Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 October 11 and Formula D: Difference between pages

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{{Cleanup|date=September 2007}}
<noinclude><div class="boilerplate metadata vfd" style="background-color: #F3F9FF; margin: 0 auto; padding: 0 1px 0 0; border: 1px solid #AAAAAA; font-size:10px">
[[Image:Oldfdlogo.jpg|thumb|200px|First Formula D logo, in use from 2004 to 2006]]
{| width = "100%"
'''Formula D''' is a [[United States]]' [[drifting (motorsport)|drifting]] series.
|-
It is not a racing formula, the name is taken for vanity's sake only.
! width="50%" align="left" | <font color="grey">&lt;</font> [[Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 October 10|October 10]]
! width="50%" align="right" | [[Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2008 October 12|October 12]] <font color="grey">&gt;</font>
|}
</div></noinclude>


The series is sponsored by the popular video game series, ''[[Need for Speed series|Need for Speed]]''. Its official name is '''''Need for Speed'' Formula Drift Presented by [[Circuit City]]'''. It was inaugurated in 2004.
=== October 11 ===
<!-- Please do not add new nominations here.
Use the current day's NEW NOMINATIONS section
(to properly order entries and avoid edit conflicts).
Thank you for your cooperation.
-->
==== NEW NOMINATIONS ====
<!-- Please add the newest nominations below this line -->
==== Category:Military Schools ====
:'''Propose renaming''' [[:Category:Military Schools]] to [[:Category:Military Schools in India]]
:'''Nominator's rationale:''' '''Rename'''. The current name is rather misleading. It is a sub category of [[:Category:Military education and training in India]]. The category also begins with the following short description of the category: ''The military schools in India were started in 1925 with establishment of Chail Military School (King George Royal Indian Military College) and later on Ajmer, Bangalore, Belgaum and Dholpur were started by Govt. of India.'' [[User:Dbiel|Dbiel]] <sup>([[User talk:Dbiel|Talk]])</sup> 05:19, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
:I failed to notice that this category was just created today. So now I am not sure if the category should be renamed or deleted. Just raising the question [[User:Dbiel|Dbiel]] <sup>([[User talk:Dbiel|Talk]])</sup> 05:31, 11 October 2008 (UTC)
*'''Merge''' - to the pre-existing [[:Category:Indian military academies]] (although that category should probably be "Military academies in India"). [[User:Otto4711|Otto4711]] ([[User talk:Otto4711|talk]]) 05:51, 11 October 2008 (UTC)


The 2008 series schedule has seven official rounds, each at a different track. These are the locations Formula D visits in 2008:


* Streets of [[Long Beach, California|Long Beach]], [[California]] (held on [[April 12]])
<!-- Please add the newest nominations to the top -->
* [[Road Atlanta]] in [[Braselton, Georgia|Braselton]], [[Georgia (U.S. state)|Georgia]] (held on [[May 10]])
* [[Englishtown Raceway]] at [[Old Bridge Township Raceway Park]] in [[Englishtown, New Jersey|Englishtown]], [[New Jersey]] (held on [[June 14]])*
* [[Las Vegas Motor Speedway]] in [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]], [[Nevada]] (held [[July 12]])*
* [[Evergreen Speedway]] in [[Monroe, Washington|Monroe]], [[Washington]] (held on [[August 9]])
* [[Infineon Raceway]] in [[Sonoma, California|Sonoma]], [[California]] (held on [[September 13]])
* [[Irwindale Speedway]] in [[Irwindale, California|Irwindale]], [[California]] (scheduled for [[October 11]])

The asterisk next to the Englishtown and Las Vegas rounds indicate that they are new venues. Round 3 was previously scheduled to be held at [[Wall Speedway]] in [[Wall Township, New Jersey|Wall Township]], [[New Jersey]], but the track was closed, as expected, and the event moved to Englishtown.<ref>[http://formulad.com/news/FD-Round-3.html]</ref>

Formula D had somewhat of a partnership with the [[Champ Car World Series]], holding demonstration events at Champ Car race weekends, most prominently, the [[Long Beach Grand Prix]]. In 2007, five demonstration events were held as team events, and counted towards a points system separate from the individual championship. Only two team events for scheduled for 2008, one at Long Beach, and the other at [[Portland International Raceway]].<ref>[http://formulad.com/team-drift/]</ref>

There was also a Formula D in [[Australia]], which was announced in June 2005. The three tracks Formula D Australia visited in 2005 were [[Mallala Motorsport Park]] in [[South Australia]], [[Oran Park Raceway]] in [[New South Wales]], and [[Winton Raceway]] in [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]]. The series was held in conjunction with the [[DRIFT AUSTRALIA Championship]]. After the season, the series' website was no longer updated, and has since been taken down.

