2021 Super Formula Championship
The 2021 Japanese Super Formula Championship is the 35th season of premier Japanese open-wheel motor racing, and the ninth under the moniker of Super Formula. Naoki Yamamoto will enter the 2021 season as the defending drivers' champion.
2021 Super Formula Championship | |||
Previous: | 2020 | Next: | 2022 |
Support series: TCR Japan Touring Car Series Super Formula Lights |
Teams and drivers
Team | No. | Driver | Engine | Rounds |
---|---|---|---|---|
TCS Nakajima Racing | 1 | Naoki Yamamoto[1] | Honda | TBA |
64 | Toshiki Oyu[2] | TBA | ||
Docomo Team Dandelion Racing | 5 | Nirei Fukuzumi[2] | TBA | |
6 | Tadasuke Makino[1] | TBA | ||
Drago Corse with ThreeBond[3] | 12 | Tatiana Calderón[1] | TBA | |
Team Mugen[2] | 15 | TBA | TBA | |
16 | Tomoki Nojiri[2] | TBA | ||
B-Max Racing[2] | 50 | TBA | TBA | |
51 | TBA | TBA | ||
Kondō Racing | 3 | Kenta Yamashita[4] | Toyota | TBA |
4 | Sacha Fenestraz[4] | TBA | ||
carrozzeria Team KCMG | 7 | Kamui Kobayashi[4] | TBA | |
18 | Yuji Kunimoto[4] | TBA | ||
ROOKIE Racing | 14 | Kazuya Oshima[4] | TBA | |
Itochu Enex Team Impul | 19 | Yuhi Sekiguchi[4] | TBA | |
20 | Ryō Hirakawa[4] | TBA | ||
Vantelin Team TOM'S | 36 | Kazuki Nakajima[4] | TBA | |
37 | Ritomo Miyata[4] | TBA | ||
JMS P.mu/cerumo・INGING | 38 | Sho Tsuboi[4] | TBA | |
39 | Sena Sakaguchi[4] | TBA |
Driver Changes
- Three-time and defending series champion Naoki Yamamoto will move to TCS Nakajima Racing after spending two seasons with Dandelion Racing. This will be Yamamoto's first time driving for Nakajima Racing since his rookie season in 2010.[2]
- Tadasuke Makino will move to DoCoMo Team Dandelion Racing after two seasons with Nakajima Racing.[2]
- Reigning Super Formula Lights champion Ritomo Miyata will drive full-time for Vantelin Team TOM's, after running two races in 2020 in relief of Kazuki Nakajima.[4]
- Reigning Formula Regional Japanese Champion Sena Sakaguchi will drive full-time for P.mu/Cerumo-INGING, after appearing in the 2020 Okayama round in relief of Kenta Yamashita.[4]
- Two-time series champion Hiroaki Ishiura has retired from the series.
- 2019 series champion Nick Cassidy has exited the series, following his move to the FIA Formula E World Championship with Envision Virgin Racing.
Race calendar
The provisional calendar was announced on 6 August 2020. After heavy disruptions to the 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the series is set to return to a more traditional schedule, with Suzuka Circuit hosting the season finale as it was usual.[5]
Round | Circuit | Date |
---|---|---|
1 | Fuji Speedway | 4 April |
2 | Suzuka International Racing Course | 25 April |
3 | Autopolis | 16 May |
4 | Sportsland SUGO | 20 June |
5 | Twin Ring Motegi | 29 August |
6 | Okayama International Circuit | 3 October |
7 | Suzuka International Racing Course | 31 October |
References
- "Honda junior Ren Sato gets Super Formula Lights and Super GT seats".
- "2021 Season Honda Driver Line-Up". superformula.net. 15 January 2021. Retrieved 16 January 2021.
- "Michigami's Drago Corse squad returns to Super Formula grid". motorsport.com. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
- "Toyota names Super Formula drivers for 2021 season". www.motorsport.com. Retrieved 2021-01-22.
- "Super Formula unveils seven-round 2021 calendar". www.motorsport.com. Retrieved 2020-12-19.
External links
- Japanese Championship Super Formula official website (in English)
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