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2018 FIA World Rallycross Championship

The 2018 FIA World Rallycross Championship presented by Monster Energy was the fifth season of the FIA World Rallycross Championship an auto racing championship recognised by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) as the highest class of international rallycross.

Johan Kristoffersson won the Drivers' Championship for the second season running during the World RX of the United States.[1]

Calendar

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The 2018 championship was contested over twelve rounds in Europe, Africa and North America.

Rnd. Event Dates Venue Class Winner Team Report
1 Spain  World RX of Barcelona 14–16 April Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
2 Portugal  World RX of Portugal 28–29 April Pista Automóvel de Montalegre, Montalegre Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
3 Belgium  World RX of Belgium 12–13 May Circuit Jules Tacheny Mettet, Mettet Supercar France  Sébastien Loeb France  Team Peugeot Total Report
RX2 Norway  Ben-Philip Gundersen Sweden  JC Raceteknik
4 United Kingdom  World RX of Great Britain 25–27 May Silverstone Circuit, Silverstone Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Sweden  Oliver Eriksson Sweden  Olsbergs MSE
5 Norway  World RX of Norway 9–10 June Lånkebanen, Hell Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Belgium  Guillaume De Ridder Sweden  Olsbergs MSE
6 Sweden  World RX of Sweden 30 June–1 July Höljesbanan, Höljes Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Belgium  Guillaume De Ridder Sweden  Olsbergs MSE
7 Canada  World RX of Canada 4–5 August Circuit Trois-Rivières, Trois-Rivières Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Sweden  Oliver Eriksson Sweden  Olsbergs MSE
8 France  World RX of France 1–2 September Circuit de Lohéac, Lohéac Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Sweden  Oliver Eriksson Sweden  Olsbergs MSE
9 Latvia  World RX of Latvia 15–16 September Biķernieku Kompleksā Sporta Bāze, Riga Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
10 United States  World RX of the United States 29–30 September Circuit of the Americas, Austin Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
11 Germany  World RX of Germany 13–14 October Estering, Buxtehude Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
12 South Africa  World RX of South Africa 24–25 November Killarney Motor Racing Complex, Cape Town Supercar Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden Report
RX2 Norway  Ben-Philip Gundersen Sweden  JC Raceteknik

Calendar changes

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Entries

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The permanent entrants of the 2018 Supercar season
 
Johan Kristoffersson won his second successive Drivers' Championship
 
Andreas Bakkerud left the departing Hoonigan Racing Division to join Mattias Ekström's EKS RX
 
GC Kompetition entered the championship, fielding two Renault Méganes built by Prodrive
 
