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GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup

The Fanatec GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup powered by AWS, formerly for sponsorship reasons the Blancpain Endurance Series from 2011 to 2015 and Blancpain GT Series Endurance Cup from 2016 to 2019, is a sports car racing series developed by SRO Motorsports Group and the Royal Automobile Club of Belgium (RACB) with approval from the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA). It features grand tourer racing cars modified from production road cars complying with the FIA's GT3 regulations. The series's goal is to be an endurance racing championship for GT3 cars, similar to the FIA World Endurance Championship which were using GTE cars and Le Mans Prototypes (now GT3 and Le Mans Hypercars). The series was primarily sponsored by Swiss watchmaker Blancpain, and the company's Lamborghini Super Trofeo series serve as support races. In 2019, SRO announced that their sponsorship deal with Blancpain had been discontinued and the series was renamed the GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup for the 2020 season.

GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup
CategoryGrand tourer
Endurance racing
CountryEurope
Inaugural season2011
Tyre suppliersMichelin (2011–2012)
Pirelli (2013–present)
Drivers' championAndorra Jules Gounon
Timur Boguslavskiy
Switzerland Raffaele Marciello
Teams' championFrance AKKodis ASP Team
Official websitewww.gt-world-challenge-europe.com
Current season
Presentation of the inaugural 2011 Blancpain Endurance Series season

Format

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Audi R8 LMS during Blancpain Endurance Series season
 
Audi R8 LMS Ultra from W Racing Team during the 2014 Blancpain Endurance Series round at the Nürburgring
 
Nissan GT-R GT3 driven by the 2015 Champions Alex Buncombe, Wolfgang Reip and Katsumasa Chiyo at the 2015 24 Hours of Spa
 
Mercedes AMG GT3 from Black Falcon at the 2018 24 Hours of Spa
 
The Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo driven by Jules Gounon, Daniel Juncadella and Raffaele Marciello that won the 2022 Overall Championship

The GT World Challenge Europe Endurance Cup reestablishes several elements of the former FIA GT Championship, with three hour endurance races held on European circuits such as Monza and Silverstone, as well as a continuation of the Spa 24 Hours. The races feature five classes derived from the FIA's GT3, GT4, and Supersport regulations, with the GT3 cars divided into a class for professional driver line-ups (GT3 Pro), a class for a mixed team of professional and amateurs (GT3 Pro-Am), and a class for gentleman drivers who use cars at least one year old (GT3 Am). The FIA's ranking system for drivers is utilized in determining what class each entry is eligible for. The GT4 category remained its own class.[1]

For the 2012 season, the GT4 and Supersport category were dropped and the GT3 Citation class was modified into the Gentlemen class.[2] In 2013, grids have reached 60 cars for regular races.

The series uses extensive performance balancing and handicap weights to equalise the cars' performance.

