Asia Road Racing Championship
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Category | Motorcycle sport |
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Region | Asia |
Inaugural season | 1996 |
Classes |
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Official website | www |
ASB1000 | |
Constructors | Honda, Kawasaki, BMW, Yamaha, Ducati |
Tyre suppliers | Dunlop |
Riders' champion | 2019 ![]() |
Constructors' champion | BMW |
Teams' champion | ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team |
SuperSports 600cc | |
Constructors | Honda, Kawasaki, Yamaha |
Tyre suppliers | Dunlop |
Riders' champion | 2019 ![]() |
Constructors' champion | Yamaha |
Teams' champion | Yamaha Thailand Racing Team |
Asia Production 250cc | |
Constructors | Honda, Kawasaki, Yamaha, TVS |
Tyre suppliers | Dunlop |
Riders' champion | 2019 ![]() |
Constructors' champion | Kawasaki |
Teams' champion | Manual Tech KYT Kawasaki Racing |
Underbone 150cc | |
Constructors | Honda, Yamaha |
Tyre suppliers | Dunlop |
Riders' champion | 2019 ![]() |
Constructors' champion | Yamaha |
Teams' champion | UMA Racing Yamaha Philippine Team |
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The FIM Asia Road Racing Championship is the regional motorcycle road racing championship for Asia, held since 1996.
This championship is part of the production-based category of racing, similar to the Supersport World Championship, British Supersport Championship and AMA Supersport Championship. Modified versions of road-going motorcycles available to the public are featured in the race.
The championship is currently divided into four open-make classes - the ASB1000 (Asia Superbikes), SuperSports 600cc, Asia Production 250cc and Underbone 150cc. The new Asian Superbikes class revved off in 2019.
Overview[]
The Asia Road Racing Championship was first organized in 1996 as part of an Asian-wide initiative boost the development of the sport of motorcycle racing in the continent. The championship received the endorsement of the Fédération Internationale de Motocyclisme (FIM, "International Motorcycling Federation") in 1997 and has been recognized since as the Asian continental championship for the FIM.[1]
The commercial rights are owned by Two Wheels Motor Racing, with FIM Asia as the sports sanctioning body.
The 2020 season consists of seven rounds with two races organized per round.[2]
Circuits[]
The championship tours in Asia but is open to riders from all nationalities.
The Asia Road Racing 2020 season consisted of 14 races at 5 circuits in 5 Asian countries.
- Round 1, March 7 & 8, 2020, Malaysia, Sepang Circuit
- Round 2, May 9 & 10, 2020, Australia, The Bend Motorsport Park
- Round 3, June 27 & 28, 2020, Japan, Suzuka Circuit
- Round 4, July 25 & 26, 2020, China, Zhuhai International Circuit
- Round 5, August 22 & 23, 2020, Thailand Chang International Circuit
- Round 6, September 26 & 27, 2020, Malaysia, Sepang Circuit
- Round 7, November 28 & 29, 2020, Thailand Chang International Circuit
Other venues that had previously hosted the Asia Road Racing Championship included:
- Shah Alam, Malaysia, Shah Alam Circuit
- Bogor, Indonesia, Sentul International Circuit
- Nakhonchaisee, Thailand, Thailand Racing Circuit
- Batangas, Philippines, Batangas Racing Circuit
- Subic Bay, Philippines, Subic Bay International Raceway[3]
- Chennai (Madras), India, Madras Motor Race Track
- New Delhi, India, Buddh International Circuit
- Sepang, Malaysia, Sepang International Circuit
- Fukuoka, Japan, Autopolis Circuit
- Doha, Qatar, Losail International Circuit
2020 race classes and motorcycles[]
Race class | BMW | Ducati | Honda | Kawasaki | Yamaha | TVS |
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ASB1000 | S1000RR | Panigale V4R | CBR1000RR R Fireblade | ZX-10RR | YZF-R1M | |
SuperSports 600cc | CBR600RR | YZF-R6 | ||||
Asia Production 250cc | CBR250RR | Ninja 250 | YZF-R25 | TVS Apache RR 310 | ||
Underbone 150cc | RS150R | Y15ZR / Exciter 150 / Sniper 150 MXi / Jupiter MX/MX King 150 |
Current broadcasters[]
Worldwide[]
Live coverage, on-demand, and highlights for free practices, qualifications, and races is available on Asia Road Racing Championship's official Facebook page and Youtube channel, as well as Bikeandrace.com.[4]
Asia-Pacific[]
Country/Region | Broadcaster |
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Astro Arena |
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RTM | |
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Selected regional channels, online platforms, and social medias |
Star Sports | |
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tvOne |
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True4U |
Spain (the one and only European country)[]
All races are streamed through subscription service DAZN.
