2024 Formula Regional Oceania Championship

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The 2024 Castrol Toyota Formula Regional Oceania Championship was the second season of the Formula Regional Oceania Championship, and the nineteenth running of the premier open-wheel motorsport category formerly known as the Toyota Racing Series, held in New Zealand. It was held over five consecutive weekends in January and February 2024.

For the first time in the history of the championship and its predecessors, the highest placed Australian or Kiwi driver after the first two rounds was awarded the Tasman Cup that had previously been awarded to the winner of the Tasman Series up until 2023. [1] Australian driver Christian Mansell was second overall after the second round at Manfeild, thereby taking this title. [2]

Roman Bilinski, driving for M2 Competition, claimed the championship at the penultimate race of the season. Kiwi Motorsport driver Patrick Woods-Toth took the rookie title at the same race.

Entry list

All drivers competed with identical Tatuus FT-60 chassis cars powered by 2.0L turbocharged Toyota engines. [3] The series switched its tyre supplier from Hankook to Pirelli because of a fire at Hankook's factory in Daejeon that caused widespread supply issues. [4] The series supplied all cars with 100% fossil-free fuel, becoming the first Formula Regional championship to take this sustainability step. [5]

TeamNo.DriverStatusRounds
M2 Competition 4 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski [6] All
7 Flag of Italy.svg Nicola Lacorte [7] R1–3
16 Flag of South Korea.svg Michael Shin [8] All
23 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats [9] All
27 Flag of the United States.svg Bryce Aron [10] 4–5
39 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Gerrard Xie [a] [11] All
101 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Ryder Quinn [12] 5
mtec Motorsport5 Flag of Brazil.svg Lucas Fecury [13] All
6 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Tommy Smith [14] 1–3
17 Flag of New Zealand.svg Callum Hedge [15] 5
19 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Elliott Cleary [16] R1–3, 5
48 Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaden Probst [17] R1–4
51 Flag of the United States.svg Jacob Abel [18] 4–5
Kiwi Motorsport14 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Patrick Woods-Toth [19] RAll
20 Flag of the United States.svg Jake Bonilla [20] RAll
22 Flag of the United States.svg Jett Bowling [21] RAll
31 Flag of the United States.svg Titus Sherlock [22] RAll
Giles Motorsport15 Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaleb Ngatoa [23] All
41 Flag of New Zealand.svg Alex Crosbie [24] RAll
69 Flag of New Zealand.svg Sebastian Manson [25] R4–5
71 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell [26] 1–2
739 Flag of the United States.svg Landan Matriano Lim [27] RAll
IconStatus
RRookie
GGuest driver

Race calendar

Even before the 2023 season had begun, New Zealand's national motorsport governing body had already announced the 2024 calendar. The championship again consisted of five weekends. The round at Teretonga Park was dropped, instead the series returned to Euromarque Motorsport Park for the first time since 2018. [28]

The 68th running of the New Zealand Grand Prix was held as the final race of the season, at Highlands Motorsport Park. [29]

RoundCircuitDateSupport billMap of circuit locations
1R1 Taupo International Motorsport Park
(Taupō, Waikato)
20 JanuaryTaupo Historic Grand Prix
Historic Touring Cars NZ
Formula Junior NZ
NZ Historic Muscle & Saloon Cars
R221 January
R3
2R1 Manfeild: Circuit Chris Amon
(Feilding, Manawatū District)
27 JanuaryNew Zealand GT Championship
TGR 86 Series NZ
Super V8 Series
TA2 New Zealand
R228 January
R3
3R1 Hampton Downs Motorsport Park
(Hampton Downs, North Waikato)
3 FebruaryNew Zealand Porsche Series Championship
GT Racing New Zealand
NZ Formula First Championship
Superkart Drivers Club Series
R24 February
R3
4R1 Euromarque Motorsport Park
(Christchurch, Canterbury)
10 FebruaryLady Wigram Trophy
Trans-Tasman Challenge
New Zealand GT Championship
TGR 86 Series NZ
R211 February
R3
5R1 Highlands Motorsport Park
(Cromwell, Otago)
17 February New Zealand Grand Prix
Trans-Tasman Challenge
New Zealand GT Championship
TGR 86 Series NZ
R218 February
R3

