Skip to main content

Hockenheim Delivers in Qualifying Series

With just two rounds to go in the Qualifying Series, drivers jumped back in the rigs on Wednesday night with one thing on their mind: securing a spot in the Pro Series. For many at the top end of the field, all that required was securing a solid haul of points to maintain their place in the ever tumbling championship ladder. For others … It was make or break.

Taking to the infamously drama-inducing Hockenheimring, drivers and teams would be all hands on deck to tackle 4.6km of curb hopping, sharp changes of direction, and excruciating traction zones. For these reasons, this circuit can feel perfectly engineered to all of the Gen3’s weaknesses. Who could possibly rise to the challenge of “The Hock”?

Let’s dive into the action from Round 3 of the Logitech G Pro Invitational Qualifying Series to find out.

Drivers jostle for position in Qualifying

Round 3 delivered another spectacular Qualifying Session.

It was championship leader Brenton Hobson leading the pack out of the lane for the first time. Hobson would run deep at Turn 8, invalidating his first flying lap, but he was far from alone. Less than half the field managed to set a valid lap time on their initial run.

Out of the 16 cars to set a lap at that point in the session, Birse would hold provisional pole with a 1:40.944. The Eclipse driver was closely followed by teammate Woods, just 0.197s away. The two would trade the top spot multiple times as the session progressed.

The hairpin was an absolute mosh pit as drivers looked to secure their own patch of track. The first of many incidents began with Jack Widdas, who crawled through the hairpin on the inside as Lachlan Caple, Michael Talijancich and Brad Rattew hurled into the corner on flyers. Caple would be forced to check up first, which caused Talijancich to make contact with him on the rear bumper. Rattew would avoid contact with all parties, but was severely impeded by the drama ahead.

The resulting impedance on Rattew at the hairpin would result in Widdas being handed his first 10 second penalty of the afternoon. He would receive another penalty for impeding a separate group of drivers in the stadium section later on in the session. 

The naughty list continued to expand as the session progressed, with Dylan O’Shea receiving a 10 second penalty for turning Dylan Perera at the Hairpin.

Andrew Dyson’s name would come up in the race control screen multiple times, culminating in a pit lane start for the DPR driver, while fan favourite Kurt Stenberg would find himself in the top 5 after finally returning to the comfort of his own setup.

With all of the chaos coming to a close in qualifying, the front row would be locked out by Eclipse with Birse and Woods. The top 10 behind them would line up from Brenton Hobson, Matthew Bowler, Kurt Stenberg, Wayne Bourke, Ryan Jones, Jacob O’Reilly, Hayden Veld and Brian Borg.

The action was frantic right from the drop of the Green Flag

The action starts immediately as the Green Flag drops.

As the revs rose like a pack of hornets and the lights went out in Hockenheim, there was a plume of tyre smoke arising from pole position. Dylan Birse dropped the clutch too quick, and was pounced on, ultimately two-wide with the Evolution Racing Team Mustang of Matthew Bowler on the run through Turn 1.

Adding to the Eclipse nightmare, Kobi Williams and Tyce Hodge came together at the exit of the first corner, with Williams spinning over the nose of one Vermillion car, and into the door of another in Andre Yousiff.

Chaos ensued further down the pack at Turn 2 with Brian Borg being put sideways by the Tyrepower Camaro of Glen Postlelthwaite. Thankfully for Borg, Sebastian Varndell was alongside him at just the right time to point the RaceKraft Mustang straight before things got nasty.

Spectators and drivers prepared for imminent drama as the Qualifying Series hauled toward the hairpin for the first time of the night. 

Birse was the first of the send-ers as he scrambled to regain positions after his treacherous run off the line. While he had the move done on Bowler with relative ease, he only narrowly escaped serious contact with the Synergy Sim Racing Camaro of Brenton Hobson at the apex.

