2011 European Rally Championship

The 2011 European Rally Championship season was the 59th season of the FIA European Rally Championship, the European continental championship series in rallying. The season consisted of eleven rallies, beginning with Rally 1000 Miglia on 14 April 2011 and concluding with the Rallye International du Valais on 29 October 2011. Only drivers registered for the European championship were allowed to score points at the events, and they had to compete in a minimum of 8 rallies to be classified in the final championship standings. 28 drivers were registered for the season, the majority (15) were from Italy, four were from Poland, three from Bulgaria, two each from Slovenia and France and one each from Czech Republic and Switzerland.

As in the previous year, Italian driver Luca Rossetti won the European championship, driving an Abarth Grande Punto S2000 car. He won the European championship category in 5 rallies. Second place in the final standings was claimed by Luca Betti (Italy), who won 2 events. Polish driver Michał Sołowow was the ERC winner in 3 events, but did not compete in enough rallies to be classified in the final standings.

Calendar edit

The original calendar for the 2011 season featured 12 rallies, the 11 rallies from the previous season plus Rally Bulgaria which returned after one year with the WRC. However, the first event, the ELPA Rally in Greece, was cancelled, leaving 11 rallies, 9 of them on tarmac.[1] Two events were shared with the Intercontinental Rally Challenge: Ypres and Zlín.

Round Date Event Surface Other series
1–3 April   ELPA Rally cancelled
1 14–16 April   Rally 1000 Miglia tarmac Italian
2 20–22 May   Croatia Rally tarmac Croatian
3 3–5 June   Bosphorus Rally gravel Turkish
4 23–25 June   Ypres Rally tarmac IRC, Belgian
5 8–10 July   Rally Bulgaria tarmac Bulgarian
6 4–6 August   Rally Vinho da Madeira tarmac Portuguese, Madeiran
7 16–18 August   Barum Rally Zlín tarmac IRC, Czech
8 9–11 September   Rally Príncipe de Asturias tarmac Spain
9 23–25 September   Rally Poland gravel Polish
10 14–16 October   Rallye d'Antibes Côte d'Azur tarmac French
11 27–29 October   Rallye International du Valais tarmac Swiss

Results and standings edit

Results and statistics edit

Note: the results and statistics only consider drivers starting in the ERC.

Colour Rally Surface
Gold Gravel
Silver Tarmac
Round Rally name ERC Podium finishers ERC Statistics
Rank Driver Car Time Stages Length Starters Finishers
1   Rally 1000 Miglia
(14–16 April)
Result source: [1]
1   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2:57:17.3 14 247.43 km 17 11
2   Renato Travaglia Škoda Fabia S2000 +1:17.3
3   Alessandro Perico Peugeot 207 S2000 +1:39.8
2   Croatia Rally
(20–22 May)
Result source: [2]
1   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2:21:09.1 15 246.45 km 13 10
2   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 +1:41.1
3   Maciej Oleksowicz Ford Fiesta S2000 +2:51.9
3   Bosphorus Rally
(3–5 June)
Result source: [3]
1   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 2:28:14.7 16 238.30 km 7 5
2   Maciej Oleksowicz Ford Fiesta S2000 +34.9
3   Szymon Ruta Peugeot 207 S2000 +4:42.6
4   Ypres Rally
(24–25 June) — Results and report
Result source: [4]
1   Michał Sołowow Ford Fiesta S2000 2:46:10.7 18 297.10 km 7 4
2   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 +1:18.2
3   Antonín Tlusťák Škoda Fabia S2000 +5:22.1
5   Rally Bulgaria
(8–10 July)
Result source: [5]
1   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2:28:35.9 10 257.76 km 10 10
2   Petar Gyoshev Peugeot 207 S2000 +7.3
3   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 +34.8
6   Rali Vinho da Madeira
(4–6 August)
Result source: [6]
1   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2:54:40.4 19 268.50 km 7 6
2   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 +4:00.3
3   Antonín Tlusťák Škoda Fabia S2000 +7:08.0
7   Barum Rally Zlín
(16–18 August)
Result source: [7]
1   Michał Sołowow Ford Fiesta S2000 2:20:52.4 15 248.48 km 9 8
2   Giandomenico Basso Proton Satria Neo S2000 +52.1
3   Maciej Oleksowicz Ford Fiesta S2000 +2:09.0
8   Rally Príncipe de Asturias
(9–11 September)
Result source: [8]
1   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 2:31:15.1 13 231,56 km 6 4
2   Antonín Tlusťák Škoda Fabia S2000 +3:30.7
3   Szymon Ruta Peugeot 207 S2000 +3:34.5
9   Rally Poland
(23–25 September)
Result source: [9]
1   Michał Sołowow Ford Fiesta S2000 2:09:17.9 13 230.23 km 7 7
2   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 +4:17.6
3   Szymon Ruta Peugeot 207 S2000 +4:44.8
10   Rallye d'Antibes Côte d'Azur
(14–16 October)
Result source: [10]
1   Luca Rossetti Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2:56:38.1 14 259.91 km 8 6
2   Luca Betti Peugeot 207 S2000 +23.6
3   Maciej Oleksowicz Ford Fiesta S2000 +6:23.0
11   Rallye International du Valais
(27–29 October)
Result source: [11]
1   Antonín Tlusťák Škoda Fabia S2000 3:12:48.4 17 264.71 km 6 4
2   Maciej Oleksowicz Ford Fiesta S2000 +10:28.2
3   Rok Turk Peugeot 207 R3T +14:07.4

