2016 Champion Bennani Mehdi (front) in action during the 2016 FIA WTCC World Touring Car Championship in this September 23 file photo.
Magical motorsport venues Macau, Monza and the Nurburgring Nordschleife will form part of the FIA World Touring Car Championship (WTCC) schedule for 2017, after a successful final run for the year in Doha.
The chase for world title glory will take place at 10 events in four continents from April to December.
The WTCC takes to the streets of Marrakech for the seventh time in 2017 with the Circuit Moulay El Hassan, transformed into a semi-permanent facility for this year, hosting the season opener on April 9, the first time since 2014 that the Moroccan city has enjoyed such an honour. Fans will turn out in great number to watch home hero Mehdi Bennani in action, while a huge launch party will take place in the build-up to the weekend.
Monza hosted the inaugural FIA World Touring Car Championship event in 1987. To mark the 40-year anniversary, the WTCC is back at the famous Italian Grand Prix venue having last visited in 2013. Monza’s long straights always deliver great racing and the same is expected when the championship returns in 2017. A pre-season test will also be scheduled at the track.
Local fans will descend on the Hungaroring in their thousands to cheer on home favourite Norbert Michelisz. The event switches from a late April to a mid-May date. The annual street parade in Budapest on 1 May, featuring demonstration laps by a variety of racing cars including Formula One machinery, will further promote the event to new audiences.
The most fearsome challenge in international motorsport awaits the WTCC drivers for a third season running when the track’s 25.378-kilometre lap and 64 heart-stopping corners provide the ultimate test in late May.
Nicknamed the Nurburgring Nordschleife of the south due to its climbs, dips and blind turns, the Vila Real street circuit in northern Portugal offers a dramatic spectacle and tough test, and the last event of the traditional European season.
WTCC Race of Argentina at Termas de Río Hondo in early August is the first of five overseas events, which are made possible through the alliance with DHL, the championship’s Official Logistics Partner. In a tweak to the schedule the WTCC races of China and Japan move back to the middle and end of October respectively, with the Qatar night race running on 1 December, two weeks after the return of the famous Guia Race on the streets of Macau.
Macau, a Special Administrative Region of the People’s Republic of China and former Portuguese enclave, oozes motorsport culture and heritage and was the setting of the traditional WTCC season closer from 2005-2014. Celebrating the famous Guia Race for touring cars, WTCC Race of Macau is part of an action-packed weekend of international FIA events and championships, including the Macau Grand Prix, which awards the FIA Formula 3 World Cup to the winner.
The WTCC won’t visit Slovakia Ring or Circuit Paul Ricard in 2017 although both venues will host rounds of the FIM Endurance World Championship, which, like the WTCC, is promoted by Eurosport Events. The WTCC’s four-year stint at the Moscow Raceway also comes to an end.