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V8 Supercar team boss Garry Rogers has confirmed his endurance drivers for 2010.

Rogers told Speedcafe.com.au that David Besnard and Greg Ritter will return to his Holden team this year for the L&H 500 (Phillip Island) and the Supercheap Auto Bathurst 1000.

Besnard and Ritter will partner primary GRM drivers Lee Holdsworth and Michael Caruso.
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The signing of Besnard and Ritter to GRM ensures the squad of two fast and experienced men to partner Holdsworth and Caruso, which will never be more important, considering the new V8 Supercar rule that prohibits primary drivers from competing in the same entry at the September/October V8 enduros.

At Bathurst last year, Holdsworth and Caruso finished third, while Besnard and Ritter came home ninth (although that result could have been better for them – the pair led the race until an ill-timed Safety Car late in the race).

Rogers told Speedcafe today that having two tried and trusted endurance drivers locked away is a huge bonus for his team.

“We’ve already got Ritter and Besnard locked away,” he confirmed.

“They did a pretty special job for us last year, and I think as a team, we did a great job for them too, and they recognise that.

“They’ve both been around for various other teams and dealt with other people and I think they realise what we as a team are able to do.”

The ‘split’ endurance driver rule has caused a stir in the V8 industry and amongst fans. Rogers says that he will play by whatever rules are given to him.

“I don’t have a problem with the new rule,” he said.

“I think it will probably encourage better racing. I suppose it depends on the calibre of the other drivers that come along, but I think you’d have to say that there’ll be more cars in there with a chance of winning and making the top 10. It will make both the races more competitive.

“I know there are downsides for teams that have coupled up together, but either way, I don’t mind. I’ll race whatever the rules are.”

Garry Rogers Motorsport will feature a new look in 2010, having secured major sponsorship from Fujitsu General.
 
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Think back ten years to the last days of the last millennium and the touring car scene seems a world away. The BTCC stood on the verge of its brave new world, poised to go into the last ever year of the Super Touring era before going BTC-spec, Mercedes, Opel and the DTM was returning after a four year absence and the death of the Italian championship was set to be the launch pad for the re-birth of the World Touring Car Championship.

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Ten year’s on and the BTCC is preparing to once again go its own way, this time with the NGTC regulations, while two German manufacturers continue to do battle in the DTM, though Audi have taken over Opel’s mantel as Mercedes bête-noire.

Meanwhile the re-born WTCC is itself at a crossroads with S2000 drawing towards the end of its lifespan and car manufacturers cutting back while the Italian Superstars series seems to be a coming force with its popular V8 silhouette rules.

Down Under another V8-based series goes from strength-to-strength as touring car racing enters its 51st year in Australia, and back in Europe 2010 sees the debut of the Scandinavian Touring Car Championship and a revamping of the European Touring Car Cup, proving that in touring cars life never stands still.

Read the full article here
 
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Renault Formula One driver Robert Kubica will enter the Rallye Automobile Monte-Carlo, the opening round of the Intercontinental Rally Challenge, in a Renault Clio R3 reports IRCseries.com on their website.
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The Polish Formula 1 star is an avid rally fan just like his ex-F1 collegue Kimi Raikkonen. Kubica has driven two rallys before, both at the wheel of a Clio R3.

Kubica stated: "It’s no secret that I like rallying so I try this for fun. Also, there is time in the Formula One winter break to do this."
 
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In the long winter days, the new touring car season can seem a world away. But fear not, with the V8 Supercar season kicking off with a Middle East double header in Abu Dhabi and Bahrain, the new season is closer than you think. 41 days in fact until we have Supercar racing, and just a further 15 days until the WTCC roars into action in Brazil.

For racing in Europe though the first round of the European Touring Car Championship in Braga should provide an appetiser for BTCC premiere in just 82 days time.

Seems a world away doesn’t it?

So to celebrate a New Year, a new start, and a new season, here are TouringCarTimes’ Ten reasons to be excited about 2010.
 
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Triple Eight Race Engineering boss Roland Dane has hinted that top-line overseas drivers are still at the top of his V8 Supercar endurance driver wish list.

