2017–18 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship
The 2017–18 Formula 4 South East Asia Championship season was the second season of the Formula 4 South East Asia Championship. It began on 30 September 2017 at the Sepang International Circuit and finished on 15 April 2018 at the same venue, after 29 races held across five rounds on three countries.[1][2][3]
Drivers
[edit]Driver | Rounds | |
---|---|---|
1 | Hibiki Taira | 4–5 |
3 | Kane Shepherd | All |
9 | Shivin Sirinarinthon | 1–2 |
10 | Timothy Yeo | 5 |
15 | 2 | |
16 | Benson Lin | 4 |
17 | Nazim Azman | 1, 3, 5 |
19 | Ben Grimes | 2–3 |
Isyraf Danish | 1 | |
77 | 5 | |
22 | Alister Yoong | 4 |
23 | Muizz Musyaffa | 4–5 |
27 | Ugo de Wilde | 3–4 |
28 | Alessandro Ghiretti | 5 |
29 | Mitchell Cheah | 4 |
30 | Eshan Pieris | 1, 4 |
31 | Armand Johany | 5 |
32 | Presley Martono | 5 |
33 | Sam Grimes | 2–3 |
38 | Arsh Johany | 5 |
42 | Luke Thompson | All |
45 | Sasakorn Chaimongkol | 3 |
55 | Daniel Cao | All |
66 | Danial Frost | 1 |
72 | Nayan Chatterjee | 1 |
78 | Aaron Love | 4 |
88 | Perdana Putra Minang | 1 |
93 | Adam Khalid | 2 |
95 | 4 | |
99 | Liam Lawrence | 4 |
Race calendar and results
[edit]The final calendar was released on 4 July 2017.[1] The first round at Sepang will be held in support the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix, whereas the two final rounds in Buriram and Sepang will support the 2017–18 Asian Le Mans Series.
Due to an incident involving F1 driver Romain Grosjean, which required track fixing operations, the first race of the opening Sepang round had to be postponed. It was announced later that the round will be shortened to 5 races, with the sixth race being rescheduled at a later date.
On November 20, organizers cancelled round 3 at the Sentul International Circuit in Indonesia due lo logistical complications. It was later announced that the round would be rescheduled at Buriram for early December,[2] and finally at Sepang for mid April as the season finale.[3]
Round | Circuit | Date | Pole Position | Fastest Lap | Winning Driver | Supporting | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | |||||||
1 | R1 | Sepang International Circuit, Selangor | 30 September | Danial Frost | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | Malaysian Grand Prix |
R2 | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | |||||
R3 | Danial Frost | Nayan Chatterjee | Danial Frost | ||||
R4 | 1 October | Nayan Chatterjee | Daniel Cao | ||||
R5 | Daniel Cao | Nazim Azman | |||||
R6 | Race cancelled due to track repars | ||||||
2 | R1 | Clark International Speedway, Mabalacat | 21 October | Ben Grimes | Ben Grimes | Ben Grimes | |
R2 | Daniel Cao | ||||||
R3 | 22 October | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | ||||
R4 | Daniel Cao | Ben Grimes | Daniel Cao | ||||
R5 | Ben Grimes | Ben Grimes | |||||
R6 | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | |||||
2018 | |||||||
3 | R1 | Chang International Circuit, Buriram | 12 January | Ugo de Wilde | Ugo de Wilde | Daniel Cao | Asian Le Mans Series |
R2 | Ugo de Wilde | Ugo de Wilde | |||||
R3 | Nazim Azman | Ugo de Wilde | |||||
R4 | Ugo de Wilde | Kane Shepherd | Ugo de Wilde | ||||
R5 | 13 January | Ugo de Wilde | Ugo de Wilde | ||||
R6 | Nazim Azman | Nazim Azman | |||||
4 | R1 | Sepang International Circuit, Selangor | 3 February | Eshan Pieris | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | Asian Le Mans Series |
R2 | Eshan Pieris | Eshan Pieris | |||||
R3 | Kane Shepherd | Mitchell Cheah | |||||
R4 | 4 February | Eshan Pieris | Ugo de Wilde | Kane Shepherd | |||
R5 | Kane Shepherd | Ugo de Wilde | |||||
R6 | Hibiki Taira | Kane Shepherd | |||||
5 | R1 | Sepang International Circuit, Selangor | 13 April | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | Kane Shepherd | Blancpain GT Series Asia Malaysia Championship Series |
R2 | 14 April | Daniel Cao | Daniel Cao | ||||
R3 | Nazim Azman | Kane Shepherd | |||||
R4 | 15 April | Muizz Musyaffa | Hibiki Taira | Alessandro Ghiretti | |||
R5 | Presley Martono | Presley Martono | |||||
R6 | Kane Shepherd | Muizz Musyaffa |
Championship standings
[edit]The series follows the standard F1 points scoring system with the addition of 1 point for fastest lap and 3 points for pole. The best 24 results out of 30 races counted towards the championship.[4]
The first and second fastest qualifying laps determine grid positions for race 1 and race 4 (In the opening round at Sepang for race 3 instead of race 4 due to cancelling of the race). The fastest laps in race 1 determine the grid positions for race 2, while the grid positions for race 3 are created by the finishing positions of race 2 with top half of the grid reversed. race 4 grid positions based on the drivers’ second fastest qualifying laps, while race 5 start is determined by the fastest laps of race 4 and the grid positions of race 6 are the finishing positions of race 5, with the top half of the grid reversed.
Due to miscalculation of the fuel level, no cars were able to finish full race distance of the third race in the opening round of the season at Sepang because of lack of petrol. The classification was declared after five race laps.[5][6]
Points were awarded as follows:
Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | R1 PP | FL |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points | 25 | 18 | 15 | 12 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
Drivers' standings
[edit]
|
Bold – Pole |
Rookie Cup
[edit]Pos | Driver | Pts |
---|---|---|
1 | Kane Shepherd | 377 |
2 | Hibiki Taira | 127 |
3 | Muizz Musyaffa | 99 |
4 | Alessandro Ghiretti | 92 |
5 | Eshan Pieris | 88 |
6 | Mitchell Cheah | 85 |
7 | Sam Grimes | 79 |
8 | Shivin Sirinarinthon | 76 |
9 | Sasakorn Chaimongkol | 42 |
10 | Perdana Putra Minang | 28 |
11 | Benson Lin | 20 |
12 | Alister Yoong | 13 |
14 | Armand Johany | 7 |
15 | Arsh Johany | 6 |
16 | Liam Lawrence | 4 |
References
[edit]- ^ a b "F4 SEA to open at Malaysian Grand Prix". F4 SEA. 4 July 2017. Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ a b "FIA Formula 4 South East Asia double header at Buriram". F4 SEA. 29 November 2017. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
- ^ a b "FIA F4 SEA finals confirmed". F4 SEA. 12 February 2018. Archived from the original on 19 February 2018. Retrieved 18 February 2018.
- ^ "F4 SEA drivers guide". F4 SEA. Archived from the original on 29 September 2017. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
- ^ "Sizzling battle for event championship". F4 SEA. Archived from the original on 30 September 2017. Retrieved 30 September 2017.
- ^ Noble, Johnatan (30 September 2017). "No cars finish Formula 4 race at Sepang". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 30 September 2017.