Supersport 300 World Championship
The Supersport 300 World Championship is a motorcycle racing competition on paved surfaces, for production-based motorcycles. Created in 2017, the championship runs as a support class to the Superbike World Championship.[1]
Category | Motorcycle sport |
---|---|
Country | Europe |
Inaugural season | 2017 |
Riders' champion | Manuel González |
Official website | worldsbk.com |
Current season |
History
The Supersport 300 World Championship was born in 2017 as a replacement for the European Junior Cup category that worked as a hotbed of the future stars of Superbike until 2016, this new championship has world-class status by the FIM. Like its predecessor, the championship runs alongside the World Superbike Championship and the Supersport World Championship but only in European rounds.[2]
The objective of this category is to create a ladder to Superbike in an accessible way and with a mechanical equality that allows all the drivers to have the same winning options. The championship began on April 2, 2017 at MotorLand Aragón, in a race that had 37 drivers who crowned Scott Deroue as the first driver to win a race in category 3. Spaniard Marc García was the first Supersport 300 world champion to overcome the Italian Alfonso Coppola by one point.
On September 30, 2018, Ana Carrasco, who had been a year earlier the first woman to win a world championship race organized by FIM, became the first female champion of the world in the history of motorcycle racing.[3]
On 2019 season, in order to face the big entry list[4] (caused by the success of previous edition), FIM split Practice and Qualifying into 2 groups with best 30 riders racing on Sunday.[5]
Regulations
According to the regulation approved by the International Motorcycling Federation, drivers must be at least fifteen years of age to participate. Despite being a world championship, it never ran outside Europe at the moment.
The bikes allowed to run in this category are not exclusively 300 engine capacity, which is why the minimum weight and revolutions per minute vary for each motorcycle model.
Starting from the Aragon GP 2018 the limits imposed by the FIM are the following:[6]
- KTM RC 390 R, single cylinder, minimum weight 136 kg, limit revolutions per minute 10.450 RPM
- Yamaha YZF-R3, twin-cylinder, minimum weight 140 kg, limit revolutions per minute 13,100 RPM
- Kawasaki Ninja 400, twin cylinder, minimum weight 150 kg, limit revolutions per minute 10,850 RPM
- Honda CBR500R, twin cylinder, minimum weight 143 kg, limit revolutions per minute 11,200 RPM
Champions
Riders' championship
Season | Rider | Pts | Bike | Team |
---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | Marc García | 139 | Yamaha YZF-R3 | Halcourier Racing |
2018 | Ana Carrasco | 93 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | DS Junior Team |
2019 | Manuel González | 161 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | Kawasaki ParkinGO Team |
2020 | Jeffrey Buis | 220 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 | MTM Kawasaki Motoport |
Manufacturers' championship
Season | Manufacturer | Pts | Bike |
---|---|---|---|
2017 | Yamaha | 196 | Yamaha YZF-R3 |
2018 | Kawasaki | 176 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 |
2019 | Kawasaki | 216 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 |
2020 | Kawasaki | 335 | Kawasaki Ninja 400 |
Note
- https://www.yamaha-racing.com/worldssp300/about
- https://ultimatemotorcycling.com/2017/02/08/2017-world-superbike-calendar-13-round-schedule/
- https://www.cycleworld.com/ana-carrasco-crowned-2018-fim-supersport-300-world-champion-in-france/
- https://www.bikeandrace.com/world-superbike/supersport-300-50-rider-provisional-entry-list-2019-season/
- https://www.mcnews.com.au/worldssp300-to-see-new-format-in-2019/
- - Supersport 300 Assen: Rivisto il regolamento del Mondiale