GRX Taneco also entered, using two ex-WRC Hyundai i20's

Supercar

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Factory Teams
Constructor Entrant Car No. Drivers Rounds
Audi Sweden  EKS Audi Sport[5] Audi S1 5 Sweden  Mattias Ekström All
13 Norway  Andreas Bakkerud[6] All
51 Switzerland  Nico Müller 9
Peugeot France  Team Peugeot Total[7] Peugeot 208 9 France  Sébastien Loeb All
21 Sweden  Timmy Hansen All
71 Sweden  Kevin Hansen All
Volkswagen Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden[8] Volkswagen Polo R 1 Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson All
11 Norway  Petter Solberg All
Privateers / satellites
Constructor Entrant Car No. Drivers Rounds
Audi Hungary  Kárai Motorsport Egyesület[9] Audi A1 102 Hungary  Tamás Kárai 4
Belgium  Comtoyou Racing[10] Audi S1 67 Belgium  François Duval 3
BMW United Kingdom  Oliver Bennett BMW MINI Cooper 42 United Kingdom  Oliver Bennett 1-2, 4-6, 8-9, 11-12
Citroën Portugal  Mário Barbosa Citroën DS3 75 Portugal  Mário Barbosa 2
France  Hervé "Knapick" Lemonnier 84 France  "Knapick" 1, 4, 8
Ford Austria  Team STARD[11] Ford Fiesta 6 Latvia  Jānis Baumanis All
58 China  Qinghua Ma[9] 4
60 Finland  Joni-Pekka Rajala[12] 5
Republic of Ireland  Oliver O'Donovan 2 Republic of Ireland  Oliver O'Donovan 8
Austria  MJP Racing Team Austria[12][13] 31 Austria  Max Pucher 5
32 Austria  Alexander Wurz 5, 9
57 Finland  Toomas Heikkinen 8-9
177 United Kingdom  Andrew Jordan 4, 8
Sweden  Olsbergs MSE[14] Ford Fiesta ST 4 Sweden  Robin Larsson All
96 Sweden  Kevin Eriksson All
Portugal  Bompiso Racing Team Ford Focus 41 Portugal  Joaquim Santos 2
Hyundai Finland  GRX Taneco Team[15] Hyundai i20 7 Russia  Timur Timerzyanov All
68 Finland  Niclas Grönholm All
Peugeot France  Sébastien Loeb Racing[16] Peugeot 208 66 Belgium  Grégoire Demoustier1 [17] All
United Kingdom  Mark Higgins[9] 134 United Kingdom  Mark Higgins 4
France  Davy Jeanney 17 France  Davy Jeanney 8
France  Emmanuel Anne 29 France  Emmanuel Anne 8
France  Gaëten Serazin 62 France  Gaëten Serzain 8
France  Cyril Raymond 113 France  Cyril Raymond 11
Renault France  GC Kompetition[18] Renault Mégane R.S. 33 United Kingdom  Liam Doran 8-9, 11
36 France  Guerlain Chicherit All
74 France  Jérôme Grosset-Janin 1-7
92 Sweden  Anton Marklund 10-12
SEAT Germany  Münnich Motorsport[19] SEAT Ibiza 44 Germany  Timo Scheider 6, 8-9, 12
77 Germany  René Münnich 5, 11-12
Volkswagen Sweden  Marklund Motorsport[20] Volkswagen Polo 24 Norway  Tommy Rustad 4-5, 8
92 Sweden  Anton Marklund 4-5
Norway  Kjetil Larsen[12] 64 Norway  Kjetil Larsen 5, 11

Drivers with a green background are ineligible to score points towards the Championship for Teams.

RX2 Teams
Constructor Entrant Car No. Drivers Rounds
OMSE Sweden  JC Raceteknik Olsbergs MSE RX2 2 Norway  Ben-Philip Gundersen All
6 Sweden  William Nilsson All
69 Norway  Sondre Evjen All
77 Norway  Henrik Krogstad All
90 Sweden  Jimmie Walfridson 4
91 Sweden  Jonathan Walfridsson 4
99 Sweden  Marcus Höglund 3-4
Finland  Set Promotion 8 Norway  Simon Wågø Syversen 1-6
22 Finland  Sami-Matti Trogen 2-7
65 Finland  Jami Kalliomäki All
59 South Africa  Ashley Haigh-Smith 7
Norway  Glenn Haug 9 Norway  Glenn Haug 1-4
Sweden  Martin Jonsson 10 Sweden  Martin Jonsson 4
Sweden  Mats Oskarsson 11 Sweden  Mats Oskarsson 4
Sweden  Anders Michalak 12 Sweden  Anders Michalak All
Sweden  Hampus Rådström 17 Sweden  Hampus Rådström 4
Sweden  Olsbergs MSE 16 Sweden  Oliver Eriksson All
18 Sweden  Linus Östlund 4
53 United States  Cole Keatts All
96 Belgium  Guillaume De Ridder All
Sweden  Team Faren 21 United States  Conner Martell All
50 United Kingdom  Nathan Heathcote All
Belgium  Koen Pauwels 23 Belgium  Koen Pauwels 1
Norway  Petter Leirhol 27 Norway  Petter Leirhol 4
United States  Christian Brooks 44 United States  Christian Brooks 4
Sweden  Simon Olofsson 52 Sweden  Simon Olofsson 1-4, 6-7
Latvia  Sport Racing Technologies 55 Latvia  Vasily Gryazin All
75 Latvia  Edijs Oss 6
15 Latvia  Reinis Nitišs 7
Spain  Albert Llovera 66 Spain  Albert Llovera 2 1-6
Sweden  Santosh Berggren 68 Sweden  Santosh Berggren 4
Sweden  Johnny Andersson 86 Sweden  Johnny Andersson 4
Norway  Stein Frederic-Akre 98 Norway  Stein Frederic-Akre 4

