The 2024 Eurocup-3 season was the second season of the Eurocup-3 series. Eurocup-3 is a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seater open wheel formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship was created in 2023 as an alternative to the FIA-sanctioned Formula Regional European Championship and the Euroformula Open championship, after the latter series struggled to attract entries in late 2022.[1]
Javier Sagrera, driving for MP Motorsport, won the Drivers' Championship by just two points over Campos Racing's Christian Ho, who became the Rookies' Champion. Sagrera's team MP Motorsport won their first Teams' Championship at the penultimate round of the season.
Javier Sagrera (top), driving for Teams' Champions MP Motorsport, won the Drivers' Championship. Christian Ho (bottom), driving for Campos Racing, finished the season runner-up and won the Rookies' Championship.
Teams and drivers
Teams utilized the same Tatuus F3 T-318 chassis used in the Formula Regional European Championship, but fitted with an updated body kit, a new intercooler and a battery kit. It also was 25kg lighter than the FRECA car. The car used a 270hp Alfa Romeo-Autotecnica engine, and Hankook tires.[2]
Evans GP originally announced that it planned to enter the championship in cooperation with Versa Motorsport.[31] It had already signed Cooper Webster and planned to field three cars, but after missing the first two rounds, it was confirmed the team had abandoned these plans.[32]
Monlau Motorsport also announced their entry into the championship, but later confirmed it would not join in 2024.[33][34]
Jorge Campos was initially announced to join Saintéloc Racing for his second Eurocup-3 campaign, but did not enter any rounds.[6]
Race calendar
The calendar for the 2024 season was announced on 20 November 2023. The race tally remained the same, at 16 races across eight tracks.[35] The series debuted at the Red Bull Ring, at Algarve International Circuit and at Circuit Paul Ricard, while Monza, Estoril and the Circuit Ricardo Tormo did not return to the schedule.[36] As the series shared its promoter with the F4 Spanish Championship, five of the eight rounds were held together with that series. The calendar was slightly amended later on, moving the penultimate round one week back.[37] A one-event winter series separate from the main championship was also held at MotorLand Aragón. After the second race at Spa was cancelled because of bad weather conditions, a third race at Portimão was added to keep the season's race tally at 16.[38]
The second season of Eurocup-3 commenced with a non-championship round at MotorLand Aragón. Christian Ho of Campos Racing and Valerio Rinicella of MP Motorsport secured pole positions for the two races. In the first race, Ho initially led for four laps before being overtaken by MP Motorsport teammates Javier Sagrera and Rinicella. A close battle ensued between the top two, with Rinicella ultimately claiming victory on lap twelve. Ho meanwhile fell further back and relinquished third place to MP's Owen Tangavelou. The second race featured an intense contest for the lead among Rinicella, Ho, and Sagrera, each taking turns at the front. Sagrera, however, encountered car issues and dropped out of contention. Ho briefly slipped to third behind teammate Noah Lisle but regained the position later, allowing Rinicella to capitalize and secure his second win of the event.[39]
The opening round of the season took place at Spa and was significantly affected by heavy rainfall. Following a pre-event test where Tangavelou set the fastest time, adverse weather conditions led to the cancellation of all four practice and qualifying sessions. Consequently, Tangavelou was awarded pole position for the first race, but he was unable to start, allowing Sagrera to lead the field behind the safety car. That was withdrawn after three laps, but was immediately redeployed due to several retirements. As conditions deteriorated further, racing resumed on lap eight, only for a major multi-car collision at Raidillon to bring the event to an early conclusion. Sagrera claimed victory ahead of Saintéloc's Alexander Abkhazava and Palou Motorsport's Kirill Smal. The second race of the weekend was subsequently canceled due to the ongoing weather issues.[40]
Tangavelou and Ho secured pole positions for the second round at the Red Bull Ring. In the first race, slow starts from the second- and third-placed drivers allowed Tangavelou to establish an early lead, followed by Smal in second and MP Motorsport’s Bruno del Pino in third. Del Pino then advanced to second place, with teammate Emerson Fittipaldi Jr. also overtaking Smal, but Tangavelou had a comfortable gap at that point and claimed victory. In the second race, pole sitter Ho experienced another poor start, enabling del Pino to pressure and ultimately pass him at turn three to take the lead. Del Pino remained unchallenged, while Ho incurred a five-second penalty for exceeding track limits, relegating him to fourth behind Sagrera and Tangavelou. The championship standings after the event mirrored the results of the second race, with Sagrera leading del Pino by five points.[41]
Round three at Portimão featured three races to compensate for the cancellation of Spa’s second race. Ho secured pole position for the first race and converted it into a dominant lights-to-flag victory, aided by a battle for second place between Del Pino and Tangavelou behind him.[42] In the second race, Campos’s Valentin Kluss started from pole but was overtaken by Ho and Tangavelou at the first corner. Kluss reclaimed second as Lisle also got through, while Ho secured another unchallenged win.[43] The third race saw pole sitter Ho drop behind Del Pino and Abkhazava at the start, before his weekend ended prematurely with a mechanical failure. On the penultimate lap, Abkhazava overtook Del Pino, who then fell down the order, allowing Sagrera and Kluss to complete the podium. This result left Del Pino, Sagrera, and Tangavelou tied for the championship lead on 78 points.[44]
At the fourth round of the championship at Circuit Paul Ricard, Ho delivered strong performances in qualifying to secure pole position for both races. However, in the first race, he fell behind Del Pino and Sagrera at the start. Despite setting the fastest laps of the race, Ho took 13 laps to reclaim second place, by which time Del Pino had already established a lead. Ho closed up to the leader, but had not enough time to threaten Del Pino. In the second race, Ho successfully defended his position from Sagrera at the start. He then built a comfortable gap and managed the race to claim a lights-to-flag victory. Jesse Carrasquedo Jr., a new addition to Campos Racing’s lineup for that round, secured third place after passing Barrichello Jr. at the start, but was unable to challenge Sagrera. Ho's victory propelled him to the top of the championship standings, two points ahead of Sagrera.[45]
Second half
The second half of the championship began at Circuit Zandvoort, where Sagrera took both pole positions.[46] The first race started under safety car conditions due to issues with the starting lights. A severe collision involving Abkhazava and Campos driver Michael Shin, whose car rolled over seven times, disrupted the event.[47] The race was red-flagged, and rain began to fall during the suspension. Following the restart, Sagrera led Ho and Del Pino, with the podium positions unchanged until the race concluded prematurely under safety car conditions. The second race proved less dramatic; Sagrera defended against an early attack by Del Pino following a safety car phase and controlled the race to secure another victory, extending his championship lead to 23 points over Ho. Kluss completed the podium, while Shin finished ninth, less than 24 hours after his crash.[48]
Championship standings
Scoring system
Points were awarded to the top ten classified finishers. Additional points were awarded for setting the fastest lap during a race or qualifying on pole position.
^ abcdefgBlokhina, Smal, Zhuravskiy, Belov and Bedrin are Russian, but with Russian national emblems banned by the FIA following the Russian invasion of Ukraine, they all competed under Kyrgyz licences, except for Bedrin, who uses an Italian licence. Abkhazava, a Russian-Georgian, competed under a Kazakh licence for the same reason.
^Free practice and both qualifying sessions were cancelled because of adverse weather conditions. The grid was set according to the times of the pre-event test, and therefore, no points for the pole position were awarded to Owen Tangavelou.