ROAL Motorsport

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Blancpain Endurance Series
Italian GT Championship
Former seriesEuropean Touring Car Championship
Superstars Series
World Touring Car Championship
2008

ROAL Motorsport (previously known as Ravaglia Motorsport) is an Italian

1987 World Touring Car champion Roberto Ravaglia and Aldo Preo (Roberto + Aldo = ROAL).[1]

History

Ravaglia Motorsport began competing in the Superproduction class of the European Super Touring Championship in 2001 as BMW Team Germany with Peter Kox and Norman Simon as drivers,[1] with Kox winning the class.[2]

In 2002, they competed in the

Monza,[1]
using special controls following his serious accident in 2001 in which he lost both his legs. Zanardi replaced Giovanardi full-time in 2004.

In 2005, the ETCC became the World Touring Car Championship (WTCC) and Ravaglia Motorsport changed their name to ROAL Motorsport. Zanardi also won the Italian Superturismo Championship in 2005 for the team,[3] and finished third in the first edition of the European Touring Car Cup.

Garcia left the team at the end of 2005 to pursue a career in sports car racing, and was replaced by fellow Spaniard Marcel Costa. Costa was disappointing though and was replaced by Duncan Huisman during the season.[1] The team gave GP2 Series racer Félix Porteiro a drive in the ETC Cup and he impressed enough to get a drive in the WTCC for 2007.[1]

In 2008, ROAL Motorsport began development of a competition M3 E90 for the Superstars Series, with Luca Rangoni as driver. For 2009, Porteiro was replaced by 2008 Independent's champion Sergio Hernández in the team, while in the Superstars Series, Rangoni was replaced by reigning Champion Gianni Morbidelli.

After leaving the

2010, ROAL returned to WTCC in 2011 with Dutch driver Tom Coronel who last drove for BMW in the European Touring Car Championship, until 2017 season, which WTCC folded and merged into 2018 World Touring Car Cup

Since 2015, ROAL Motorsport has regularly competed in the Italian GT Championship, initially with the BMW Z4 GT3 until switching to the BMW M6 GT3 in 2016. 2016 also saw ROAL compete under the BMW Team Italia name.

In 2019, the running of the team was taken over by Ceccato Motorsport.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "ROAL Motorsport". Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2009-08-21. Team History at roal-motorsport.com
  2. ^ http://www.driverdb.com/standings/48-2001/ European Superproduction Championship 2002 at Driver Database
  3. ^ http://www.driverdb.com/standings/94-2005/ Italian Super Touring Car Championship 2005 at Driver Database
  4. ^ "Una storia imprenditoriale di successo: La famiglia Ceccato allarga i confini e salva 37 posti di lavoro".

External links