2 Despite having been born in Andorra, Albert Llovera is recognised by the RX2 International Series and by extension, the FIA World Rallycross Championship as a Spanish driver for the duration of the 2018 season.[22][23]

Team changes

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Driver changes

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  • Andreas Bakkerud left Hoonigan Racing Division to join EKS RX.[25]
  • Toomas Heikkinen and Reinis Nitišs both left EKS RX.[26][27] Nitišs will instead re-join Set Promotion, the team in which he won the Super1600 championship with in 2013, and compete in the FIA European Rallycross Championship with an M-Sport Ford Fiesta. Heikkinen also joined the team, but stepped down from driving duties, becoming Nitišs’ team manager and a driving coach for Set Promotion's Super1600 drivers.
  • After spending a year with MJP Racing Team Austria in 2017, Kevin Eriksson returned to his father's Olsbergs MSE team alongside fellow countryman Robin Larsson, who will make his return to World RX after a year sabbatical.
  • Jérôme Grosset-Janin will partner team owner and driver Guerlain Chicherit, driving for the new GCK team.
  • Double European Rallycross champion Timur Timerzyanov left STARD to join GRX Taneco, partnering Niclas Grönholm in the new Hyundai i20.

Results and standings

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World Championship points are scored as follows:

Position
Round 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th 12th 13th 14th 15th 16th
Heats 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Semi-Finals 6 5 4 3 2 1
Final 8 5 4 3 2 1
  • A red background denotes drivers who did not advance from the round

FIA World Rallycross Championship for Drivers

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Pos. Driver BAR
Spain 
POR
Portugal 
BEL
Belgium 
GBR
United Kingdom 
NOR
Norway 
SWE
Sweden 
CAN
Canada 
FRA
France 
LAT
Latvia 
USA
United States 
GER
Germany 
RSA
South Africa 
Points
1 Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson 1 1 5 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 341
2 Sweden  Mattias Ekström 6a 7 4 4 2 6 4 4 2 5 2 2 248
3 Norway  Andreas Bakkerud 3 4 6 2 6 2 7 2 8 3 3 7 237
4 France  Sébastien Loeb 2 2 1 3 8 9 3 6 3 4 8 3 229
5 Norway  Petter Solberg 5 3 2 7 3 7 5 3 7 2 5 5b 227
6 Sweden  Timmy Hansen 7 6 3 8 5 4 2 5 5b 6b 7 6 192
7 Finland  Niclas Grönholm 4 10 11 5 7 11 8 11 4 8 4 13 146
8 Sweden  Kevin Hansen 13 8 9 6 4 5 9 7b 6 7 6 4 145
9 Latvia  Jānis Baumanis 8 11 10 14 12 10 6 13 14 11 11 9 98
10 Russia  Timur Timerzyanov 10 12 8 12 21 8 11 9 11 13 20 11 86
11 France  Guerlain Chicherit 12 5 10 15 15 14 15 12 10 9 13 12 68
12 France  Jérôme Grosset-Janin 11 14 14 10 14 3 13 47
13 Sweden  Kevin Eriksson 14 9 16 9 9 13b 10b 10b 16 10 10 14 38
14 Sweden  Anton Marklund 17 11 12b 9 8 35
15 Sweden  Robin Larsson 9 13 7 13 10 12 12b 17b 17 14 12 15 34
16 United Kingdom  Liam Doran 8 12 19 19
17 Norway  Tommy Rustad 11 13 16 14
18 Germany  Timo Scheider 17 25 13 10 13
19 Switzerland  Nico Müller 9 10
20 Finland  Toomas Heikkinen 14 15 5
21 Belgium  François Duval 13 4
22 Norway  Kjetil Larsen 19 14 3
23 United Kingdom  Andrew Jordan 20 15 2
24 Germany  René Münnich 17 16 16 2
25 Finland  Joni-Pekka Rajala 16 1
26 Isle of Man  Mark Higgins 16 1
27 France  "Knapick" 17 22 23 0
28 Portugal  Joaquim Santos 17 0
29 Austria  Alexander Wurz 18 18 0
30 Portugal  Mário Barbosa 18 0
31 France  Cyril Raymond 18 0
32 Hungary  Tamás Kárai 19 0
33 France  Davy Jeanney 20 0
34 France  Gaëten Serzain 21 0
35 Republic of Ireland  Oliver O'Donovan 22 0
36 Austria  Max Pucher 23 0
37 China  Qinghua Ma 23 0
38 France  Emmanuel Anne 24 0
39 United Kingdom  Oliver Bennett 15 16 21 20 15 18 20 15 18c -3
40 Belgium  Grégoire Demoustier 16 15 15 18 22 16 14 19 19 15 17 17b -4
Pos. Driver BAR
Spain 
POR
Portugal 
BEL
Belgium 
GBR
United Kingdom 
NOR
Norway 
SWE
Sweden 
CAN
Canada 
FRA
France 
LAT
Latvia 
USA
United States 
GER
Germany 
RSA
South Africa 
Points
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