In what may be viewed as a bold move by some, Dane says he still wants to have international drivers compete at the Phillip Island 500 and Bathurst 1000 alongside Jamie Whincup and Craig Lowndes, despite the new regulations that will force teams to keep their regular drivers in their own cars at Phillip Island and Bathurst.
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Local talent with lots of V8 Supercar experience seems to be the popular trend for most teams, however, Dane likes to think “outside the square.”

Recently, veteran Bathurst champ Mark Skaife has been linked to the Voadfone-backed Holden team, however, Dane mentioned Yvan Muller, Alain Menu and Allan Simonsen as his three preferred international options for this year’s endurance races.

Since Dane entered the V8 Supercar Championship Series in 2003, he has employed international talent such as Rickard Rydell, Muller, Simonsen, Richard Lyons, Fabrizio Giovanardi, Marc Hynes and James Thompson to compete in the twin two-driver races.muller-344x203.jpg

Will he partner relative V8 rookies with Whincup and Lowndes in the two most important races of the season?

He confirmed to Speedcafe.com.au that the three drivers above are on his list of potentials.

“A journalist recently made the mistake saying that the last non-regular driver to win an enduro was Jim Richards (Bathurst 1000, 2002). That’s not true – it was Yvan Muller with Craig Lowndes at the Sandown 500 in 2005,” he said.

“When I look down my list of possibles, Yvan, for sure, he is on it.

Dane said that Alain Menu was “absolutely” a possibility, as is regular TeamVodafone endurance driver Allan Simonsen.

“You can’t forget the person who has done the best job for us in recent years is Allan Simonsen. He’s done a good job for us,” he said.

There is a great degree of logic behind the Muller and Menu options. Both will drive for Chevrolet’s factory team in the World Touring Car Championship this year – an easy fit considering Triple Eight will campaign fellow GM make Holden this year. Coincidentally, there is no WTCC calendar clash with either Phillip Island or Bathurst.

Also, both Muller and Menu have raced V8 Supercars before – Menu more so. Muller has only competed in 2005, while Menu has driven at Bathurst in Super Tourers, plus with Mark Larkham’s V8 team and Ford Performance Racing.

One thing that may stop Dane from playing his international card is the fact that the co-drivers get very little opportunity to drive the cars outside of the two race meetings.

Each V8 Supercar team is restricted to four test days per year, and Dane (a V8SA board member) says that it’s not enough track time.

“One of the things that we’ve done with the rules in recent years is make them too restrictive,” he said.

“The testing rules are crazy in my opinion, but more than that, at Phillip Island and Bathurst in recent years, we’ve had very limited practice sessions. Our drivers haven’t been able to run their full course and you’ve had guys who have never been to the circuit before who are suddenly going into the race having done 15 laps.

“This is ridiculous if you want to promote people coming in from overseas.

“The days of Jacky Icyx coming out and winning with Allan Moffat in 1977, and people like Steve Soper, Klaus Niedzwiedz and Johnny Cecotto … we’ve made it too restrictive and if we don’t make it as restrictive, we can utilise some of the world’s great talent – including Australians like Ryan Briscoe. He came out here and put the HRT car on (provisional) pole in 2006. Where his passport comes from is irrelevant.

“You saw the job that Muller did at Sandown in ‘05 – good drivers are good drivers, but if you don’t give them the opportunities …

“You’d be kidding yourself if you gave Jamie Whincup or Garth Tander 10 laps around Brands Hatch in a World Touring Car and expected them to run at the front of the field.

“Good drivers are good drivers, and I like to think outside the square.

“In my opinion, we shouldn’t be so limiting on our test days, and when we get to the circuits, particularly the endurance races, we should be more sensible on how we run our practice sessions.

“That has been discussed in the past and it will be addressed this year.”
 
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Jorge Lorenzo has revealed that he briefly decided to retire from MotoGP in the wake of his string of violent crashes in 2008. The Spaniard's impressive rookie year lost momentum in the middle of the season following a series of ferocious accidents.

He continued to race after breaking both ankles in a practice crash in China, but then had to skip his home race at Catalunya due to a head injury from another fall.

It was while recovering from this injury that Lorenzo was on the brink of quitting the sport.
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"I had thought it was over for me," he told Motosprint.

"After the fourth bad crash, which occurred during practice at Barcelona, I almost broke my head. I took a heavy blow on the side, and for about two days I couldn't even remember who I was. I'm serious, I couldn't remember my name, nor what I was doing. It was a really heavy blow.

