12 BTCC Days of Christmas

 

It’s that time of year again when we would like to wish you all a wonderful Christmas and a Happy New Year!

To celebrate, make sure you download the official BTCC App as part of your digital festive stocking, and get answering our exclusive questions on the App’s '12 BTCC Days of Christmas'.

Getting just one of the questions correct between 25 December – 5 January will automatically enter you into a draw to win a DVD review of the 2018 BTCC season, whereas anyone answering all 12 correctly will be in with a chance of winning a VIP day out at a BTCC event next year! Each question will be posted on the App via your ‘Alerts’ tab at 10am (UK time) and will be open for 24 hours, before the next question is posted. To download the App simply search 'BTCC' via the App Store or Google Play.

All that’s left is to say thank you to everyone involved in what was an unforgettable 60th anniversary campaign in 2018 and we’re banking on your unbelievable support again next year.

So, from everyone involved in the BTCC, we wish you a very Merry Christmas – see you in 2019!

Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship stars and cars to take centre-stage at Autosport International

The 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season will take centre stage at the Autosport International from 10-13 January, with a comprehensive line-up of stars and cars contesting the upcoming season attending.

Presented by Motorsport News, the feature will be the perfect place for fans to get up close to the show’s star drivers and to catch a first glimpse of the 2019 metal set to compete in the upcoming season. 

A Motorbase Ford Focus RS, AmD Tuning’s Honda Civic Type R, Ciceley Motorsport’s Mercedes-Benz A-Class and a Power Maxed Racing Vauxhall Astra will be on display on Stand 2580 across all four days of the event. 

Autosport International will also play host to number of the series’ leading drivers, including last year’s champion Colin Turkington. The triple world champion will be joined at Birmingham’s NEC by fellow champions Andrew Jordan, Ash Sutton and Matt Neal. A host of other racers including Matt Simpson and Tom Ingram will also be on hand to go up on the main Autosport stage to chat about the highs and lows of last year and expectations ahead of the 2019 season, while former BTCC champion Gordon Shedden will also make an appearance.

Matt James, Motorsport News Editor, said: “Launching the 2019 BTCC season at Autosport International, with some of next year’s most competitive cars and stars, is something fans will not want to miss out on.   

Butcher and Tordoff join Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing for BTCC 2019

Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing team begins its tenth season in the Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship with its sights set firmly on a regular challenge for top honours after confirming Rory Butcher and Sam Tordoff will form its driver pairing for the 2019 campaign.
 
Fielding a pair of race-winning Honda Civic Type Rs in the UK’s leading series next year, the West Thurrock-based team heads into the new season in better shape than ever after concluding deals with two of the series’ leading drivers in Butcher and Tordoff.

Fife racer Butcher will race in AmD colours for a second season following an eye-catching first full year of touring car competition with the team in 2018.

The 31-year-old enjoyed a stellar debut campaign at the wheel of an MG6 GT, with a best finish of sixth the highlight of several top ten finishes. The results earned Butcher tenth place in the Independents’ Trophy and fourth in the Jack Sears Trophy; only missing out on a top three finish in the latter on a count-back of wins.

In a real signal of Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing’s intent for the season ahead, Butcher will be joined in the two-car line-up by Yorkshireman Sam Tordoff who joins the team for what will be his sixth full season in the series.
 
Runner-up in the overall standings in 2016, seven-time BTCC race winner Tordoff spent a season in GT racing before returning to touring cars this year with Motorbase, taking eleventh in the standings and concluding his campaign with a victory at Silverstone and the best qualifying average of any driver on the grid.

With both drivers eyeing regular silverware in 2019, specifically a maiden BTCC victory for the Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing team, Butcher and Tordoff make their first Honda race appearances at the Brand Hatch curtain raiser in April 2019. 

Rory Butcher, Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing, said: “This year for me was all about gaining experience in the BTCC and learning the ropes after so long racing in GT cars. My aim was to build towards getting into a top package for 2019 to push forwards up the grid, and I’m delighted that I can do that and also stay with Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing to build on what we achieved this year. I have to thank Shaun, the team and all of my sponsors for making that possible.
 
