2023 Super Formula Championship

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Ritomo Miyata, driving for Vantelin Team TOM'S, won his first Super Formula Championship title. Ritomo Miyata 6 Hours of Monza 2023.jpg
Ritomo Miyata, driving for Vantelin Team TOM'S, won his first Super Formula Championship title.

The 2023 Japanese Super Formula Championship was the fifty-first season of premier Japanese open-wheel motor racing, [1] and the eleventh under the moniker of Super Formula. It started in April 2023 and was contested over seven weekends, comprising nine races. [2] Tomoki Nojiri entered the season as the two-time and defending series champion.

Contents

TOM'S driver Ritomo Miyata won the Drivers' Championship at the final race, ahead of Liam Lawson, who became Rookie of the Year while his Mugen Team won the Teams' Championship.

Teams and drivers

All teams used identical Dallara-built SF23 chassis. 2023 was the first season for this new chassis. The SF23 was constructed from Bcomp bio-composite material aimed at reducing carbon dioxide emissions by approximately 75 percent, and featured updated aerodynamic features aimed at reducing turbulent air and promoting more wheel-to-wheel racing. [3] Series tyre supplier Yokohama Rubber debuted a new "carbon neutral racing tyre" made from 33 percent recycled and renewable raw materials. Every Honda-powered car used a Honda HR-417E engine and every Toyota-powered car used a Toyota TRD-01F engine.

TeamEngineNo.Driver nameRounds
Flag of Japan.svg Team Mugen [4] Honda 1 Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri [4] 1–3, 5–9
Flag of Japan.svg Hiroki Otsu [5] 4
15 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson [4] All
Flag of Japan.svg Kondo Racing [6] Toyota 3 Flag of Japan.svg Kenta Yamashita [6] All
4 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg Docomo Team Dandelion Racing [4] Honda 5 Flag of Japan.svg Tadasuke Makino [4] All
6 Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta [4] All
Flag of Hong Kong.svg Kids com Team KCMG [6] Toyota 7 Flag of Japan.svg Kamui Kobayashi [6] All
18 Flag of Japan.svg Yuji Kunimoto [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg ThreeBond Racing [4] [7] Honda 12 Flag of Japan.svg Nirei Fukuzumi [4] All
Flag of Japan.svg docomo business ROOKIE [6] Toyota 14 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuya Oshima [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg Itochu Enex Team Impul [6] Toyota 19 Flag of Japan.svg Yuhi Sekiguchi [6] All
20 Flag of Japan.svg Ryō Hirakawa [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg Vantelin Team TOM’S [6] Toyota 36 Flag of France.svg Giuliano Alesi [8] 1–5
Flag of Japan.svg Ukyo Sasahara [9] 6–9
37 Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg P.mu/CerumoINGING [6] Toyota 38 Flag of Japan.svg Sho Tsuboi [6] All
39 Flag of Japan.svg Sena Sakaguchi [6] All
Flag of Japan.svg B-Max Racing [4] Honda 50 Flag of Japan.svg Nobuharu Matsushita [4] All
51 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Raoul Hyman [4] [lower-alpha 1] All
Flag of Japan.svg TGM Grand Prix [10] Honda 53 Flag of Japan.svg Toshiki Oyu [11] 1–5, 7
Flag of Japan.svg Hiroki Otsu [12] 6
Flag of Japan.svg Riki Okusa [13] 8–9
55 Flag of Turkey.svg Cem Bölükbaşı [11] All
Flag of Japan.svg TCS Nakajima Racing [4] Honda 64 Flag of Japan.svg Naoki Yamamoto [4] 1–7
Flag of Japan.svg Hiroki Otsu [14] 8–9
65 Flag of Japan.svg Ren Sato [4] All

Team changes

Driver changes

Mid-season

Race calendar

The provisional calendar was announced on 8 August 2022. [19] After three weekends were made to double-header events in 2022, the season opener and finale were both announced to have two races again. [20]