Race results

RoundCircuitPole positionFastest lapWinning driverWinning team
1R1 Taupo International Motorsport Park Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
R2 Flag of New Zealand.svg Alex Crosbie Flag of Hong Kong.svg Gerrard Xie M2 Competition
R3 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
2R1 Manfeild: Circuit Chris Amon Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of Italy.svg Nicola Lacorte Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
R2 Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaleb Ngatoa Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell Giles Motorsport
R3 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
3R1 Hampton Downs Motorsport Park Flag of Hong Kong.svg Gerrard Xie Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
R2 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of Italy.svg Nicola Lacorte M2 Competition
R3 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaleb Ngatoa Giles Motorsport
4R1 Euromarque Motorsport Park Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of the United States.svg Bryce Aron Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski M2 Competition
R2 Flag of South Korea.svg Michael Shin Flag of South Korea.svg Michael Shin M2 Competition
R3 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats M2 Competition
5R1 Highlands Motorsport Park Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats M2 Competition
R2 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of the United States.svg Bryce Aron M2 Competition
R3 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats M2 Competition

Season report

First half

The 2024 Formula Regional Oceania Championship began at a wet Taupo with Giles's Christian Mansell taking pole position for the first race. [30] His advantage was short-lived, however, as M2's Roman Bilinski grabbed the lead at the start. He continued to lead Mansell all 18 laps, throughout a safety car phase. His teammate Michael Shin completed the podium. [31] Giles's Alex Crosbie headed the field for the reversed-grid second race. Two caution periods disrupted proceedings, allowing M2's Gerrard Xie to rise up to second and then grab the lead at the final restart to win. Crosbie dropped to third, behind Bilinski. [32] Mansell had qualified on pole position for the third race, [33] but a penalty saw him start fifth. Nevertheless, he was back in second by the end of the first lap and took the lead on lap four. Bilinski took second shortly after and began closing up on Mansell. The Pole took the lead on lap 19 and went on to take the win. Mansell and M2's Liam Sceats were on the podium and left Taupo equal on points, 25 behind Bilinski. [34]

Bilinski continued his form by taking pole position for the first race at Manfeild. [35] He led Mansell throughout most of the first race, before the Australian dropped to tenth because of an electrical issue. This allowed Bilinski to take a trouble-free win ahead of Lacorte and Sceats. [36] The second race was held in wet conditions and saw Bilinski forced to pit to repair his rain light, thereby removing him from contention. Xie spun from second place, while Mansell and his teammate Kaleb Ngatoa both got past Kiwi's polesitter Patrick Woods-Toth. The pair battled for the race lead with Mansell eventually coming out on top, while mtec's Tommy Smith completed the podium. [37] Another pole position for Bilinski put him in prime position for race three. [38] Wet conditions first saw a red flag for a crash between Lacorte and Shin, before multiple drivers spun and race control elected to stop the race early. Bilinski won ahead of Mansell and Sceats, now with a slightly reduced lead of 22 points ahead of newly crowned Tasman Cup winner Mansell. [39]

Round three at Hampton Downs began with Xie taking pole position and Bilinski only managing 14th place. [40] He turned his frustration into a momentous first race: in changing conditions, he climbed eight places on the first lap into sixth, forced his way past Xie and Sceats into third and set out after Ngatoa and mtec's Kaden Probst. The pair had started on wet tires, but the track was now dry enough that Bilinski could easily take the lead and the win ahead of Sceats and Woods-Toth. [41] Race two began with Lacorte overtaking Shin into turn one, with the Italian, then controlling the race out in front to win ahead of the Korean with Bilinski in third. [42] Now the Pole had also regained his one-lap pace and took pole position for race three. [43] Xie was to start alongside him, but a heavy crash in race two saw him withdraw. This allowed Ngatoa into second and he used that to overtake Bilinski and leading him home. Shin came third, as Sceats overtook the absent Mansell for second in the standings, now 50 points behind Bilinski. [44]

Second half

The series' return to Ruapuna saw Bilinski claim another pole position ahead of Sceats. [45] The first race opened with a lengthy stoppage after heavy contact between Probst and Kiwi's Titus Sherlock. Bilinsiki controlled the restart and resisted Sceats's pressure all race long. Behind them, mtec's returnee Jacob Abel held on to third in a three-car battle with Ngatoa and Giles's Alex Crosbie. [46] Race two saw front-row starters Shin and Woods-Toth making slight contact side-by-side into turn one. This saw Woods-Toth drop to third behind Xie. Shin then pulled away to win, while Xie did all he could to keep Woods-Toth behind him. [47] Bilinski was on pole position again for the third race, again heading Sceats, [48] but this time, the Kiwi got the better of the Pole into the first turn to take the lead. Again the leader had to resist pressure from behind, but like Bilinski the day before, Sceats did not put a foot wrong to claim his maiden win. Still, Bilinski had grown his lead to 56 points, with 90 still on offer heading into the final weekend. [49]