Not so lucky was his SSR teammate of Brady Baldwin, who would end up pointing the wrong way in the middle of the track. He was turned by Corey Preston, who had all four tyres locked before the contact occurred. Just a few moments later, Preston would also spin the Xcelerate Sim Racing Camaro of Greg Favelle as he tried to drive all the way around the drama on the outside. Preston received a drive through penalty for the incidents.

Lap 1 hairpin dramas for Brady Baldwin who gets turned around

Safety car, boards and flags. Safety car, boards and flags.

Things looked to have calmed down as the drivers formed into a single file line by lap 3. That was until the 9ine5ive Simsport car of Daniel Benefield found himself parked up on the side of the road with a very sad looking Mustang - bringing out a safety car.

At the hairpin, Benefield would dive down the inside of Favelle, hitting him on the right side. Both drivers would find themselves on the slippery exit curb, which allowed Rattew to get a convincing run on the way out of the corner. However, as Rattew and Favelle inched closer together with slightly different lines, they would eventually meet at the same bit of track.

Rattew tripped over the front of Favelle’s Camaro, jolting the Orbit Drop Bear Mustang to the left. Benefield was the bystander in that tangle, pit maneuvered into the barrier at high speed just before the right hand kink of Turn 7.

The early Safety Car opened the door for drivers to take to the pit lane and clear the first of two Compulsory Pit Stops.

Eclipse’s Damon Woods would drop right down the order to 37th, spending 50 seconds in the lane due to a pit lane speed infringement.

Matthew Bowler took the race lead over Brenton Hobson, while Vermillion’s Wayne Bourke sat just in front of a bloodthirsty Dylan Birse for the restart.

It didn't take long for the Logitech G safety car to be seen on track

Back to green … for now

Other than Vermillion’s Ben Faulkner looping ERT’s Jake Blackhall, the restart was relatively smooth sailing as drivers tried to settle back to normality. Brenton Hobson was one of many drivers wanting to stay out of trouble. With his championship status firmly up the pointy end, squabbles for extra positions were something he knew would be wise to avoid. He would concede two positions in one corner, as Bourke and Birse dived to his inside at the hairpin two laps after the restart.

Kurt Stenberg had dropped to 8th from his season-best start of 5th at this stage, but a minor lapse of concentration struck Stenberg at the hairpin on lap 9. Under pressure from Sebastian Varndell, Stenberg locked all four tyres, resulting in side-on contact with the bright pink Vermillion Camaro. While Varndell would manage to escape the contact with only a minor loss in time, Stenberg would spin around into the path of Tyce Hodge who had little time to react.

On lap 10, Birse launched his Eclipse Camaro down the inside of Wayne Bourke at the hairpin to claim second place. Two laps later, he would pass ERT’s Matthew Bowler for the lead at the same corner.

As the stint progressed, Bowler looked to be struggling once again on long-run pace. In the meantime, Bourke followed in Birse’s footsteps to pass the ERT driver in similar fashion on lap 13.

On lap 21, there was an incident that lasted for such a period of time … that it was still occurring as the commentators looked at the replays of its commencement. Dylan Perera was spun around at the hairpin by Dylan O’Shea in a fairly common pit-maneuver type of contact, and while the cars in the immediate vicinity of the incident were able to flow around the stationary Camaro, late arrivers weren’t so lucky. 

Perera stomped on the throttle in an attempt to get back into action, but immediately made contact with Michael Talijancich and then Andrew Dyson who T-boned Perera at the apex. Dyson was then essentially forced to push the Synergy Camaro all the way out of the corner. In that time, he lost multiple positions and was left with severe damage to the front of his car.

The drama continued for both Dyson and Perera two corners later. They were both victims of a late lockup from OPR’s Ryan Bettess at Turn 8. Perera learnt from his first lesson, staying off the track until it was clear this time around; he would also receive a drive through penalty for the long-lasting ordeal.

Birse, Bowler and Bourke fighting for the top 3 spots

The run home and more Safety Car chaos

With just over 15 laps to go, drivers began peeling into the lane for the last scheduled stops of the afternoon. Birse would be the first of the leaders to pit, while Vermillion aimed to go a tad longer with Bourke and O’Reilly.

