2015 Audi Sport TT Cup
2015 Audi Sport TT Cup season | |||
Previous: | none | Next: | 2016 |
Parent series: Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters DTM Support series: Porsche Carrera Cup Germany FIA European Formula 3 |
The 2015 Audi Sport TT Cup season was the inaugural season of the Audi Sport TT Cup, a one-make sports car racing series organised by Audi. It began on 2 May at Hockenheim and finished on 18 October at the same venue after six double-header meetings,[1] all of which were support events for the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters.[1]
Poland's Jan Kisiel won the title by 25 points ahead of Danish driver Nicolaj Møller Madsen, while Dennis Marschall of Germany completed the championship top-3, a further 19.5 points in arrears of Møller Madsen. After trailing Marschall by twenty points after the first event at Hockenheim, Kisiel then achieved a run of eight successive podium finishes, with five victories in six races – including four wins in consecutive races at Oschersleben and the Nürburgring – moving him into the championship lead. A fifth-place in the first race at the Hockenheim finale sealed the championship. Møller Madsen – who started the season with five consecutive podium finishes including a win at the Norisring – and Marschall, who won a race at the season-opening event, were split by half a point going into the final weekend, but two podium finishes for Møller Madsen moved him clear.
Outside the top three drivers, Finnish driver Joonas Lappalainen finished in fourth place after achieving a pair of class wins behind guest drivers René Rast and Marco Bonanomi in the Hockenheim finale. Three other drivers won races during the season; Shaun Thong won at the Norisring, but that was his only podium finish of the 2015 season. Belgium's Alexis van de Poele – son of 1987 DTM champion Eric van de Poele – was declared winner of the rain-shortened race at the Red Bull Ring, while Austria's Marc Coleselli won the opening race of the season, but did not contest any further meetings during the season.
Contents
Drivers
No. | Drivers | Rounds |
---|---|---|
3 | Gosia Rdest[2] | All |
5 | Nikita Misiulia | 3–5 |
7 | Christoph Hofbauer[2] | 1–5 |
8 | Shaun Thong[2] | All |
9 | Kaan Önder[2] | All |
11 | Levin Amweg[2] | 1–3, 6 |
14 | Josh Caygill[2] | All |
17 | Nicolaj Møller Madsen[2] | All |
26 | Dominik Peitz[2] | All |
27 | Dennis Marschall[2] | All |
33 | Emil Lindholm[2] | All |
40 | Marc Coleselli[2] | 1 |
43 | Jan Kisiel[2] | All |
45 | Joonas Lappalainen[2] | All |
49 | Sebastian Landy[2] | All |
50 | Loris Hezemans[2] | All |
55 | Alexis van de Poele[2] | All |
89 | Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky[2] | All |
92 | Anton Marklund[2] | 1–5 |
Guest drivers | ||
4 | Aaron Mason | 6 |
93 | Jordi Gené | 2 |
Jeffrey Kruger | 6 | |
94 | Tanner Foust[3] | 1 |
Pierre Casiraghi | 2 | |
Emiliano Perucca Orfei | 3 | |
Harald Grohs | 4 | |
Matthias Malmedie | 5 | |
Alberto Sabbatini | 6 | |
95 | Toomas Heikkinen[3] | 1 |
Albert von Thurn und Taxis | 2 | |
Rahel Frey | 3 | |
Frank Biela | 4 | |
Nikolaus Schelle | 5 | |
Reiner Kuhn | 6 | |
96 | Sven Hannawald[3] | 1 |
Marcus Graf von Oeynhausen-Sierstorpff | 2 | |
Aksel Lund Svindal | 3 | |
Uwe Alzen | 4 | |
Aditya Patel | 5 | |
Jon Olsson | 6 | |
97 | Ferdinand Stuck | 1 |
Sebastian Schmidt | 2 | |
Felix Neureuther | 3 | |
Alex Lloyd | 4 | |
René Rast | 6 | |
98 | Horst von Saurma[3] | 1 |
Marcel Hirscher | 3 | |
Tim Schrick | 4 | |
Guido Naumann | 5 | |
Marco Bonanomi | 6 | |
99 | Christian Gebhardt[3] | 1 |
Doreen Seidel | 2–5 | |
Patrick Simon | 6 |
Race calendar and results
Round | Circuit | Date | Pole position | Fastest lap | Winning driver | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | R1 | Hockenheimring, Baden-Württemberg | 2 May | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | Marc Coleselli |
R2 | 3 May | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | Alexis van de Poele | Dennis Marschall | ||
2 | R1 | Norisring, Nuremberg | 27 June | Shaun Thong | Dominik Peitz | Shaun Thong |
R2 | 28 June | Shaun Thong | Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | ||
3 | R1 | Red Bull Ring, Spielberg | 1 August | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | Dennis Marschall | Jan Kisiel |
R2 | 2 August | Alexis van de Poele | Levin Amweg | Alexis van de Poele | ||
4 | R1 | Motorsport Arena Oschersleben, Saxony-Anhalt | 12 September | Jan Kisiel | Nicolaj Møller Madsen | Jan Kisiel |
R2 | 13 September | Jan Kisiel | Jan Kisiel | Jan Kisiel | ||
5 | R1 | Nürburgring, Rhineland-Palatinate | 26 September | Emil Lindholm | Dennis Marschall | Jan Kisiel |
R2 | 27 September | Jan Kisiel | Jan Kisiel | Jan Kisiel | ||
6 | R1 | Hockenheimring, Baden-Württemberg | 17 October | Joonas Lappalainen | Marco Bonanomi | René Rast |
R2 | 18 October | René Rast | Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky | Marco Bonanomi |
Championship standings
- Scoring system
Points were awarded to the top eighteen classified finishers as follows:
Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th | 11th | 12th | 13th | 14th | 15th | 16th | 17th | 18th |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Points | 25 | 21 | 18 | 16 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 11 | 10 | 9 | 8 | 7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
Drivers' championship
The second race at the Red Bull Ring was red-flagged after four laps, due to a multi-car incident involving Christoph Hofbauer, Levin Amweg, Loris Hezemans, Kaan Önder, Emil Lindholm and Anton Marklund. The first three laps of the race had been completed behind the safety car, due to a heavy downpour. As less than 50% of the scheduled race distance had been covered, half points were awarded.[4]
|
Bold – Pole |
References
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- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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