a Ekström received no points from the final as he was disqualified after crashing into Solberg.
b Loss of fifteen championship points – stewards' decision
c Loss of ten championship points – stewards' decision

FIA World Rallycross Championship for Teams

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Pos. Team No. Drivers Points
1 Sweden  PSRX Volkswagen Sweden 1 Sweden  Johan Kristoffersson 568
11 Norway  Petter Solberg
2 Sweden  EKS Audi Sport 5 Sweden  Mattias Ekström 485
13 Norway  Andreas Bakkerud
3 France  Team Peugeot Total 9 France  Sébastien Loeb 421
21 Sweden  Timmy Hansen
4 Finland  GRX Taneco Team 28 Russia  Timur Timerzyanov 232
68 Finland  Niclas Grönholm
5 France  GC Kompetition 33 United Kingdom  Liam Doran 152
36 France  Guerlain Chicherit
74 France  Jérôme Grosset-Janin
92 Sweden  Anton Marklund
6 Sweden  Olsbergs MSE 4 Sweden  Robin Larsson 72
96 Sweden  Kevin Eriksson

RX2 International Series

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(key)

Pos. Driver BEL
Belgium 
GBR
United Kingdom 
NOR
Norway 
SWE
Sweden 
CAN
Canada 
FRA
France 
RSA
South Africa 
Points
1 Sweden  Oliver Eriksson 7 1 2 4 1 1 6 175
2 Belgium  Guillaume De Ridder 8 7 1 1 2 3 7 156
3 Norway  Henrik Krogstad 3 8 3 2 8 6 9 121
4 Norway  Ben-Philip Gundersen 1 10 8 5 7 11 1 119
5 Latvia  Vasily Gryazin 5 6 5 14 4 10 3 118
6 Norway  Sondre Evjen 2 3 4 22 11 5 2 106
7 Sweden  William Nilsson 4 12 6 7 9 8 4 93
8 Finland  Jami Kalliomäki 6 9 10 11 10 9 8 83
9 United States  Conner Martell 10 2 12 17 6 4 10 80
10 Finland  Sami-Matti Trogen 11 9 15 5 2 5 79
11 United Kingdom  Nathan Heathcote 14 17 11 10 13 7 11 49
12 Norway  Simon Wågø Syversen 11 13 7 24 12 12 38
13 Sweden  Anders Michalak 13 4 14 21 14 15 13 33
14 Sweden  Simon Olofsson 12 15 15 3 14 14 32
15 United States  Cole Keatts 16 14 16 27 3 13 12 31
16 Norway  Glenn Haug 9 5 13 18 25
17 United States  Christian Brooks 6 20
18 Sweden  Jimmie Walfridson 8 14
19 Sweden  Marcus Höglund 17 9 13
20 Norway  Petter Leirhol 12 6
21 Sweden  Linus Ostlund 13 4
22 Spain  Albert Llovera 17 16 18 29 15 17 3
23 Belgium  Koen Pauwels 15 2
24 Latvia  Reinis Nitišs 15 2
25 South Africa  Ashely Haigh-Smith 16 1
26 Latvia  Edijs Oss 16 1
27 Norway  Stein Frederic-Akre 16 1
28 Sweden  Santosh Berggren 19 0
29 Sweden  Mats Oskarsson 20 0
30 Sweden  Hampus Rådström 23 0
31 Sweden  Martin Jonsson 25 0
32 Sweden  Johnny Andersson 26 0
33 Sweden  Jonathan Walfridsson 28 0
Pos. Driver BEL
Belgium 
GBR
United Kingdom 
NOR
Norway 
SWE
Sweden 
CAN
Canada 
FRA
France 
RSA
South Africa 
Points