Brenton Hobson had a heart-stopping moment when Hayden Veld made contact with his rear bumper, nudging him off balance in his travels to the pit lane. Hockenheim’s tricky pit entry had already caused similar incidents earlier in the race.

With the field cleansed and stops completed it seemed like a straightforward race to the finish until on lap 33, Corey Preston detonated an engine while working down the gears for the hairpin. Parking his all-white Mustang off the racing surface on exit, Preston would bring out the final safety car of the afternoon. It would also mark three consecutive rounds where an engine failure brings out a safety car in the Qualifying Series.

Dylan Birse, along with the vast majority of cars at the top end of the field, decided to stay out.

The lead pack would remain steadfast all the way to the line, and for good reason; most of them don’t require significant gains in the standings to secure a place in the pro series.

Corey Preston became the third driver in three races to detonate an engine and bring out a Safety Car

The hairpin’s curtain call.

Just when you thought it couldn’t be possible for another accident to happen at Turn 5; more paint was traded, and more panels were lost.

As Tao Soerono began to ease off the brake and turn into the corner, Glen Postlethwaite made a late defensive move on Tyce Hodge - resulting in a three-wide entry to the fabled collision zone. Soerono was just barely clipped by Postlethwaite’s Camaro, but it was more than enough to see the Vermillion car spun around on the exit in a pool of marbles.

Vysma found himself trying to power out of the corner on those same marbles just moments after Soerono’s accident. The Xelerate driver would cause an accident of his own when the inevitable loss of traction saw him stopped sideways on corner exit, before being collected by Dylan Perera.

Perera retired his car on the same lap.

The scrap for second place continued between Bowler and Bourke with just 4 laps to go; Bourke would find himself on top in that fight after Bowler got loose on the entry of the hairpin. Bowler’s focus was then diverted to holding off the blue Vermillion Mustang of O’Reilly.

The turn 5 Hairpin was the action spot on the track for contact at Hockenheim

Back-to-back Pro Series entries secured for Eclipse Simsport.

Dylan Birse ran to the line with a comfortable gap over Wayne Bourke to claim his golden ticket to the main game. Matthew Bowler would round out the podium in third, followed by O’Reilly,

Veld, Woods, Jones, Hobson, Borg, and Postlethwaite in the top 10 after penalties were applied.

While the battle at the front remained relatively stable, several drivers delivered standout performances by charging through the field.

McNamara was the biggest mover of the race, climbing an astonishing 24 places from 36th to 12th. Broad also impressed with a 19-place gain, finishing 15th after starting all the way down in 34th. Talijancich made up 14 places to secure 13th place.

As always, not everyone had a smooth run to the checkered flag.

Stenberg took the biggest drop of the day, tumbling 30 places from 5th to 35th after experiencing technical difficulties. Perera and Caple also suffered largely, losing 25 and 23 spots respectively. Preston’s race also fell apart on his tumble from 19th to 38th. These drivers will be looking to regroup and bounce back in the next round after a tough outing.

Published on

by Harrison Lillas

Related Articles

Previews

Read more …Hockenheim Delivers in Qualifying Series

  • Hits: 2088

Fuji Falls to Deith in V8PRO Qualifying Series

After an explosive opening round of racing at Canadian Tire Motorsport Park, the Qualifying Series leaped across the globe to continue the action amongst the stunning peaks of Mount Fuji, Japan

While Emily Jones sat back enjoying her locked-in main game seat following her round win at Mosport - the rest of the grid took to a gruelling 45 laps of tyre management, NASCAR-style slipstream drama, and strategy headaches.

If you were unlucky enough to miss out on Wednesday’s action, not to worry!

Here’s what went down in Round 2 of the Logitech G Pro Invitational Qualifying Series…

One and done qualifying run sets the tone for Kody Deith

20 minutes of open qualifying is all you get to secure your spot on the grid, but that’s clearly too long for Eclipse Simsports’ Kody Deith, who opened the session with a 1:37.007. While Deith would try again to dip into the elusive sub-37’s, he would not see an improvement for the remainder of the session. Thankfully for him, that lap would be more than enough to secure an important pole position.