RoundCircuitLocationDateSupport billMap
1 Fuji Speedway Oyama, Shizuoka 8 AprilFerrari Challenge Japan
Honda N-One Owner's Cup
29 April
3 Suzuka International Racing Course Suzuka, Mie 23 April All-Japan Road Racing Championship JSB1000
4 Autopolis Hita, Oita 21 May Super Formula Lights
5 Sportsland SUGO Shibata, Miyagi 18 June Super Formula Lights
6 Fuji Speedway Oyama, Shizuoka 16 July Lamborghini Super Trofeo Asia
7 Mobility Resort Motegi Motegi, Tochigi 20 August TCR Japan Touring Car Series
8 Suzuka International Racing Course Suzuka, Mie 28 OctoberHonda N-One Owner's Cup
Toyota 86 Racing Series
929 October

Race results

RoundCircuitPole positionFastest lapWinning driverWinning team
1 Fuji Speedway Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Team Mugen
2 Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Flag of Japan.svg Toshiki Oyu Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Team Mugen
3 Suzuka International Racing Course Flag of Japan.svg Toshiki Oyu Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata Vantelin Team TOM'S
4 Autopolis Flag of Japan.svg Sho Tsuboi Flag of Japan.svg Sho Tsuboi Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Team Mugen
5 Sportsland SUGO Flag of Japan.svg Toshiki Oyu Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata Vantelin Team TOM'S
6 Fuji Speedway Flag of Japan.svg Tadasuke Makino Flag of Japan.svg Ryō Hirakawa Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Team Mugen
7 Mobility Resort Motegi Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Flag of Japan.svg Ryō Hirakawa Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Team Mugen
8 Suzuka International Racing Course Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri Team Mugen
9 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson Flag of Japan.svg Yuhi Sekiguchi Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta Docomo Team Dandelion Racing

Season report

First half

The 2023 Super Formula Championship began with a double-header at Fuji Speedway. Mugen's defending champion Tomoki Nojiri took pole position for the first race. His debuting teammate Liam Lawson started third, with the TGM of Toshiki Oyu between them until Lawson moved up into second. He then pitted on lap 21, with Nojiri following one lap later. A slightly quicker stop for Lawson together with his tyres already being up to temperature meant he took the lead. Lawson then built a gap and became the first driver to win on debut in Super Formula history. The podium was completed by Impul's Ryō Hirakawa, who had started seventh and pitted late in the race to climb up the order, but a late safety car meant the race finished under caution, so he was unable to make full use of his new tyres. [21]

Nojiri also took pole position for the second race of the weekend, but a great start by Oyu saw him take the lead into turn three. Most cars pitted shortly after a safety car on lap ten, where Nojiri profited of his pit box position as Oyu had to let him by before being allowed back into the fast lane. Oyu tried once to retake the lead, but then struggled for pace, allowing INGING's Sho Tsuboi to take second place, before dropping further down and finishing last. Lawson initially finished third, but was hit with a five-second time penalty for holding up other cars when he tried building a gap to Nojiri at the pit entry when Mugen double-stacked their cars. This promoted Kondō's Kenta Yamashita onto his first podium in three years. Nojiri left Fuji as the championship leader, 14 points ahead of his teammate Lawson. [22]

Next came the season's first visit to Suzuka, where Oyu claimed pole position. He held on to his lead as Lawson moved from eighth on the grid into fourth, and then past Nojiri into third. Most of the leaders then pitted, but Oyu waited until lap 19, resulting in him coming out directly in front of Nojiri. The pair fought through the opening corners, before Nojiri rear-ended Oyu, forcing both cars into retirement. TOM'S driver Ritomo Miyata and Hirakawa stopped under the ensuing safety car, thereby coming out third and fourth. Their fresher tyres allowed them to take the fight to the leaders, with Miyata eventually ending up in the lead and winning the race ahead of Tsuboi, and Hirakawa passing Lawson for third. Nojiri still maintained his championship lead, but now Miyata was second, four points behind. [23]

The fourth round at Autopolis began with Tsuboi on pole position. Lawson in second initially lost position to INGING's Sena Sakaguchi, but stopped earlier than the other frontrunners, which allowed him to get past both INGING cars. Miyata was the only other frontrunner yet to pit and did so as Oyu and Sakaguchi crashed to bring out a timely safety car. Lawson and Tsuboi were both still able to stay in front of Miyata, but Lawson had by far the oldest tyres. A perfect restart allowed him to build a gap as Miyata tried to get past Tsuboi. He did so with three laps to go, but by then Lawson was far enough ahead to secure the win. Nojiri had to miss the weekend due to a pneumothorax, allowing Lawson to take the standings lead, four points from Miyata, with Tsuboi a further seven points behind. [24]

