2022 Super Formula Lights

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The 2022 Super Formula Lights Championship was the third Super Formula Lights Championship season, after the Japanese Formula 3 Championship was rebranded following the end of the 2019 season. It featured drivers competing in Dallara 320 chassis and with engines made by three different manufacturers, a similar regulation format to the Euroformula Open Championship.

Contents

After 18 races over six rounds, Kazuto Kotaka took the Drivers' Championship, while his team, TOM'S, took the Teams' Championship and the Manufacturers' Championship. Nobuhiro Imada (B-Max Racing Team) won the Masters' Cup.

Teams and drivers

TeamEngineNo.DriverStatusRounds
B-Max Racing Team Spiess A41 1 Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura [1] All
4 Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada [2] MAll
30 Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon" [2] MAll
50 Flag of Japan.svg Togo Suganami [3] All
98 Flag of Spain.svg Roberto Merhi [4] 6
Toda Racing Spiess A41 2 Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta [1] All
Rn-Sports Spiess A41 10 Flag of Japan.svg Kohta Kawaai [3] 1, 3–5
Flag of Japan.svg Seiya Motojima [5] 2, 6
11 Flag of Japan.svg Masayuki Ueda [3] M1–2
TOM'S TOM'S TAZ31 35 Flag of Japan.svg Seita Nonaka [6] All
36 Flag of Japan.svg Yuga Furutani [7] All
37 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka [6] All
38 Flag of Japan.svg Hibiki Taira [6] All
HELM Motorsports Tomei TB14F3 202062 Flag of Japan.svg Yuya Hiraki [3] 1–5
63 Flag of Japan.svg Reiji Hiraki [3] 1–5
IconClass
MMasters' Cup.

Race Calendar & Results

The calendar for the 2022 season was announced on 25 November 2021. The championship supported Super Formula at five of its six events. The season finale was held over the Okayama Challenge Cup weekend. [8]

RoundCircuitDatePole positionFastest lapWinning driverWinning teamMasters winner
1R1 Fuji Speedway 9 April Flag of Japan.svg Kohta Kawaai Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Seita Nonaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Masayuki Ueda
R210 April Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"
R3 Flag of Japan.svg Hibiki Taira Flag of Japan.svg Hibiki Taira TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"
2R4 Suzuka International Racing Course 23 April Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R524 April Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Toda Racing Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R6 Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"
3R7 Autopolis 21 May Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura B-Max Racing Team Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R8 Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Toda Racing Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"
R922 May Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura B-Max Racing Team Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
4R10 Sportsland SUGO 18 June Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R1119 June Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R12 Flag of Japan.svg Seita Nonaka Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
5R13 Mobility Resort Motegi 20 August Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"
R1421 August Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Hibiki Taira TOM'S Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R15 Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura B-Max Racing Team Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
6R16 Okayama International Circuit 24 September Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Toda Racing Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro Imada
R1725 September Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka TOM'S No finishers
R18 Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Toda Racing Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon"

Season report

The championship began in early April at Fuji Speedway with Kohta Kawaai taking a surprise debut pole. He was overtaken at the start by Kakunoshin Ohta and then rear-ended him into the next turn, causing Ohta to retire and Kawaai dropping down the field. The new lead trio of Seita Nonaka, Iori Kimura and Hibiki Taira pulled away to finish in that order. The second race was also decided by the time lap one was over: Kazuto Kotaka led Ohta from pole, while Taira passed Kawaai for third. The pair remained busy fighting each other all race, so Kotaka and Ohta were free to pull away and finish first and second. Race three started with Taira passing both Nonaka and Kimura around the outside of turn 1 to claim the lead. Kimura then passed Nonaka and held him behind until the finish. Two third places and a win granted Taira the championship lead. [9]

Two weeks later, the second round at Suzuka International Racing Course started with Kotaka taking pole for the first race. Ohta started second, Nonaka third and those positions stood unchanged until the end. Race two was a very wet one, Ohta on pole had to fight off one attack from Nonaka, who was then overtaken by Kotaka when that attempt failed. Nonaka then aquaplaned off in turn three later on, so Yuga Furutani was able to gain his maiden podium. The final race was wet, too, and Ohta used his drier start position to move past Kotaka into first, with Furutani doing the same to Nonaka for third. Ohta pulled away, but Kotaka was able to reel him back in and attack him through the last two laps, passing him in the end. Their efforts over the weekend saw Kotaka take the championship lead and Ohta second in the standings, six points back. [10]

The third round was held at Autopolis. Race one began with two drivers stalling on the grid, and poleman Ohta was overtaken by Kimura. He then pulled away, and Nonaka began closing in on Ohta, but did not come in attacking range. The second race began with a collision, as Togo Suganami had a slow start from second and was defending from Kimura before crashing into Ohta. On the restart, the gaps at the front quickly grew, and Ohta won the race. A flurry of penalties meant he was joined on the podium by Furutani and Nonaka. Kimura was among those who were penalized, but came back to win race three in a dominant lights-to-flag display, only dropping behind Ohta shortly before turn one. Nonaka was third and ex-championship leader Kotaka grabbed his third sixth place in as many races, ceding the lead to Ohta by 19 points. [11]