Promise continued for Eclipse throughout qualifying, with Dylan Birse holding onto a provisional front row start before being pipped by Vermillion Esports’ Wayne Bourke in the dying stages.

The current points leader Brenton Hobson treaded water comfortably within the top 10 as the session progressed, finding small improvements across his four attempts. He would eventually find himself lining up in 9th alongside Evolution Racing Team’s Lachlan Caple.

Finding the draft in qualifying was pivotal for the drivers throughout the field

There were a number of big names facing adversity at the end of the session, including Andrew Dyson being thrown out of sync with an illegal crossing of the pit exit line - sending him back to the lane.

Commentators' curse struck ERT’s Hayden Veld, who got loose on the exit of the penultimate corner on his last run. Veld, Stanaway, and Deith each aborted their final laps of the session.

With qualifying complete, the top 10 would start with Kody Deith and Wayne Bourke on the front row, followed by Dylan Birse, Richie Stanaway, Matthew Bowler, Tao Soerono, Jobe Stewart, Jacob O’Reilly, Brenton Hobson and Lachlan Caple.

The calm before the storm

Fuji’s Turn 1 is about as notable as Monza’s first chicane when it comes to opening lap drama, both on the sim and in the real world. Somehow though, it was fairly civilised as the Qualifying Series hurdled toward the downhill hairpin on cold rubber.

Things were mostly unchanged within the top 10 come the end of the first lap, with only Lachlan Caple dropping back two places to 12th. That opened the door wide open for Vermillion’s Ben Faulkner, who took to the side panels of Brenton Hobson in a nail biting scrap. That fight started at Turn 1, and wasn’t over until the left hand hairpin of Turn 6.

The storm … after the calm

Further down the field, it was divebomb city from Orbit Drop Bear Motorsport’s Tyson Broad, who threw it down the inside of Andre Heimgartner at Turn 1. It was Michael Talijancich who copped the rough end of the stick in that move, who was alongside Heimgartner in his attempt to make room for Broad. That contact resulted in the green Synergy machine pointing the wrong way and dropping right down the order.

While Heimgartner was able to get away from that incident unscathed, the Kiwi’s problems would be far from over, being spun around at the exit of the final corner at the end of the same lap. With the critical fuel window still 17 long laps away, trying to make something of this one would be the tallest of orders for the proven star.

Cory Preston would be another victim of Turn 1 contact, spun around by Brian Borg to end up facing backwards in the middle of the track on corner exit. It meant another few jumps up the order for Tyson Broad, who was forced to use the astroturf to avoid the aftermath. Borg received a drive through penalty for the contact, putting him out of realistic contention.

Corey Preston gets rotated at Turn 1

Talent rising to the top as tyres fade

Wayne Bourke looked to be holding on nicely to second place as Kody Deith slowly inched up the road. That was until the Vermillion driver got a little too greedy with track limits at Turn 3, forcing himself into serving a brutal slow-down penalty naturally issued by iRacing.

It was all smiles on the Eclipse pitwall as Dylan Birse moved up to second place, but they would be short lived. Just a few laps later, the LOBS Camaro of Richie Stanaway would be filling Birse’s mirrors. On the run into Turn 1, Birse ran deep and was left having to drive off the corner on the marbles. While Birse managed to keep the car pointing straight, Stanaway would slip past into 2nd on his charge up the order.

Tyre wear? How about engine wear?

The race seemed to have settled as a few drivers opted for early pit stops, while the leaders remained about five laps away from their scheduled stops. That all changed on lap 16 when Denis Gataric’s Synergy Sim Racing Mustang suddenly bursted with dark smoke, rolling to a stop just meters from the racing surface - bringing out the safety car.