“You only have to look at the stats for the Honda in recent years to see how well it has performed and on paper, there is huge potential for us to do some big things on track in 2019. It’s a big step up for both the team and I, and I’m confident that this package will give us a great chance of success. Certainly, I think it would be silly of me to not aim for podiums and race wins and I’ll also be looking at the bigger picture of getting as many points on the board as we can to see where it leaves us come the end of the season.
 
“It’s also great to have Sam coming onboard and I don’t think I could wish for a better team-mate. We enjoyed some good races together when I was with Celtic Speed in the Carrera Cup, and since he moved into the BTCC he has shown himself to be one of the top drivers with his results on track.
 
“I’m sure he’ll be a great reference point for me and I think we’ll work together well as a pairing to push the team forwards.”
 
Sam Tordoff, Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing driver, said: “The Honda is a car that I’ve wanted to race for some time and when Gordon Shedden beat me to the title in one, it only increased my desire to see what it was like. To be honest, I didn’t think it was going to happen and it wasn’t something that was on my radar, but then this deal with Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing came along and I couldn’t be more excited.
 
“I’m sure there will be some people who are surprised by this move and whilst there is some appeal in going into 2019 as an underdog, the reality is that I have one aim and that is to fight for the championship title. I showed strong pace on track in 2018 but things just didn’t go my way and eleventh in the standings wasn’t what I was looking for – and it isn’t what I’m chasing next year.
 
“Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing have put a lot of investment into not only getting the cars, but in strengthening the team behind the scenes in order to move to the next level and there can be no excuses. The Honda was on pole for the final round of 2018 and won races, so we have to be aiming to do the same from the outset and I’m confident we can raise a few eyebrows when the season gets underway – and will only get stronger as the year goes on.
 
“It was also important for me to know that I’d have a strong team-mate alongside me and that is exactly what I have in Rory. Some of his performances in the MG this year were above where the car should have been and I think we’ll form a strong partnership. In my eyes, with everything that Shaun and AmD have pulled together for this programme, there is no weak link.”
 
Shaun Hollamby, Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing joint team principal, said: “From the moment we agreed a deal to purchase the two Hondas, our focus has been on making sure we signed the right drivers who would give us the best chance of success on track in 2019. In Rory and Sam, I’m confident we have found the ideal pairing and we are massively excited about what we can achieve together next season.
 
“We knew when we brought Rory onboard this year that he was a top quality driver and his performances in the MG were outstanding. He fitted in with the team immediately and keeping him for a second season was a priority. Given the fact he now has a year of experience under his belt, I have no doubt at all that Rory will be a real contender for podium finishes and race wins.
 
“To bring in a driver of the calibre of Sam is fantastic for us as a team and we are expecting big things from him at the wheel of the Honda. He brings experience from running with three of BTCC’s top teams and is a proven race winner who has consistently shown himself to be one of the quickest drivers on the grid. He is also well aware of what needs to be done to build a championship challenge, and that has to be his target in 2019.
 
“Alongside the cars and the drivers, we have been working behind the scenes to strengthen our engineering team and made investments in the facilities back at base, which are an indication of how seriously we are taking this programme. Whilst the BTCC remains as competitive as ever, we aren’t here to make up the numbers and are fully focused on fighting at the sharp end of the grid and battling for silverware.” 

Rachel Abbott, Cobra Sport AmD with AutoAid/RCIB Insurance Racing joint team principal, said: “I’m delighted that we have been able to have secure both Sam and Rory for the 2019 season as we embark on a new challenge with the Hondas.
 
“A driver of Sam’s calibre is a great addition to the team and he brings a wealth of BTCC experience as well as a history of excellent results in the series. It is exciting to see what Rory is capable of at the wheel of the Honda after a solid season in the MG this year and I’m sure that as a pair, they will produce some fantastic results next year. I’m really looking forward to working with them both.”

Trade Price Cars Racing signs Jake Hill

Trade Price Cars Racing has signed Jake Hill for the 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship, with 24 year-old set to pilot one of the outfit's newly-acquired and rebuilt Audi S3s.

Goudhurst-based Hill rejoins the BTCC having taken a debut Independents' victory and overall podium in 2018. He previously campaigned the S3, which is being run by AmD Tuning for the Essex-based squad, back at the final round in 2015 and has since enjoyed promising full campaigns in both 2016 and 2017 in Britain's leading motorsport series.