Drivers' championship edit

For the final classification in a rally, the winner got 25 points, the runner-up 18 and the third placed driver 15. Drivers ranked 4 to 10 got 12–10–8–6–4–2–1 point(s). Additionally, the top five of every leg got 7–5–3–2–1 point(s).[2] The season was divided into two parts (first 5 and last 6 rallies). From each part, only the 4 best results for each driver counted towards the championship. To qualify for the final standings, a driver had to participate in at least 5 events and in at least 1 in each part of the season.[3]

Pos Driver ITA
 
CRO
 
TUR
 
BEL
 
BUL
 
POR
 
CZE
 
ESP
 
POL
 
FRA
 
SUI
 
 Pts 
1   Luca Rossetti 1 1 2 1 1 2 1 Ret 253
2   Luca Betti 4 2 1 Ret 3 2 5 1 2 Ret 223
3   Antonín Tlusťák 9 6 4 3 5 3 4 2 4 4 1 164
4   Maciej Oleksowicz 7 3 2 4 Ret 3 Ret Ret 3 2 163
5   Szymon Ruta 5 3 7 4 3 3 Ret 101
6   Rok Turk 10 8 9 5 8 5 3 59
7   Giovanni Vergnano Ret 10 Ret 10 6 4 Ret 6 4 51
Not enough events to qualify for championship
  Michał Sołowow 1 1 1 (115)
  Dimitar Iliev 5 4 4 (46)
  Renato Travaglia 2 Ret Ret (35)
  Giandomenico Basso Ret 2 (31)
  Petar Gyoshev Ret 2 (28)
  Maciej Rzeźnik 7 6 Ret Ret (23)
  Alessandro Perico 3 (21)
  Stefano Albertini 6 Ret 6 (18)
  Todor Slavov 5 8 Ret (17)
  Piero Longhi Ret Ret (7)
  Marco Cavigioli 7 (6)
  Marco Signor 8 (4)
  Elia Bossalini Ret 9 (2)
  Cyril Vosahlo Ret (1)
Key
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Did not finish (Ret)
Black Excluded (EX)
Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Cancelled (C)
Blank Withdrew entry from
the event (WD)

2WD drivers' championship edit

Any driver participating in a 2WD car automatically also scored points for the 2WD championship.

Pos Driver ITA
 
CRO
 
TUR
 
BEL
 
BUL
 
POR
 
CZE
 
ESP
 
POL
 
FRA
 
SUI
 
 Pts 
1   Rok Turk 3 1 2 1 2 1 1 231
2   Giovanni Vergnano Ret 2 Ret 3 2 1 Ret 2 2 186
Not enough events to qualify for championship
  Todor Slavov 1 1 Ret (85)
  Stefano Albertini 1 Ret 1 (78)
  Marco Signor 2 (28)
  Andrea Dallavilla Ret (2)

External links edit

References edit

  1. ^ "FIA European Rally Championship 2011 – Calendar". rally-erc.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  2. ^ "ERC Unofficial Standings". rally-erc.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  3. ^ "Clarification of the number of results counted in ERC 2011". rally-erc.com. 18 May 2011. Archived from the original on 6 October 2011. Retrieved 19 May 2011.