Winners by race class[]
1996–1999[]
The road racing series began on 2-stroke engines.
Year | Series Production 250cc (2-stroke) | Sports Production 150cc (2-stroke) | Underbone 125cc (2-stroke) | Underbone 110cc (2-stroke) |
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1996 | ![]() |
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1997 | ![]() |
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1998 | ![]() |
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1999 | ![]() |
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2000–2003[]
The gradual shift to 4-stroke engines began in 2000 when the SuperSports 600cc class replaced the previous 250cc bikes as the premier class of the championship.[5]
Year | SuperSports 600cc (4-stroke) | GP125 (2-stroke) | Underbone 125cc (2-stroke) | Underbone 110cc (2-stroke) |
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2000 | ![]() |
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2001 | ![]() |
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2002 | ![]() |
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2003 | ![]() |
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2004–2005[]
Year | SuperSports 600cc (4-stroke) | Underbone 125cc (2-stroke) | Underbone 115cc (4-stroke) |
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2004 | ![]() |
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2005 | ![]() |
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2006–2014[]
Year | SuperSports 600cc (4-stroke) | Underbone 115cc (4-stroke) | Underbone 115cc (Under 21) | Asia Dream Cup |
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2006 | ![]() |
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2007 | ![]() |
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2008 | ![]() |
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2009 | ![]() |
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2010 | ![]() |
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2011 | ![]() |
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2012 | ![]() |
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2013 | ![]() |
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2014 | ![]() |
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2015–2018[]
Year | SuperSports 600cc (4-stroke) | Asia Production 250cc (4-stroke) | Underbone 130cc (4-stroke) | Asia Dream Cup | Suzuki Asian Challenge |
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2015 | ![]() |
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2016 | ![]() |
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2017 | ![]() |
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2018 | ![]() |
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2019–2020[]
Year | ASB1000 (4-stroke) | SuperSports 600cc (4-stroke) | Asia Production 250cc (4-stroke) | Underbone 150cc (4-stroke) |
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2019 | ![]() |
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2020 |
Notable achievements[]
The Asia Road Racing Championship is a mix of well-known riders racing against upcoming talents from the Asian region. Some of the big names that have contributed to the growth of the sport of road racing in Asia include Katsuaki Fujiwara, Ryuichi Kiyonari,[6] Yuki Takahashi and Noriyuki Haga.[7] In 2016, Anthony West was the latest addition in the roster of internationally recognized names.[8] For the 2019 season, Australian racers who have participated in both MotoGP and World Superbike take part in the series, they are Broc Parkes, and Bryan Staring.
This formula of pitting upcoming talents against seasoned campaigners have resulted in a number of successes. In recent years, riders from the Asian region are beginning to make their breakthrough into the MotoGP arena. These include:
- Shahrol Yuzy Ahmad Zaini (250cc, 1996 to 2002)
- Azlan Shah Kamaruzaman (Moto2, 2013 to 2015)[9]
- Hafizh Syahrin Abdullah (Moto2, 2011 to 2017; MotoGP, 2018 to present)
- Thitipong Warokorn (Moto2, 2013 to 2015)
- Rafid Topan Sucipto (Moto2, 2012–13, 2018)
- Doni Tata Pradita (GP250cc, 2008; and Moto2, 2013)
- Dimas Ekky Pratama (Moto2, 2019)
- Khairul Idham Pawi (Moto3, 2016; Moto2, 2017 to present)[10]
- Hiroki Ono (Moto3, 2013 to 2016)
On July 4 to 11, 2016, five young riders from the Asia Production 250cc class became the first batch of riders to be trained at the VR46 Academy in Italy as part of the Yamaha|VR46 Master Camp. They were (21, Thailand), (19, Indonesia), Galang Hendra Pratama (17, Indonesia), (16, Japan) and Kasma Daniel Kasmayudin (16, Malaysia).[11][12]
References[]
- ^ "Road Racing - FIM ASIA". Retrieved 2016-07-11.
- ^ (ARRC)
- ^ "The Marlboro Asia Pacific Philippines leg at Subic Bay - by Paul Peczon". www.dot.com.ph. Retrieved 2016-07-11.
- ^ "Asia Road Racing Championship on Instagram: "The 1st Race Week of #ARRC2020 is here! Catch Round 1 LIVE on