"We have been working non-stop since the summer to get things in place to get back into the BTCC," said Hill. "I am absolutely buzzing to once again be part of the UK’s premier championship, especially as part of this exciting new project with Trade Price Cars Racing.

"I want to thank Dan (Kirby) and Andy (Wilmot) so, so much for making this possible and for giving me the chance to remind everyone what I can do. I am more fired-up than ever and ready to work as hard as possible to get the maximum out of the car, and see what we can achieve as a team.

"We have some fantastic partners, both new and existing, and we've a stunning livery to be revealed soon. We aim to be out testing early in the new year, and we have some very, very good people working with the team, so we expect to be well prepared.

"I’d also like to make it clear how much I appreciate the previous opportunities Motorbase Performance, Team HARD, RAR and AmD Tuning have given me, as well as all of the teams outside of the BTCC that put their faith in me. Shaun Hollamby has done so much for me, too, and has been great for my career since first helping me out back in 2010.

"They've all provided the platform for me to show people what I can do. Without their support, and that of my fantastic sponsors, friends, fans and of course my incredible family, I simply wouldn’t be able to do what I love."

Trade Price Cars owner Dan Kirby, having worked with Hill previously, said he was always top of the list of drivers the team wanted for their inaugural season in the BTCC.

"We have got to know Jake well over the past couple of seasons," said Kirby. "Having seen up-close how strong he is as a driver, his technical awareness, and how well he works with his partners off track it’s a real statement of our intent getting him on board.

"Everyone has seen just how quick he is, so we’re really confident he will be a key part of the team and in helping us achieve success, now and hopefully in the long-term."

"We’ve had a tough year," added Hill. "Everything happens for a reason and I am more focussed, physically fit, and determined than ever to succeed. This will be a fun ride. Being on the podium at Brands Hatch earlier this year was just incredible, so a bit more of that in 2019, please!" 

RCIB Insurance, AutoAid Breakdown extend Cobra Sport AmD Racing title sponsorship deal

Cobra Sport AmD Racing has agreed a deal with RCIB Insurance and AutoAid Breakdown to take on the role of title sponsor for its 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship programme.
 
West Thurrock-based AmD Tuning and long-time backers Cobra Sport Exhausts will campaign a pair of Honda Civic Type Rs in the series next year as part of a new and exciting partnership, replacing the two MG6 GTs that were run by AmD in 2018.
 
Those MGs were run with support from sister companies RCIB Insurance and AutoAid, which are headed by successful Essex-based businessman Mike Joseph.
 
Founded ten years ago, RCIB Insurance has become one of the fastest growing insurance companies in Europe whilst AutoAid Breakdown – part of the RCIB group since 2016 – has won numerous awards for providing all-inclusive breakdown cover at value-for0money prices not seen anywhere else.
 
With the relationship between Cobra Sport AmD Racing and RCIB Insurance/AutoAid having proven to be a success both on and off-track this year, talks have now been concluded on a deal to extend the agreement into a second season.
 
Discussions with potential drivers for the two RCIB Insurance/AutoAid-backed Hondas have also now drawn to a close, with a further announcement in due course about who will be at the wheel of the two cars when the new season kicks off at Brands Hatch in April 2019.
 
“Over the past twelve months we have developed a strong working relationship with Mike and his team, so we are delighted to have concluded an agreement to extend our deal with RCIB Insurance and AutoAid into a second season," said Cobra Sport AmD Racing joint Team Principal Shaun Hollamby.
 
“On track this year, we enjoyed some strong results with the MGs and the things we were able to do together off-track also worked extremely well for both parties; such as the competition to win a road-going replica of the car.
 
“As a team, we are excited about taking our BTCC programme to the next level with the Hondas, and are thrilled to have RCIB and AutoAid along for the ride as we look to build on the success we have already enjoyed together.
 
“We didn’t quite manage to get onto the overall podium this year, but with the drivers we have now signed to drive the two Hondas, I have no doubt that we will regularly be pushing for the top step in 2019.”
 