While the safety car came out a few laps before the critical fuel lap, it tempted the idea for some of the drivers at the rear (who had stopped prior) to try to make it to the end. They would serve the two mandatory stops, but it would require a monumental fuel save to make it. They would also become roadblocks with tyre wear later on, assuming there wasn’t another full course yellow… I promise this isn’t foreshadowing …

Denis Gataric detonates a motor on lap 16

Fuel save chess match begins

Richie Stanaway would lead the field away on the restart, but this would be one of very few occasions where being in the lead isn’t really the best place to be. Leading the pack, you face the brunt of the air without any support; it makes fuel saving that much more difficult, and that would prove true as the race progressed toward the second batch of pit stops.

The field was notably relaxed at this point of the race for that very reason. Assuming this race went to the chequered flag without another safety car, the biggest gains on offer in this one would be in the pit lane. Lunging your competitors now would only drop you out of the vital slipstream train.

It was Kody Deith in the box seat with 20 laps to go. His first mandatory stop was five seconds longer than most of the cars around him; while it may have lost him track position for now, he would get all of that back and more as he peeled into the lane for the last time.

Chaos ensues on the race to the flag

An absolute spectacle would lie ahead for drivers and spectators alike as strategy differences reared their heads in the dying stages.

Brenton Hobson would be a pioneer of the early stoppers, coming into the lane on lap 30 as his competitors' composure began to fade, and incidents flared up once again. It would be a gamble dropping out of the slipstream, but the fresh tyre delta would be his opportunity to make ground early.

Six laps later, the lead three would peel into the lane nose-to-tail. The order as they crossed the entry line was Stanaway, Birse, Deith.

The order on the way out …Deith, Stanaway, Birse.

While Deith and Stanway managed to exit the lane mostly uninterrupted, Birse would run deep on the cold rubber and collide with Jobe Stewart. The contact quickly caught the eyes of race control, who handed Birse a 5-second penalty.

One lap pace was virtually useless at this stage as the race leaders put on a spectacular display of racecraft. While the field ahead of them was packed like a can of sardines, they would all be saving fuel and rubber to make it to the end - a number of those on significantly older tyres having completed their second stop under the safety car. These cars would not be putting up much of a fight.

"One lap pace was virtually useless at this stage as the race leaders put on a spectacular display of racecraft"

Deith had a small cushion back to Stanaway with only a handful of laps to go, but it was far from over for the Eclipse superstar. On the run through 100R on lap 39, Deith would make contact with the rear bumper of Daniel Benefield, slightly misjudging just how much the rest of the traffic was having to conserve. Deith would get away with the contact without a penalty.

Drawing to a close

On lap 42, Deith made the move on Vermillion’s Andre Yousiff to take the effective race lead. When Jacob O’Reilly and Joshua Houghton came in to serve their last stop on lap 44, Deith would take the official race lead. Race victory, and with it a locked-in place in the Pro Series, was just laps away.

Just behind him, Yousiff would have to give up second place to Stanaway in order to make it to the line on fuel. It would be a monumental drive from the Vermillion driver anyway, moving up 22 positions to claim the final spot on the podium.

Kody Deith ripped his Eclipse Mustang out of the last corner with a handy little slide, capping off a commanding pole-to-win drive in Fuji. Stanaway would finish 2.3 seconds behind, followed by Yousiff a further second behind.

Kody Deith crosses the line to win at Fuji

Honourable mentions!

‘Driver of the day’ is an impossible reward to hand out when you look at some of the results throughout the field.

The biggest mover was Daniel Benefield, with an eye-popping gain of 29 positions to finish in 6th. Just ahead of him, a fellow 9INE5IVE SimSport driver in Shawn McNamara, who also moved up 21 places - a mega effort by the two teammates.

Sebastian Varndell was just as impressive, moving his Vermillion machine into the top 10 from 38th on the grid. He was also one of four Vermillion cars to finish in the top 15.

With significant internet outages on the lead up to race day, Tyson Broad took to a foreign sim rig for Fuji - organised just the night before the green flag dropped. Regardless, the Orbit Drop Bear driver moved his Camaro up 23 places. That will certainly boost his confidence as he eyes up the chance of a main-game entry.