Qualifying for the New Zealand Grand Prix at Highlands began with a shock for Bilinski as he crashed, putting him 13th on the grid for the Grand Prix, while Sceats took two pole positions. [50] The first race saw a controlled lights-to-flag victory by Sceats to keep the championship alive going into the final day of the season. Bilinski started fourth and got into second, but could not find a way past mtec's Callum Hedge. [51] M2's Bryce Aron started the second race from pole position, while Bilinski was in fifth. He needed to outscore Sceats to take the title, but did more than that, rising to second and briefly contending for victory before dropping back into third behind Woods-Toth. He thereby took the championship title, while Woods-Toth claimed the Rookie win. [52] Sceats's only consolation for the loss of the championship title came in him winning the Grand Prix, resisting Hedge for 27 laps before claiming the victory, with Shin also on the podium. Bilinski's season ended in a wild crash, going over the top of Aron's car in the final turn. [53]

Bilinski came to New Zealand with a single Formula Regional podium in his previous career, but was a championship contender right off the bat. While most of his six wins came from front-row starts, a defining moment of his championship was his win from fourteenth on the grid at Hampton Downs. Bilinski called his championship "massively" important for his career, calling himself "absolutely over the moon". Sceats was runner-up in a Formula Regional Championship for the second time in a year after his 2023 Formula Regional Japan campaign, but found comfort in winning the Grand Prix. After the race, his words to the media talking about his win were: "I’m speechless. I can’t even think right now. I can’t believe it." The championship's second year post-COVID saw it further reestablish itself as a competitive winter series, while also continuing to build upon its unique selling points with the addition of features like a fossil-free fuel. [54]

Championship standings

Scoring system

No points were awarded for pole position or fastest lap.

Race (starting grid from qualifying)
Position1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th10th11th12th13th14th15th16th17th18th19th20th
Points3531272422201816141210987654321
Reversed grid race
Position1st2nd3rd4th5th6th7th8th9th10th11th12th13th14th15th
Points201816141210987654321

Drivers' championship

Pos.Driver TAU MAN HMP RUA HIG Points
R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3
1 Flag of Poland.svg Roman Bilinski 1211171132142335385
2 Flag of New Zealand.svg Liam Sceats 543363265281191341
3 Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg Patrick Woods-Toth 1659846346733629255
4 Flag of South Korea.svg Michael Shin 3751712Ret623817473245
5 Flag of New Zealand.svg Alex Crosbie8349771210856813127206
6 Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaleb Ngatoa 414742516714510WDWDWD205
7 Flag of Hong Kong.svg Gerrard Xie 61117101545WD6268616205
8 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Tommy Smith 7612634597144
9 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Christian Mansell 2Ret2512135
10 Flag of Italy.svg Nicola Lacorte Ret11625Ret714130
11 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Elliott Cleary1081014910881191010124
12 Flag of the United States.svg Jett Bowling121215111391314151099111111120
13 Flag of the United States.svg Jacob Abel 375544118
14 Flag of the United States.svg Titus Sherlock11Ret8138811139Ret12111714Ret105
15 Flag of the United States.svg Bryce Aron 9104716102
16 Flag of the United States.svg Landan Matriano Lim1591715111210151311131315151394
17 Flag of Brazil.svg Lucas Fecury9NC16101613912121214Ret14171491
18 Flag of New Zealand.svg Callum Hedge 25274
19 Flag of the United States.svg Jake Bonilla14101416151414161413151416161574
20 Flag of New Zealand.svg Kaden Probst131313121411151110RetWDWD63
21 Flag of New Zealand.svg Sebastian MansonDNS11121081243
22 Flag of Australia (converted).svg Ryder Quinn1213828
Pos.DriverR1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3R1R2R3Points
TAU MAN HMP RUA HIG
ColourResult
GoldWinner
SilverSecond place
BronzeThird place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleRetired (Ret)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
BlankDid not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole

Italics – Fastest Lap

 — Did not finish, but classified

Rookie

Notes

    1. Xie is a Chinese driver who competed under a Hong Kong licence.

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