Oyu took another pole position a month later at Sportsland Sugo. He led Miyata at the start as Tsuboi and Lawson slotted in behind them. Oyu then started struggling for pace, allowing Miyata to take the lead on lap twelve. Tsuboi followed through as Oyu lost control of his car and crashed. Split strategies meant some drivers stopped early and other stayed out, with the former strategy clearly materializing to be the better one: Dandelion's Tadasuke Makino was the first driver to pit, which saw him take third place. Miyata and Nojiri also stopped early and ended the race first and second, while Tsuboi and Lawson were among the last cars to stop, having stayed out hoping for another safety car. Both unable to make the podium, while Miyata's win saw him take a twelve-point championship lead over Lawson. [25]

Second half

The championship returned to Fuji Speedway to kick off the second half of the season. Makino beat Lawson to pole position and kept his lead at the start. Lawson pressured Makino, but was unable to pass him on the road. He then pitted a lap earlier than the leader and once again used his warmed up tyres to take first place, just as he did against Nojiri in the first race of the season. As the race stayed green until the end, the drivers who delayed their stop, led by KCMG's Naoki Yamamoto, were also no problem for him. In the end, he had built a four-second gap and won comfortably. Miyata had started fifth and passed Nakajima Racing's Ren Sato for third on lap 31 to hold on to his championship lead by a single point. Nojiri only came eighth, and Tsuboi failed to finish inside the points. [26]

Mobility Resort Motegi played host for round seven, and Nojiri was back on pole position. Dandelion's Kakunoshin Ohta qualified second, but stalled at the start. This saw Lawson aggressively challenge Nojiri for the lead into turn two, with the New Zealander running wide over the kerbs, spinning across the track, hitting Makino and Impul's Yuhi Sekiguchi and sending both cars airborne. A red flag interruption followed, with Makino being airlifted to hospital. He was able to avoid major injuries. After the restart, the race remained relatively uneventful, with Nojiri leading the pack home after a slow pitstop cost his nearest challenger Hirakawa any chance of victory. Oyu came third, while Miyata in fourth retook the championship lead. Lawson's car was repaired during the stoppage, but he could only manage 13th place and now trailed Miyata by eight points. [27]

The final double header at Suzuka began with Nojiri taking a crucial pole position to earn three more points and move past Lawson, who could only qualify seventh. The race began with Ohta moving past Makino for third, before being stopped for a massive crash between Sasahara and Nakajima Racing's Hiroki Otsu into 130R. Otsu was trying to move down the inside of Sasahara, which resulted in both cars hitting the barrier at high speed. Sasahara's car was flung into the catch fence, which tore the car in half. The chassis landed on the other side of the track near Degner 1. Both drivers miraculously avoided grave injuries, although Sasahara suffered a concussion. The damage to the barriers was to severe to restart the race and half points were awarded. This saw Lawson drop further back in the title fight, while Nojiri closed up to 6.5 points behind Miyata. [28]

Lawson took pole position for the final race of the season to minimize his gap to Miyata to twelve points. The odds still remained stacked against him, even more so after he lost the lead to Ohta at the start. Miyata moved into third, capitalizing on Nojiri losing momentum after also trying to move past Lawson. Miyata put pressure on Lawson, but knew he would not have to force the move to take the title. Ohta pitted later than his rivals, came out in front and spent the rest of the race fending off Lawson before eventually taking his maiden win. Miyata came home three seconds behind Lawson, his third place more than enough to secure his first Super Formula title. Nojiri could only manage fourth after a longer first stint waiting for a safety car and therefore lost second in the standings to Lawson by half a point. [29]

While all the talk was of the battle between Nojiri and Lawson leaving the first weekend, Miyata strongly inserted himself into the discussion through the next rounds. Delivering when he had the fastest car and still earning strong points when he had not, the TOM'S driver took a deserved title. Still, Lawson had an extremely strong rookie campaign that turned heads all over, tackling all obstacles with relative ease were it not for the overambitious move on Nojiri in Motegi that would prove pivotal in his title campaign. Nojiri meanwhile had to fight not only on track, but also off track as he had to recover from his pneumothorax that cost him the chance to compete at Autopolis. Considering his condition, he had a remarkable season to come so close within his third successive title.