Tyson Broad was among the biggest movers in the race despite a difficult lead in

Published on

by Harrison Lillas

Related Articles

Media Release

Read more …Fuji Falls to Deith in V8PRO Qualifying Series

  • Hits: 2228

Win and You're in: Victory Lane with Emily Jones

With the introduction of the new “win and you’re in” format in the 2025 Logitech G Pro Invitational Qualifying Series, getting that chequered flag just became even more important.

Over four races with intense pressure, the chances of making the top 24 has become that much more difficult if you make one mistake.

With the series running the Gen 3 Supercars for the first time at Mosport, the race was always going to have even more interest.

45 of Australia's most competitive drivers took to the grid where, by the end of the night, one would only need to make a one-off appearance.

This honour would go to Trans Tasman Racing driver Emily Jones who used all their experience and racecraft to capitalise on a mixture of speed and strategy to deserve a win and a spot on the grid for the main series that starts in March.

We thought we would talk to Emily about the importance of the win and the expectations that lie ahead.

R: First of all, Emily, congratulations on an outstanding drive, what does this win mean to you?

EJ: Thanks! Was nice to be up the front in the new supercar. It's a really competitive field, so was just happy to have lots of pace considering how many drivers have put effort into the new car.

R: The win gives you an automatic entry to the main series, how much does this take the pressure off knowing you won’t have to race again in the Q series?

EJ: It's definitely a lot of stress gone! Racing is pretty scary. I think I would qualify comfortably without winning Round 1, but you're so scared of someone crashing into you, or accidentally blowing an engine, etc. It's nice to just seal it away.

Jones stalking down Bourke on the last lap of the race

This will be your debut season as a solo driver in the Logitech G Pro Invitational Series, what are your thoughts on the series from what you have seen so far?

It looks like fun. It also looks like carnage tbh. I often watch a bit of the races on Wednesday and it seems all over the place sometimes. There's a lot of rules to be across as well. It seems like you could be 10th or 40th just depending on if things go your way.

And what are your expectations heading into the fourth season of the Pro Series?

Honestly, I'm just planning to have fun. I think it's a bit of a lottery from 20th back, you can get spit out in the top 15 or so, or you could be in the fence. I'm just going to go in with no expectations and have fun racing. I'm hoping to stream it and make it entertaining as well! I might not be fighting for wins, but hopefully it'll be fun.

You have been driving for a long while now, one of the most experienced sim racers in the Region and you have a large reach of followers, is there anything that you want to pass on to them?

Just thanks for everyone's support! I feel bad doing laps off-stream and everything, I often find it difficult to concentrate when streaming, but I'm going to try and get better at it this year.

Thanks for the chat Emily, we know that you will be a name to watch in the series and we look forward to following your progress in 2025. Good Luck!!

Published on

Related Articles

Driver Spotlight

Read more …Win and You're in: Victory Lane with Emily Jones

  • Hits: 2038

5 Qualifying Series Short Takes

The introduction of Gen3 certainly made an impact on the hectic nature of the Qualifying Series! It was a huge hit among the guys in the commentary booth, and I’m hearing the same from the fans as well.

If you weren’t there on Wednesday night, or haven’t seen the race so far, then I would highly recommend catching up on the action as soon as you can!

Until then, here are some of the key points and moments from the first night of Logitech G Pro Invitational racing in 2025.

1. New car, new teams at the front!

When Eclipse Simsports locked out the front row, things appeared to be business as usual. But as the grid tumbled and turned throughout a nail biting qualifying session (which saw the top 10 separated by just 0.194s) there was quite the mixture of teams shaking up the order.

Synergy Sim Racing’s Brenton Hobson was on fire, getting his Camaro onto the second row of the grid amongst some of the community’s biggest names.

Eclipse Simsports cars lead to Turn 1 off the start

2. The rulebook is not just for decoration

There were a number of new drivers welcomed to the pack at Mosport, some learning the hard way that pit stop regulations can bite you on the butt. In this series, you are required to make 2 Compulsory Pit Stops (CPS) … but there’s a catch.