"When I realised again who I was and what was happening, I decided to quit racing.

"No, I said more than that. I said: 'if I carry on doing this, I'll end up killing myself sooner or later.'"

Lorenzo admitted that it was the first time in his career that he had been afraid.

"This is a sport where something really bad may happen, so you tend not to think about it," he said. "Clearly, when you do think about it, as a rider you're finished. Indeed, for at least a couple of days, I had considered myself finished."

He said it took some several races to restore his confidence from that low point, and that his opening lap crash at Laguna Seca a few months later set him back again.

"When I felt myself again and got back on the bike, this thought [of retirement] suddenly disappeared," Lorenzo explained. "Thankfully the human mind changes very rapidly sometimes. For sure, however, I promised myself I would change my approach to races.

"I remember that at Donington I was among the slowest in practice, but in the race I slowly started to make up ground and in the end I finished sixth. Then at Assen I was sixth again, while at Sachsenring I crashed but the track was wet because of the rain so that's acceptable.

"However, at Laguna Seca I ended up doing another highside: I was regaining confidence but lost it all again all of a sudden. So I had to start over once again.

"But I matured that season, I acquired the knowledge for the reasons why you go quick. And most of all, I also understood when it's better to slow down."

Although Lorenzo did not win again in 2008 following his crashes, he returned to the podium at Misano and held on to fourth place in the championship, before challenging Yamaha team-mate Valentino Rossi for the title this year.
 
The European Le Mans Series will start racing again early March with an official test at HTTT Paul Ricard.

The 2010 season will consist of 5 races of which 4 are marked as a 1000km race.
[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]7-8 March : Official Tests – Paul Ricard Circuit
9-10-11 April : 8H of the Castellet – Paul Ricard Circuit
7-8-9 May : 1000 Km of Spa-Francorchamps
15-16-17 July : 1000 Km of Algarve (Night race)
21-22 August : 1000 Km of Hungaroring (Night race)
10-11-12 September : Autosport 1000 Km of Silverstone

In between most of the teams will also be present at the famous 24 hours of Le Mans.

To get you in the mood for the upcoming season here are last years highlights:

[video=dailymotion;xbospi]http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xbospi_highlights-of-the-le-mans-series-20_auto[/video]
 
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Swedish Touring Car Championship team WestCoast Racing are still trying to secure its finances to be able to run two cars for their 2010 campain.

The frontrunning team, who recently lost its main sponsor TOOLS, are set to run a BMW with former champion Richard Göransson. However, things are looking a bit darker for Robin Rudholm who might not get a drive for the team but teamboss Dick Jönsson-Wigroth is not ruling out a second entry.
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"I am humble ahead of the assignment to get two cars to the grid. It takes a proper budget to keep the quality and our budget is not ready yet," said Jönsson-Wigroth to touringcartimes and continued; "There is no doubt about the fact that Rudholm is a very skilled driver that I would really like to see in one of our cars."

Photo: Andreas Hultgren
 
Reigning Danish Touring Car champion Michel Nykjær will take part in the 2010 WTCC at the wheel of a SEAT León run by SUNRED Engineering. During the latest seasons the 30-year old Dane emerged as one of the most successful touring car drivers in Europe, clinching twice the Danish Touring Car title (2007 and 2009) and the FIA European Touring Car Cup (2007 and 2008) in SEAT León and Chevrolet Lacetti cars. Nykjær has recently driven the SUNRED car in a private test.

Read more on fiawtcc.com
 
DTM driver Paul di Resta says he is close to a deal to become Force India's reserve driver this season, after impressing the team in a test at the end of last year.

At least that is what autosport is saying.


(notice the incredible applause when he enters the press room, that must be painful :D)
 
stcc10011902.jpgRumors says that Rickard Rydell may drive in the Swedish Touring Car Championship in 2010 with Flash Engineering. The frontrunning BMW team is looking at the oportunity to expand to three cars and team boss Jan "Flash" Nilsson met with Rydell a few days ago.

"We are looking at more cars for both STCC and Carrera Cup Scandinavia," said Nilsson.[PRBREAK][/PRBREAK]
"We are looking over all possibilities. Rydell is a good driver, but I do not want to comment if he is in contention to join the team for 2010."

Source | touringcartimes.com
 
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