Championship standings

Race points
Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th 
Points2015118654321
Qualifying points
Position 1st  2nd  3rd 
Points321

Drivers' championship

PosDriver FUJ1 SUZ1 AUT SUG FUJ2 MOT SUZ2 [lower-alpha 2] Points
1 Flag of Japan.svg Ritomo Miyata 5242121234223114.5
2 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Lawson 135412512133621106.5
3 Flag of Japan.svg Tomoki Nojiri 2111Ret3238111143106
4 Flag of Japan.svg Sho Tsuboi Ret22231711Ret5559
5 Flag of Japan.svg Ryō Hirakawa 321†3511427658
6 Flag of Japan.svg Tadasuke Makino 148156321Ret431043
7 Flag of Japan.svg Kakunoshin Ohta 151917161563Ret231235.5
8 Flag of Japan.svg Kenta Yamashita Ret354817911932
9 Flag of Japan.svg Toshiki Oyu 7203Ret1RetRet1322
10 Flag of Japan.svg Ren Sato 69DNS71251610Ret17.5
11 Flag of Japan.svg Kamui Kobayashi Ret6141169781717.5
12 Flag of Japan.svg Sena Sakaguchi 17106Ret310105141115
13 Flag of Japan.svg Naoki Yamamoto 415119137Ret14
14 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuya Oshima 91113124128191413
15 Flag of Japan.svg Kazuto Kotaka 101471914146151210
16 Flag of Japan.svg Nirei Fukuzumi Ret71081616149Ret9
17 Flag of Japan.svg Yuji Kunimoto 12161610915101687
18 Flag of Turkey.svg Cem Bölükbaşı 81791517181120155
19 Flag of Japan.svg Nobuharu Matsushita 131212RetRet13Ret1374
20 Flag of France.svg Giuliano Alesi RetRet813Ret3
21 Flag of Japan.svg Yuhi Sekiguchi 11131918Ret20Ret12160
22 Flag of Japan.svg Ukyo Sasahara 191222WD0
23 Flag of Japan.svg Riki Okusa 18130
24 Flag of Japan.svg Hiroki Otsu 1421†17WD0
25 Flag of the United Kingdom.svg Raoul Hyman 1618181718Ret1521180
PosDriver FUJ1 SUZ1 AUT SUG FUJ2 MOT SUZ2 Points
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
SilverSecond place
BronzeThird place
GreenOther points position
BlueOther classified position
Not classified, finished (NC)
PurpleNot classified, retired (Ret)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
BlankDid not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)
Did not enter (cell empty)
Text formattingMeaning
Bold Pole position
Italics Fastest lap

Teams' championship

PosTeamNo. FUJ1 SUZ1 AUT SUG FUJ2 MOT SUZ2 [lower-alpha 2] Points
1 Flag of Japan.svg Team Mugen 121Ret1428114188.5
151541511362
2 Flag of Japan.svg Vantelin Team TOM’S 36RetRet813Ret191222WD109.5
37541213423
3 Flag of Japan.svg Docomo Team Dandelion Racing 514815632Ret41069.5
615191716156Ret31
4 Flag of Japan.svg P.mu/CerumoINGING 38Ret223711Ret5568
39Ret106Ret101051411
5 Flag of Japan.svg Itochu Enex Team Impul 1911131918Ret20Ret121658
20321†35114276
6 Flag of Japan.svg Kondo Racing 3Ret354817911942
41014719141461512
7 Flag of Japan.svg TCS Nakajima Racing 64415119137Ret17WD31.5
6569DNS71251610Ret
8 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Kids com Team KCMG 7Ret61411610781724.5
181216161091510168
9 Flag of Japan.svg TGM Grand Prix 53720RetRetRet21†3181320
558179151718112015
10 Flag of Japan.svg docomo business ROOKIE 1491113124128191413
11 Flag of Japan.svg ThreeBond Racing 12Ret71081616149Ret9
12 Flag of Japan.svg B-Max Racing 50131212RetRet13Ret1374
511618181718Ret152118
PosTeamNo. FUJ1 SUZ1 AUT SUG FUJ2 MOT SUZ2 Points

Notes

  1. Hyman is a South African driver competing under a British licence.
  2. 1 2 The First race for round 8 was stopped due to a huge crash and wasn't resumed. Due to less than 75% of laps being completed, half points were awarded.

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