass Edoardo Mortara on the left-hand side, so that was the key to retaking the lead. From there I really put my head down; I just focused on my driving, trying to keep cool and open up the gap.

Maro Engel, on winning the inaugural FIA GT World Cup. [28]

At the midway, Derdaele's car had a punctured tyre and retired at Lisboa curve, while Parente lost sixth place to O'Young by having a better exit out of a turn. [28] Meanwhile, Engel extended his advantage over second-placed Van Der Zande when the course of the race altered on lap 12. [27] Van Der Zande was slowed by traffic, allowing Mücke to challenge him for second place heading into Lisboa bend. [25] As a result of the manoeuvre, Mücke struck Van der Zande's vehicle from behind, causing debris to land in Mücke's left rear wheel. [29] The two collided as Mücke passed Van Der Zande on the inside as they approached Lisboa corner on the next lap. [27] Both drivers ran wide under braking, allowing Rast and Mortara of Audi into second and third places. [29] When the safety car was deployed to close the field down following an accident on lap 14, Engel's eight-second lead over Mortara was reduced to nothing. [26] Inthraphuvasak crashed at Paiol corner, leaving his vehicle stranded in the middle of the course. [29]

As everyone waited for additional laps at racing speed behind the safety car, a multi-vehicle accident occurred at Moorish Hill with 2½ laps to go. [26] [27] The lapped Shen struck the tyre barrier, and every driver behind him collided with each other since he blocked the course. [28] [29] Race control decided to stop the race and not restart it, counting back the result by two laps. [28] [29] Engel won the first FIA GT World Cup, his second consecutive victory in Macau after winning the GT event in 2014. [30] Mortara finished second before a 20-second time penalty was enforced by the International Sporting Code for being deemed to have jumped the start, [28] [31] promoting Rast and Mucke to second and third. [25] Off the podium, Van Der Zande, O'Young, Mortara, Parente, Marchy Lee, Sawa and Lathouras, Couto, Jeffrey Lee, Sun, Shen, Ma, Yueng and Inthraphuvasak were the final finishers. [3]

Main race classification

Classification of the main race
Pos.ClassNo.DriverTeamManufacturerLapsTime/Retired
1P1 Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 1433:28.832
2P7 Flag of Germany.svg René Rast Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Audi Sport Team WRT Audi 14+2.900
3P97 Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 14+3.690
4G2 Flag of the Netherlands.svg Renger van der Zande Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes AMG Driving Academy Mercedes-Benz 14+4.422
5S55 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Darryl O'Young Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 14+17.444
6 [lower-alpha 1] P6 Flag of Italy.svg Edoardo Mortara Flag of Germany.svg Audi Sport Team Phoenix Audi 14+22.321
7P25 Flag of Portugal.svg Álvaro Parente Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 14+24.880
8S30 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Marchy Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Audi Hong Kong Audi 14+37.248
9S88 Flag of Japan.svg Keita Sawa Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 14+30.404
10S10 Flag of Thailand.svg Pasin Lathouras Flag of Italy.svg AF Corse Ferrari 14+40.354
11G5 Flag of Macau.svg André Couto Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 14+1:32.315/Accident
12B33 Flag of Chinese Taipei for Olympic games.svg Jeffrey Lee Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 14+2:29.634
13B3 Flag of Singapore.svg Weng Sun Mok Flag of Singapore.svg Clearwater Racing McLaren 14+3:08.350
14B68 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg John Shen Flag of Hong Kong.svg Modena Motorsports Porsche 13+1 Lap/Accident
15S98 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Philip Ma Flag of Hong Kong.svg Absolute Racing Audi 13+1 Lap
16B77 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Jacky Yeung Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley 13+1 Lap
17S9 Flag of Thailand.svg Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak Flag of Thailand.svg Est Cola Racing Team Porsche 12Accident
RetS20 Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Dylan Derdaele Flag of Japan.svg Gulf Racing JP Porsche 7Puncture
RetG19 Flag of New Zealand.svg Earl Bamber Flag of Hong Kong.svg LKM Racing Porsche 1Accident Damage
RetP15 Flag of France.svg Kévin Estre Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg FFF Racing Team McLaren 1Collision Damage
RetG99 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Richard Lyons Flag of Hong Kong.svg Craft-Bamboo Racing Aston Martin 0Collision
DNS [lower-alpha 2] S8 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Adderly Fong Flag of Hong Kong.svg Bentley Team Absolute Bentley Accident
Source: [20] [3]
Notes
  1. Mortara had originally placed at second, but a twenty-second time penalty was later applied due to jump start. [28]
  2. Adderly Fong did not start the Main Race, because his Bentley had too much damage after a crash the day before in the Qualifying Race. [22]

FIA GT World Cup for Manufacturers

The FIA GT World Cup for Manufacturers award was presented to the manufacturer supplying the cars with a manufacturer entry with the highest number of points after adding the points of its two best cars awarded based on the result of the Main Race. [4]

Scoring system

To be classified and earn points, entries had to complete 90 per cent of the winning car's race distance. The pole position winner received no points. [4]