Unlike most international racing categories, you cannot serve more than one CPS under a single safety car unless you enter the lane before the safety car is called. For those not accustomed to this rule, it can cause quite the headache.

Safety Car restarts were also under a microscope in the Race Control booth, to Wayne Bourke’s chagrin. With checkups deep in the field, the Vermillion Esports driver had mistakenly completed a pass before the control line.

The slip up was enough to land Bourke with a 30s post-race penalty, relegating him from the race win … to 31st. A tough spot to be in, particularly with the onboard vision showing he only missed it by metres. But the rules are the rules, and he took it like a champ!

The brand new Logitech G Safety Car on track after Dylan Perera lost a motor

3. Marbles … marbles … marbles

iRacing’s updated debris model, which launched alongside the Gen3 Supercar in December, was another catalyst for chaos in Mosport. As tyres wear, focus fades, and drivers lunge for passes - risk builds as they inch closer to the river of marbles building up on the track’s edges. 

The Moss Hairpin was the place to be for marble-induced drama, with drivers getting caught out as they hit the slow pedal on what is essentially the only major passing opportunity on a lap of Canadian Tire.

4. ‘Win and In’ - Love it or hate it, it made for a mega story!

There was a certain intensity about the racing at the front. In the drivers minds, there was this looming, unspoken question of  “How far would you go to qualify straight into the main game?”. It was brilliant, and in a short sharp series like this, it only adds fuel to the fire of a category that is already ‘gloves off’.

Brenton Hobson technically leads the points race heading into Round 2, but for Emily Jones, her round win secures a few weeks off before starting the arduous task of running the Pro Series.

Chaos at Moss, the corner than produced more action than any other during the race

5. Banging doors no longer means race over

The Gen2’s reworked damage model that was introduced halfway through last season made its chassis a little bit fragile. Add in the older contact coding, and cars were rotating off noses in ways they shouldn’t have been. 

Here in Gen3, door-to-door racing was welcomed back in open arms on multiple occasions. Paint and dents were traded like it was going out of fashion, yet most walked away no worse for wear. A massive win all around for drivers and spectators alike!


Celebrations for Jones and Trans Tasman Racing!

Emily Jones is through and will be flying Trans Tasman Racing colours in the Pro Series all year long! The race we saw was perfectly in her wheelhouse. Much like the style of her co-drives over the last 2 years, she’s regularly been one of the most consistent drivers when thrown in the deep end, and it shows! There might be other flashier drivers on their day, but she’s regularly got the job done and will be right at home in the Pro Series.

Emily Jones is the first driver to lock in through the Qualifying Series in 2025

Expectations for Fuji

With all of that now locked in, what are we expecting from Fuji?

Boasting a 1.5km long straight that is going to enable drafting, side-by-side racing action will be the regular on the approach down to turn 1. To win this one, you’ll not only need pace, but race smarts as well.

Canadian Tire was a race where you were limited by your tire stops, and fuel was completely covered. Fuji has significantly more on-throttle time, so we should see a return of fuel being the limiting factor.

Eclipse Simsports is going to be the buzzword of the month, and yet again I expect them to be at the front. They’ll have learned from their failings in a big way and will attack again.

Synergy Sim Racing had a very fast car. Dylan Perera blew an engine with an early downshift, but until that point was running in a phenomenal position to take a bank of points. Taking into consideration Brenton Hobson being the points leader, and Glen Postlethwaite's wild 8th place result, I expect these guys to be strong yet again.

Postlethwaite recovered brilliantly at Mosport after early race dramas

Another point of discussion is going to be tyre wear. Mosport wasn’t overly punishing on rubber with cooler Canadian Winter temperatures, shorter laps, and corners which weren’t as long and loaded. 

Fuji punishes tires with long braking zones, long loaded corners (highlighted by 100R at turns 4-5), and a traction and turning based final sector. Expect to see qualifying times a fair chunk faster than race laps!

