1993 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship

The 1993 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship was the inaugural season of the Japan Automobile Federation All-Japan Grand Touring Car Championship and the successor series to the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship as international prototypes were in a state of flux in the early 1990s, and sportscar racing globally had switched from prototypes to grand tourers. It was marked as well as the eleventh season of a JAF-sanctioned sports car racing championship dating back to the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship.[1]

1993 All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship
Previous: 1992 Next: 1994

Most events were staged as joint-races with the upstart Japan Super Sports Sedan Championship, and the IMSA GT Championship, with only a small handful of cars entered in the "GTS" category that would later evolve into the current GT500 class - and in fact, only one such car took part in that year's Suzuka 1000km against several Group C prototypes and sports cars from the N1 Endurance Series. Because the format and structure of the races were so different from what would come in future seasons, the 1993 season is not recognized by the GT Association (GTA), who were incorporated in 1994 to promote the All-Japan GT Championship (later to become Super GT).

The championship was contested over four rounds,[2] and Masahiko Kageyama was declared the champion, driving a Nissan Skyline GT-R.[3] He would also win the final All-Japan Touring Car Championship to be run to Group A regulations in the same year.

Schedule

Round Race Circuit Date
1 IMSA GT Fuji Fuji Speedway March 28
2 Fuji 6 Hours Fuji Speedway May 30
3 Suzuka 1000 km Suzuka Circuit August 29
4 Fuji F3000 Fuji Speedway October 17

Race results

Round Circuit Date Pole Position Winner
1 Fuji Speedway March 28 #2 NISMO #2 NISMO
Masahiko Kageyama Masahiko Kageyama
2 Fuji Speedway May 30 #2 NISMO #2 NISMO
Masahiko Kageyama Masahiko Kageyama
3 Suzuka Circuit August 29 #27 Nova Engineering #25 Le Mans Company
Mauro Martini
Heinz-Harald Frentzen
Takao Wada
Toshio Suzuki
4 Fuji Speedway October 17 #2 NISMO #2 NISMO
Masahiko Kageyama Masahiko Kageyama

References

  1. "History of JGTC and Super GT Racing". imca-slotracing.com. 19 October 2007. Archived from the original on 8 February 2010. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  2. "JGTC 1993". wspr-racing.com. 10 April 2003. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
  3. "JGTC – final positions and tables". classicscars.com. 10 April 2003. Retrieved 6 March 2010.


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