Mike Joseph, RCIB Insurance Managing Director said: “We are delighted to be working with Shaun and the team at AmD again this year and with the new cars - and our chosen drivers - I’m sure that the 2019 season will be a great success.
 
“With this extension of our relationship, we can not only look forward to another strong year on track, but can further promote the RCIB Insurance brand – and our sister company AutoAid and its award-winning breakdown cover – to a huge audience both trackside and on TV.
 
“We’re really looking forward to 2019.”

Tom Oliphant joins WSR for 2019 campaign

West Surrey Racing has announced the signing of Tom Oliphant for the 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship.

The Leamington Spa-based driver will compete for the team in what will be the 62nd running of the UK’s most popular motor racing series.

Oliphant, 28, made his BTCC debut in 2018 with Ciceley Motorsport and qualified inside the top 10 at his second event at Donington Park.

He repeated this achievement five more times across the season, recorded a best finish of seventh at Knockhill in August and scored his maiden fastest lap in the series at the final round on the Brands Hatch Grand Prix circuit.

His CV also counts a Ginetta GT4 Supercup title and British GT race wins, while he finished runner-up in the Porsche Cup Middle East and has scored a podium finish in both the Carrera Cup GB and the global 24H Series’ showpiece event, the Dubai 24 Hours.

“It’s a dream come true to join WSR for next year’s British Touring Car Championship and I’m incredibly proud that Dick Bennetts and the team have shown the faith in me to provide this opportunity," said Oliphant.

"WSR have been the Teams’ Champions for the past three years and their reputation is of the absolute highest standard, while BMW’s contribution to touring car racing in Britain and across the globe is immense, so I’m incredibly excited and proud to be a part of this programme.

"This gives me a great platform to achieve my targets in the BTCC, which are to take wins and podiums in 2019, finish in the top 10 of the points and compete for the Jack Sears Trophy.”

WSR’s BMW 125i M Sports scored 18 podiums and three wins in 2018 as the Sunbury-on-Thames team steered Colin Turkington to the Drivers’ title and claimed the Teams’ and Manufacturers’ crowns to complete a championship clean sweep with the help of fellow drivers Rob and Ricky Collard and Andrew Jordan. The team has won 10 overall BTCC titles in the past 10 seasons; all with BMW cars, plus nine Independents’ crowns.

Dick Bennetts, Team Principal, added: “We’re very pleased to announce Tom as the first member of our 2019 line-up. We have a long history of working with young drivers and turning them into front-runners and champions, and we’re sure Tom has all the right attributes to achieve his potential with us. We were impressed with him in the BTCC support categories and the speed he showed in his rookie season in 2018 has convinced us that he’ll be the ideal driver to help us push on and achieve our aim of even more success in 2019.”

Tingram and Speedworks top fans' poll

To celebrate the recent launch of the new official Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship app, we gave fans the opportunity to follow up on the annual TOCA Night of Champions awards evening, with a couple of brand new awards of their very own.
 
Voting ran for seven days and took place from within the BTCC app – available via the Apple Store and Google Play – to decide who would be crowned the inaugural BTCC Fans' Driver of the Year and their Team of the Year. The results were conclusive.
 
With Colin Turkington taking home the glory, and the coveted BTCC Drivers' trophy from the Night of Champions, he'd be a tough candidate to beat. Ash Sutton and Tom Chilton were also in the running, and further stiff competition, but it was Indy champ Tom Ingram that romped home in the fans' poll with 58 percent of the vote.
 
The competition was similarly fierce in the race to be honoured as Fans' Team of the Year. In the end, though, Speedworks Motorsport stretched their legs and sealed 56 percent of the vote to take the award.
 
Both Ingram and Speedworks Motorsport will receive a numbered, limited edition 60th anniversary BTCC print – each one of 100 produced – to mark their achievements.

TOCA releases confirmed entries for 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship

Following the entry approval deadline, Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship Series Organiser TOCA has today (3 December) advised that all 30 entries – the maximum number of TOCA BTCC Licences (TBLs) held by teams – are now confirmed for the 2019 season.

Teams must hold a TBL for each car entered and there are 30 TBLs controlled by teams, with two further licences retained by TOCA for its own use.