See also

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2018 in rallycross

References

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  1. ^ "KRISTOFFERSSON CROWNED WORLD RX CHAMPION AT COTA". FIA World RX. Archived from the original on 7 October 2018. Retrieved 7 October 2018.
  2. ^ "World Rallycross to race in USA from 2018". Speedcafe. 24 October 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  3. ^ "Silverstone reveals new World RX circuit". Speedcafe. 31 May 2017. Retrieved 24 October 2017.
  4. ^ Ridge, Hal (24 October 2017). "Hockenheim dropped from 2018 World Rallycross schedule". Autosport. Motorsport Network. Retrieved 25 October 2017.
  5. ^ "EKS TO RECEIVE AUDI SPORT BACKING IN WORLD RX". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2017-12-13. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  6. ^ "BAKKERUD JOINS EKSTROM DRIVING FOR EKS AUDI SPORT". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  7. ^ "PEUGEOT ARMS WORLD RX TITLE BID WITH FACTORY SUPPORT". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  8. ^ "PSRX VOLKSWAGEN SWEDEN DEBUT 2018 CAR AT METTET". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  9. ^ a b c "SPEEDMACHINE ATTRACTS CAPACITY WORLD RX SILVERSTONE ENTRY". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-05-05. Retrieved 2018-05-04.
  10. ^ "METTET RX ENTRY LIST REVEALED". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-04-20. Retrieved 2018-04-19.
  11. ^ Putniņš, Aldis (9 March 2018). "Jānis Baumanis stāsta par gatavošanos WorldRX sezonai un iespējamo ķīniešu komandas biedru - F1LV Blogs".
  12. ^ a b c "WURZ HEADLINES HELL RX ENTRY LIST". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-05-20. Retrieved 2018-05-19.
  13. ^ "MJP Racing Rallycross". www.facebook.com.
  14. ^ "Olsbergs MSE to make two-car WRX return".
  15. ^ Ridge, Hal. "Double WRC champion Marcus Gronholm launches Hyundai World RX team".
  16. ^ "SEBASTIEN LOEB RACING JOINS WORLD RX WITH DEMOUSTIER". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-03-06. Retrieved 2018-03-05.
  17. ^ "2018 WORLD RX ENTRY LIST REVEALED". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-03-10. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  18. ^ "FIA World Rallycross on Twitter".
  19. ^ "HOLJES RX ENTRY LIST REVEALED". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-06-12. Retrieved 2018-06-08.
  20. ^ "RUSTAD SET TO JOIN SPEEDMACHINE & HELL WORLD RX GRIDS". FIA World Rallycross. Archived from the original on 2018-04-01. Retrieved 2018-03-31.
  21. ^ "Driver Profile - Grégoire Demoustier". FIA. Archived from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  22. ^ "RX2 International Series - Drivers". Federation Internationale de l'Automobile. Archived from the original on 2 April 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  23. ^ "RX2 International Series - Provisional Championship Standing" (PDF). FIA. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 26 August 2018.
  24. ^ Ridge, Hal (4 October 2017). "Ken Block's Ford-backed Hoonigan team to quit World Rallycross". Autosport. Retrieved 5 October 2017.
  25. ^ Ridge, Hal (31 January 2018). "Bakkerud to Ekstrom's Audi World RX team after Block squad's exit". Autosport. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
  26. ^ Ridge, Hal (20 December 2017). "Ekstrom's team-mate Heikkinen leaves team amid RX uncertainty". Autosport. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
  27. ^ Ridge, Hal (25 January 2018). "Reinis Nitiss splits with Mattias Ekstrom's EKS Audi World RX team". Autosport. Retrieved 20 February 2018.
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