The second half of the season began at Sportsland SUGO, and race one had chaos from the start that took out Suganami, while Kotaka moved past Ohta for the lead. On the restart, Kimura hit Ohta's rear and the resulting oil leaking on track caused a lengthy red flag. Kotaka restarted from the lead and avoided further drama, while behind him Taira and Reiji Hiraki eventually completed the podium. The second race was more straightforward, with Kotaka winning from pole as Furutani dispatched Ohta behind him and the trio finished that way. Race three looked much the same for Kotaka, although his gap to Taira in second was not as dominant. Nonaka was third, and Kotaka's triple win sent him back into the championship lead, demoting Ohta to second place with a margin of four points. Taira was a distant third, a further 26 points back. [12] [13]

The Mobility Resort Motegi was the host of the next round, and a wet track caused wheelspin for race one polesitter Kimura, who was then overtaken by Kotaka, Ohta and Suganami. Kotaka pulled away into the distance, as the others had to contend with limited visibility. Ohta came second and Kimura third, after Suganami made a mistake and dropped back. Race two began chaotic, with Taira taking the lead, while Ohta and Kimura sustained damage behind him. This promoted Nonaka and Suganami to the podium. The weather for race three was better, and Kimura ended his weekend with a bang, slicing past Ohta and then Kotaka to claim the lead, while the other podium positions did not change. Kotaka's two podiums meant he widened his gap in the standings to 13 points, while Kimura's strong showing promoted him to third, 34 points from Ohta. [14]

The season concluded at Okayama International Circuit, and Ohta took pole for race one. He converted pole to win in a race where overtakes were hard to come by, and Kimura and Kotaka completed the podium. Race two saw Kotaka pass polesitter Kimura at the start, with the lead gap staying very close all race, but Kimura could not produce an attack on the leader. Ohta was third, and started the final race of the season from pole. He had to defend from Kimura once at the start, and after that it was processional once again, with Nonaka in third and soon-to-be champion Kotaka in fourth. Dropped scores came into play and Kotaka's four-point gap to Ohta grew to six points at the end of the season as he took a deserved championship with eight wins from 18 races. Kimura solidified third in the standings, and Nonaka came fourth in the end. [15]

Championship standings

The points were awarded as follows:

123456 PP FL
107532111

Every drivers' four worst results were dropped.

Drivers' Championships

Overall

PosDriver FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA Points
R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3
1 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka 417121666111142314114
2 Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Ret24212212Ret35294131108
3 Flag of Japan.svg Iori Kimura 262557181Ret563Ret122285
4 Flag of Japan.svg Seita Nonaka 153312633346392847363
5 Flag of Japan.svg Hibiki Taira 3317454Ret5242101766562
6 Flag of Japan.svg Yuga Furutani 77943382752445375645
7 Flag of Japan.svg Togo Suganami 5956645104Ret7873654825
8 Flag of Japan.svg Kohta Kawaai Ret469Ret9Ret8Ret56510
9 Flag of Japan.svg Reiji Hiraki 6889797483127WDWDWD9
10 Flag of Japan.svg Yuya Hiraki 810101091010510810RetWDWDWD2
11 Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon" Ret1111121011127127111068Ret11Ret101
12 Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro ImadaRet1212118121191169987910Ret111
13 Flag of Japan.svg Seiya Motojima8Ret88870
14 Flag of Spain.svg Roberto Merhi 9Ret90
15 Flag of Japan.svg Masayuki Ueda913131311130
PosDriverR1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3Points
FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA

Masters Class

PosDriver FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA Points
R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3
1 Flag of Japan.svg Nobuhiro ImadaRet221121211112111Ret2143
2 Flag of Japan.svg "Dragon" Ret1122121222212Ret2Ret1126
3 Flag of Japan.svg Masayuki Ueda13333335
PosDriverR1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3Points
FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA

Teams' standings

PosTeam FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA Points
R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3
1 TOM'S 111121323111112313151
2 Toda Racing Ret24212212Ret35294131100
3 B-Max Racing Team 26255417165633122287
4 HELM Motorsports 6889797483710WDWDWD9
5Rn-Sports94681189Ret9Ret8Ret5658879
PosTeamR1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3Points
FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA

Engine manufacturer standings

PosEngine manufacturer FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA Points
R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3
1 TOM'S 111121323111112313151
2 Siegfried Spiess Motorenbau 222212111635231121132
3Tomei Engine6889797483710WDWDWD9
PosEngine manufacturerR1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3Points
FUJ SUZ AUT SUG MOT OKA

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