In keeping with the objective of reducing the size of the BTCC grid, TOCA will not be allocating its two TBLs to additional entrants, despite receiving serious applications from no fewer than three new teams wishing to participate in the forthcoming campaign.

Teams will announce driver line-ups and details of their cars and sponsorship agreements for 2019 over the coming weeks, prior to the release of the finalised entry list, set to be distributed by TOCA in March.

Confirmed entries for the 2019 Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship:

Aiden Moffat Racing, 1
AmD/Cobra Exhausts, 2
AmD/Trade Price Cars, 2
BTC Racing, 2
Ciceley Motorsport, 2
Excelr8 Motorsport, 2
Motorbase Performance, 3* 
Power Maxed Racing, 2
Simpson Racing, 1
Speedworks Motorsport, 1
Team Parker Racing, 1
Team BMR, 2
Team Dynamics, 2
Team HARD, 4
West Surrey Racing, 3 

*including one TBL on loan from HMS Racing

Hodgetts' double

To mark the news that Toyota GB is set to return to the Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship in 2019, we've gone back in time to the 1980's to recount Chris Hodgetts' BTCC title triumphs, via the Toyota GB Blog.

In the hands of Chris Hodgetts, the front-engined, rear-wheel drive Toyota AE86 Corolla GT Coupé defeated many more powerful cars to win the BTCC Drivers’ and Manufacturers’ crowns in 1986 and 1987.

The combination of Hodgetts’ aggressive driving style and the raucous sound of the Corolla GT’s 1587cc naturally aspirated engine are still fondly remembered three decades later by those who warmed to the tale of this underdog beating the odds.

The BTCC ran a multi-class system in the mid-80s, with cars divided according to engine capacity. Points were awarded in each class, meaning the overall champion could come from any division. For 1986, Team Toyota GB needed an experienced front-runner to pedal its Corolla GT in the 1301-1600cc category. Hodgetts fitted the bill, not least because he had previously enjoyed two seasons of success in a Celica GT in the BTCC in 1980 and 1981.

Hodgetts, then 34, shared Toyota GB’s desire to run a slick operation: “Although we were competing in the smaller class, we ran professionally,” he recalls. “I am a stickler for having things right. We had to do it properly and I was trying to make a mark for myself.”

The Toyota GB entry topped the class podium in the opening race at Silverstone, and Hodgetts never looked back, winning five more times in succession. That’s not to say that he had things easy; at every race he fought with bigger-engined cars from the classes above.

He had to extract every last ounce of performance from the Corolla GT. With about 180bhp and 190Nm from its 1587cc engine, but weighing just 800kgs, the Corolla GT had a good power-to-weight ratio, but Hodgetts’ rivals in cars with more power could stretch their legs on circuits with long straights.

Hodgetts had to maintain momentum, which meant braking as late as he dared into the corners and launching the Corolla GT over the kerbs on two wheels. “The secret of getting the most speed out of the car was wringing its neck!” he laughs. “It was great fun to drive, very light and the engine was very strong.”

The victory streak lasted until Brands Hatch in August, when Hodgetts finished second in class in an unpredictable, monsoon-hit race, but he returned to class-winning ways at Donington Park and clinched the 1986 BTCC crown. It brought him great satisfaction: “I didn’t really intend to be a giant-killer – I wanted to win the BTCC, plain and simple – but I enjoyed mixing it with more powerful cars and took so much pleasure from beating them.”

Hodgetts relinquished his title-winning Corolla GT to motorcycle racing legend Barry Sheene for the final round and instead drove a second version sponsored by Demon Tweeks. After following Sheene for a few laps, Hodgetts pulled clear for another class victory.

Toyota GB and Hodgetts remained together for 1987. A new, improved Corolla GT was built: more horsepower was extracted from the twin-cam 16-valve inline four-cylinder engine and the suspension and brakes were uprated.

Hodgetts dovetailed his BTCC title defence with outings in the European and World Touring Car Championships. Occasionally he would race in two events during the same weekend, flying from Britain to mainland Europe and back again to compete.

“Driving was my job,” says the man once known as ‘the flying milkman’, in deference to his former career. “I wasn’t doing it for the fun of it – it was what paid the mortgage and put food on the table.”