So in what is far more Supercars style, Fuji is going to be a race of managing fuel, tyres, pace and expectations. Tempers were already short with a few drivers in the field as patience continued to thin. As a driver, this is your best opportunity to get some overtaking done in the Qualifying Series - so you both have to make it count and ensure you finish the race at the same time! 

This is where the real racing drivers will make a name for themselves.

One more driver will be elevated to Pro Series status on Wednesday 12th February. And with a few towards the back needing a strong finish before going into “win it or bin it” mode, can the drivers match the excitement of last week?

I know I am keen as mustard for another round, see you then!

Published on

by Scott Rankin

Related Articles

Previews

Read more …5 Qualifying Series Short Takes

  • Hits: 1882

2025 Qualifying Series Preview

It's finally time. After a long long wait we are back in action for 2025! With 4 races ahead of us we’re about to lock in the final 24 drivers to join us for the 2025 Logitech G Pro Invitational Season!

Canadian Tire Motorsport Park is going to be the venue where we get to see the next generation of Supercars set off in anger for the first time on your screens!

So what do we need to keep an eye out for in the 2025 Qualifying Series?

The New

New Chassis, new sound, new driving style! The Gen 3 Supercars Chassis landed back in December and has been making waves. With a tire that feels more connected to the road, a larger fuel tank, and with the new sounding engine, gearbox and drivetrain the new car has not only changed the game, but changed who we expect to see on top as well!

How you make it into the “main game” for 2025 has changed marginally as well. New for 2025 is the “Win and You’re IN!” system for the Qualifying Series. Last year Jarrad Filsell showed he was back and better than ever in the Qualifying Series, but he would have automatically been into the series after the first round. Who will be following in his footsteps this year? Who will send it in desperation at the final round? Could we see strategy play its part in an attempt to find some clear air and track position?

One of the other elements of the updated Supercars chassis was the ability for us to see weather affected racing, and early forecasts had the potential for “Mosport” to require lifejackets and waterwings! Updated forecasts have us on track for a dry race, but this is another element that has me curious to see how it will all play out!

The undulating and flowing Mosport will host Round 1

The Returning

4 rounds across 4 weeks decides your fate! Last year a couple of potentials failed to qualify due to the shorter nature of the qualifying series. With only 3 other rounds to score back the necessary points, can any of the Qualifying field expect to get away with a mistake?

The big teams! 9ine-5ive Sim Sports, Evolution Racing Team, Lobs Esports, Synergy Sim Racing, Trans Tasman Racing and Vermillion Motorsports all have entries running the gauntlet again this year, but they’re joined by teams looking to shake up the Pro Series! Blackout OPR, DPR Racing, Eclipse Simsports, Phoenix Racing, Racekraft, Xcelerate and a solo Privateer entry are all lurking beneath the water waiting for their opportunity to strike! A race winner coming from outside the big teams is very likely during the Qualifying Series, and already I’m chomping at the bit to find out where it will come from!

The commentary team remains unchanged from last year! Do you think Stephen “Sandman” Clarke and I could wait for the first round? Absolutely not! Oh and the Logitech G-Hub is back with all of the juicy details Sandman has ready to show off! Beau Albert’s Rookie of the year performance somehow managed to land him a spot in the commentary box to highlight all the important points from a professional driver!

What's Missing?

Realistically, not much! Just the Gen2 cars, the Holden Badge and the roar of the engines. Good thing that last bit can be fixed on Wednesday night!

You have no idea how keen we all are for this next generation to kick off! Who can put the lap down, who can keep their tires underneath them, and where does that element of unpredictability creep in? Will it be Drama, Safety Cars, Weather or all of the above?

Join us Wednesday night to kick off Season 2025! 51 Laps from Canadian Tire Motorsport Park will send one driver straight to the Pro Series!

Published on

by Scott Rankin

Related Articles

Previews

Read more …2025 Qualifying Series Preview

  • Hits: 4651