Champions

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Drivers

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Year Pro Cup (2011–2015)
Overall (2016–present)
Silver Cup Gold Cup Pro-Am Cup Gentlemen Trophy (2011–2014)
Am Cup (2015–2020)
Bronze Cup (2022-present)
GT4
2011 Belgium  Greg Franchi Not held Not held Netherlands  Niek Hommerson
Belgium  Louis Machiels
France  Georges Cabannes United Kingdom  Alex Buncombe
France  Jordan Tresson
United Kingdom  Christopher Ward
2012 Germany  Christopher Haase
Germany  Christopher Mies
Monaco  Stéphane Ortelli
Netherlands  Niek Hommerson
Belgium  Louis Machiels
Switzerland  Pierre Hirschi
United Kingdom  Robert Hissom
Not held
(discontinued)
2013 Germany  Maximilian Buhk Spain  Lucas Ordóñez France  Jean-Luc Beaubelique
France  Jean-Luc Blanchemain
France  Patrice Goueslard
2014 Belgium  Laurens Vanthoor Italy  Stefano Gai
Italy  Andrea Rizzoli
Portugal  Francisco Guedes
United Kingdom  Peter Mann
2015 United Kingdom  Alex Buncombe
Japan  Katsumasa Chiyo
Belgium  Wolfgang Reip
United Kingdom  Duncan Cameron
Republic of Ireland  Matt Griffin
United Kingdom  Ian Loggie
United Kingdom  Julian Westwood
2016 United Kingdom  Rob Bell
France  Côme Ledogar
New Zealand  Shane van Gisbergen
Italy  Alessandro Bonacini
Poland  Michał Broniszewski
Italy  Andrea Rizzoli
Russia  Vadim Gitlin
Australia  Liam Talbot
Italy  Marco Zanuttini
2017 Italy  Mirko Bortolotti
Italy  Andrea Caldarelli
Germany  Christian Engelhart
United Kingdom  Jonathan Adam
Oman  Ahmad Al Harthy
Belgium  Jacques Duyver
South Africa  David Perel
Italy  Marco Zanuttini
2018 Netherlands  Yelmer Buurman
Germany  Maro Engel
Germany  Luca Stolz
Switzerland  Alex Fontana
Canada  Mikaël Grenier
Switzerland  Adrian Zaugg
United Kingdom  Chris Buncombe
United Kingdom  Nick Leventis
United Kingdom  Lewis Williamson
Switzerland  Adrian Amstutz
Russia  Leo Machitski
2019 Italy  Andrea Caldarelli
Italy  Marco Mapelli
Germany  Nico Bastian
Russia  Timur Boguslavskiy
Brazil  Felipe Fraga
Oman  Ahmad Al Harthy
Republic of Ireland  Charlie Eastwood
Turkey  Salih Yoluç
Switzerland  Adrian Amstutz
Russia  Leo Machitski
2020 Italy  Alessandro Pier Guidi Finland  Patrick Kujala
United Kingdom  Alex MacDowall
Denmark  Frederik Schandorff
United Kingdom  Chris Goodwin
Sweden  Alexander West
France  Stéphane Tribaudini
2021 Italy  Alessandro Pier Guidi
Denmark  Nicklas Nielsen
France  Côme Ledogar
Switzerland  Alex Fontana
Switzerland  Ricardo Feller
Switzerland  Rolf Ineichen
United Kingdom  Chris Froggatt
Hong Kong  Jonathan Hui
Not held
2022 France  Jules Gounon
Spain  Daniel Juncadella
Switzerland  Raffaele Marciello
Denmark  Benjamin Goethe
France  Thomas Neubauer
France  Jean-Baptiste Simmenauer
United Kingdom  Oliver Millroy
Denmark  Frederik Schandorff
United States  Brendan Iribe
Belgium  Louis Machiels
Italy  Andrea Bertolini
Italy  Stefano Costantini
Saudi Arabia  Reema Juffali
Germany  Tim Müller
Germany  Valentin Pierburg
United States  George Kurtz
Year Pro Cup (2011–2015)
Overall (2016–present)
Gold Cup Silver Cup Bronze Cup Pro-Am Cup GT4
2023 Andorra  Jules Gounon
  Timur Boguslavskiy
Switzerland  Raffaele Marciello
Belgium  Nicolas Baert
Belgium  Maxime Soulet
Chile  Benjamín Hites
Austria  Clemens Schmid
Netherlands  Glenn van Berlo
Italy  Eddie Cheever III
United Kingdom  Chris Froggatt
Hong Kong  Jonathan Hui
Switzerland  Alex Fontana
Switzerland  Ivan Jacoma
Switzerland  Nicolas Leutwiler
Not held
(discontinued)

Teams

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Year Pro Cup (2011–2015)
Overall (2016–present)
Silver Cup Gold Cup Pro-Am Cup Gentlemen Trophy (2011–2014)
Am Cup (2015–2020)
Bronze Cup (2022-present)
GT4
2011 Belgium  Belgian Audi Club Not held Not held Germany  Vita4One France  Ruffier Racing United Kingdom  RJN Motorsport
2012 Belgium  Belgian Audi Club Team WRT Italy  AF Corse France  Saintéloc Racing Not held
(discontinued)
2013 Belgium  Marc VDS Racing Team United Kingdom  Nissan GT Academy Team RJN France  SOFREV Auto Sport Promotion
2014 Belgium  Belgian Audi Club Team WRT Italy  Scuderia Villorba Corse Italy  AF Corse
2015 Belgium  Belgian Audi Club Team WRT Italy  AF Corse France  AKKA ASP
2016 United Kingdom  Garage 59 Switzerland  Kessel Racing Switzerland  Kessel Racing
2017 United Kingdom  Bentley Team M-Sport Oman  Oman Racing Team with TF Sport Switzerland  Kessel Racing
2018 Germany  (Mercedes-AMG Team) Black Falcon Switzerland  961 Corse / Italy  AF Corse United Kingdom  Barwell Motorsport
2019 China  Orange1 FFF Racing Team France  AKKA ASP Team Oman  Oman Racing with TF Sport United Kingdom  Barwell Motorsport
2020 Italy  AF Corse United Kingdom  Barwell Motorsport United Kingdom  Garage 59 France  CMR
2021 Belgium  Team WRT Switzerland  Emil Frey Racing United Kingdom  Sky - Tempesta Racing Not held
2022 France  AKKodis ASP Team Belgium  Team WRT United Kingdom  Inception Racing Germany  SPS Automotive Performance Germany  SPS Automotive Performance
Year Pro Cup (2011–2015)
Overall (2016–present)
Gold Cup Silver Cup Bronze Cup Pro-Am Cup GT4
2023 France  AKKodis ASP Team Belgium  Comtoyou Racing Austria  GRT Grasser Racing Team United Kingdom  Sky – Tempesta Racing Germany  Car Collection Motorsport

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The new GT Endurance Series in detail!". planetlemans.com. 2010-11-03. Archived from the original on 2010-11-12. Retrieved 2010-11-03.
  2. ^ "2012 Blancpain Endurance Series Presentation (english)". SRO. 2012. Archived from the original on 2012-03-21. Retrieved 2012-03-20. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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