Hodgetts won at Silverstone, Oulton Park and Thruxton. There was a rare blip during a second visit to Thruxton, where he suffered excessive tyre wear and was beaten by another Corolla GT driven by Geoff Kimber-Smith, but thereafter he went unbeaten.

He faced stern opposition from an unlikely source in the support race to the British Grand Prix at Silverstone in July. TOM’S GB, the European division of Toyota’s Japanese racing team, entered former F1 driver Tiff Needell in a new front-wheel-drive Corolla FX-GT (AE82) hatchback. The TOM’S car was quick and Needell pushed Hodgetts hard before the reigning champ pulled clear.

Needell featured again in Hodgetts’ other memorable BTCC race in 1987. A novel two-driver endurance event was held at Oulton Park, with cars coming into the pits midway through the race to make a driver change.

Hodgetts and Needell each drove a Corolla GT, with the twist that they were partnering each other. They circulated nose-to-tail on the circuit, and then came into the pits on the same lap to swap machines. Changeable conditions almost wrecked the plan – the team’s mechanics only had one set of air guns with which to change the cars on to dry-weather tyres, so Needell had to remain on wet-weather rubber – but the results for that bizarre race show Hodgetts/Needell in third and Needell/Hodgetts in fifth…

Hodgetts has fond memories of the seasons with Toyota GB, and the run of two titles and 18 class wins from 20 starts cemented his position as one of Britain’s top touring car racers. “It was a wonderful time,” he says with a smile. “I was flat-out everywhere – and I still am today.”

Toyota's title winner

To mark the news that Toyota GB are set to return to the Kwik Fit British Touring Car Championship in 2019, we thought we'd take a look back at the marque's BTCC title-winning AE86 Corolla GT Coupe with Toyota GB.

The AE86 Corolla GT Coupe won back-to-back titles in 1986 and 1987, the feisty little rear-wheel drive machine beating larger, more powerful competition on its way to success.

Toyota celebrated the 30th anniversary of its title win last year, taking the covers off its replica Chris Hodgetts Motor Sport (CHMS) Corolla GT Coupe for an outing at Anglesey alongside the outgoing Avensis.

It would have been fantastic to have the actual championship-winning car present but the whereabouts of that original car is unknown; reports suggest that it ended up going overseas, but then the trail runs cold. So to coincide with the launch of the AE86’s spiritual successor – the front-engined, rear-wheel drive GT86 – Toyota GB commissioned this replica.

Alongside the modern-day BTCC contender, the simplicity of the ’80s Corolla GT Coupe is striking. Whereas contemporary BTCC regulations proscribe an extensive aerodynamic package that includes a frontal aero device with a flat floor and a specific rear wing profile, the Corolla is a far more humble machine. Beneath the Toyota GB livery run by the CHMS team, the body is stock Toyota fare. As specified by the FIA’s Group A regulations in force at the time, the front bumper, side skirts and boot spoiler were all fitted to the production AE86.

A key part of the success enjoyed by Chris Hodgetts was the powerful yet reliable Toyota 4A-GE twin-cam engine. Displacing 1587cc, it came in below the 1600cc limit for BTCC’s class D, and yet this compact four-cylinder engine reportedly developed around 195bhp for the 1987 season. The engine in our replica Corolla GT isn’t quite so highly strung as the original race engines, yet it still generates in the region of 170bhp.

A comparison with current BTCC regulations shows how the series has moved on. While engine capacity is now capped at 2.0 litres, the addition of turbo power and modern advances like direct-injection mean that the current crop of cars produce over 350bhp, double the power of the Corolla.

Equally important to the Corolla GT Coupe’s on-track performance was its superb handling. Stripped of unnecessary extras, it tipped the scales at only 800kgs, and its production-derived front-engined, rear-wheel drive layout improved matters further by evenly distributing that weight across the axles.

Thirty years on, the BTCC still mandates that cars use the same drivetrain layout as the base production model, so in contrast to the Corolla, the current BTCC Avensis – set to be replaced at Team Toyota GB with Speedworks Motorsport in 2019 by the all-new Corolla hatchback – employs a front-engined, front-wheel drive layout.

With a fantastic car beneath him throughout 1986 and 1987, Chris Hodgetts capitalised on his wealth of experience to dominate the class throughout both seasons.