Main Race points

Points scoring system for the FIA GT World Cup
Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points251815121086421
Final FIA GT World Cup for Manufacturers standings
Pos.ManufacturerCarDrivers Flag of Macau.svg MAC Total
QRMR
1 Flag of Germany.svg Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 Flag of Germany.svg Maro Engel 1137
Flag of the Netherlands.svg Renger van der Zande 44
2 Flag of Germany.svg Audi R8 LMS Flag of Hong Kong.svg Marchy Lee 128126
Flag of Italy.svg Edoardo Mortara 26
Flag of Germany.svg René Rast 52
3 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Aston Martin V12 Vantage GT3 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Richard Lyons 6Ret125
Flag of Germany.svg Stefan Mücke 33
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Darryl O'Young 85
4 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg McLaren 650S GT3 Flag of Macau.svg André Couto 20116
Flag of France.svg Kévin Estre 10Ret1
Flag of Portugal.svg Álvaro Parente 97
5 Flag of Germany.svg Porsche 997 GT3-R Flag of New Zealand.svg Earl Bamber 7Ret10
Flag of Belgium (civil).svg Dylan Derdaele15Ret
Flag of Thailand.svg Vutthikorn Inthraphuvasak1417†
Key
ColourResult
GoldRace winner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
Excluded (EX)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Withdrew (WD)
BlankDid not participate

Bold – Pole

Italics – Fastest Lap

Notes
  •  – Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance. [4]
  • 1 – Only the two best highest finishing cars of a manufacturer are able to score points. The result of the lowest finishing car is not included. [4]

See also

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The 2016 6 Hours of Nürburgring was a six-hour endurance sports car racing event held for Le Mans Prototype and Le Mans Grand Touring Endurance cars at the Nürburgring, Nürburg, Germany on 24 July 2016. The Nürburgring round served as the fourth race of the 2016 FIA World Endurance Championship, and was the second running of the event as part of the championship. A total of 58,000 people spectated the event.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 Macau Grand Prix</span> 55th running of the Macau Grand Prix

The 2008 Macau Grand Prix was a Formula Three (F3) car race held on the streets of Macau on 16 November 2008. Unlike other races, such as the Masters of Formula 3, the 2008 Macau Grand Prix was not part of any F3 championship, but was open to entries from any F3 championship. The event consisted of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race that set the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main race. The 2008 race was the 55th Macau Grand Prix and the 26th for F3 cars.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters</span>

The 2017 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was the thirty-first season of premier German touring car championship and also eighteenth season under the moniker of Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters since the series' resumption in 2000. The season is scheduled to run from 6 May until 15 October over 18 races. René Rast won his first DTM championship after a total of nine events.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2016 FIA GT World Cup</span> GT race held at Macau in 2016

The 2016 FIA GT World Cup was a Grand Touring (GT) sports car race held on the streets of the autonomous territory of Macau on 20 November 2016. It was the event's second annual edition, and the ninth time GT3-specified machinery had participated in Macau. Unlike the 2015 race, it was not run as a non-championship GT Asia Series race. The Automobile General Association Macau-China appointed motorsports organiser Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to help form a grid. The race itself consisted of two races: a twelve-lap qualification race that determined the starting grid for the four-lap main race.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 Macau Grand Prix</span> 64th running of the Macau Grand Prix

The 2017 Macau Grand Prix was a motor race for Formula Three cars that was held on the streets of Macau on 19 November 2017. Unlike other races, such as the Pau Grand Prix, the 2017 Macau Grand Prix was not a part of any Formula Three championship, but was open to entries from all Formula Three championships. The race itself was made up of two races: a ten-lap qualifying race that decided the starting grid for the fifteen-lap main race. The 2017 race was the 64th running of the Macau Grand Prix, the 35th for Formula Three cars and the 2nd edition of the FIA F3 World Cup.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2017 FIA GT World Cup</span> 3rd World Cup for GT3-spec sports cars in Macau

The 2017 FIA GT World Cup was a non-championship Grand Touring (GT) sports car race held on the streets of the Macau autonomous territory on 19 November 2017. It was the event's third edition, and the tenth Macau GT3-specification cars race. The Automobile General Association Macau-China appointed the motorsports organiser Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to form a grid for the race. The race itself consisted of an 11-lap qualifying race that set the starting order for the 18-lap main race.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2018 FIA GT World Cup</span> Motor race

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">2019 FIA GT World Cup</span> 5th World Cup for GT3-spec race cars in Macau

The 2019 FIA GT World Cup was a Grand Touring (GT) sports car race held on the Guia Circuit in Macau on 17 November. It was the fifth edition of the FIA GT World Cup and the twelfth GT3 car race to be held in Macau. The event promoter, the Automobile General Association Macau-China, appointed the motorsports organiser Stéphane Ratel Organisation (SRO) to form a grid. The edition itself was made up of two races: a 12-lap qualifying race and an 18-lap main event.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marvin Dienst</span> German racing driver

Marvin Christopher Dienst is a German racing driver, who last competed in the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters for Mercedes-AMG Team Mücke Motorsport. Dienst won the Formula BMW Talent Cup in 2012 and the ADAC Formula 4 championship in 2015.

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