The American Formula D series advertises nine tire manufacturers ([[Nitto Tires]], [[Toyo Tire & Rubber Company|Toyo Tires]], [[Bridgestone|Bridgestone Tires]], [[Maxxiss Tires]], [[Federal Tires]], [[Falken Tires]], [[Cooper Tires]], [[Dunlop Tires]], [[Hankook Tires]], and [[Kumho Tires]]).

== Formula D television coverage ==
Former ''[[Fox Soccer USA]]'' host Brandon Johnson hosted the ''Formula D'' show for G4 in 2006. [[Rossi Morreale]] was the show's host in 2005. Johnson was joined by ''Attack of the Show'' co-host [[Olivia Munn]] who covered the pits and drivers during the events and drifting expert [[Adam Matthews]] who provided commentary and insight on the tandem battles. G4 aired each round on a tape-delayed basis. [[Jarod DeAnda]] is the [[public address]] announcer at each event, earning him the moniker, "The Voice of Formula D." In 2005, G4 used DeAnda's event commentary track, but for 2006, used Johnson and Matthews calling each battle like a typical [[play-by-play]]/[[color commentator]] combination. Johnson and Matthews were on-site for each event, but it sounded as if they had taped their commentary after the event had already taken place. This practice is not uncommon in the motorsports business; an article in the December 2006 issue of ''[[Car and Driver]]'' revealed that longtime motorsports announcer [[Rick Benjamin]] uses this same method when calling [[USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series]] races. Benjamin travels to [[Atlanta]], views a tape of the most recent event, makes notes, then tapes his commentary.

In the 2005 season, there were two people working the pits — driver interviewer [[Mayleen Ramey]], who was a roving reporter for the half-hour episodes, and a second anchor, who patrolled around the car show at each event. In 2005, G4 used three reporters for this job. From the round in Wall to the round in Houston, actor [[Emeka (actor)|Emeka]] held the job. At the Infineon round, ''[[Attack of the Show]]'' co-host [[Kevin Pereira]] took the duties, while ''Street Fury'' host [[Big C (TV personality)|Big C]] finished things out in Chicago and Irwindale. Also, G4 showed half-hour episodes in-between rounds, most of which focused on the network having its own [[drift car]] built from scratch, with other segments focusing on the aspects of drifting. One of the first half-hour episodes in 2005 had one Formula D competitor, [[Chris Forsberg]] go to Japan, and meet up with another competitor, [[Daijiro Yoshihara]], to explore the country and get more perspective on the birth of drifting. Episodes that featured event coverage lasted an hour-and-a-half, and featured the top 16 tandem rounds, including those that needed to be run again, because the judges deemed them too close to call. These episodes aired the night after the next round in the series had already taken place.

In 2006, however, coverage was dramatically different. The half-hour episodes were gone, and event coverage was reduced to an hour, and their scheduling was quite random. The Long Beach and Atlanta rounds premiered on [[June 18]], with the Chicago round airing on [[July 2]], and the Sonoma round airing a week after it took place. During the Sonoma round, G4 noted that the Seattle round would premiere on [[September 10]], but that date was changed to [[October 8]], with the last two rounds (Wall and Irwindale) airing every other week afterward. These episodes featured more interviews and driver profiles, many of which would've been placed in a half-hour show last year, and many of the tandem battles have been cut out, and any battle that needed to be run again did not have its second run shown. This led to some criticism from those in the drifting community, including fans and some Formula D drivers.

At the 2006 [[SEMA Show]] in [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]], Formula D co-founders [[Jim Liaw]] and [[Ryan Sage]] announced that the series would have a new television partner in 2007. That partner was [[ESPN2]]. Each round began airing in a one-hour block on [[November 15]] with the Long Beach round. All subsequent airings were supposed to be every Thursday afterward, but beginning with the Evergreen Speedway round on [[December 5]], the air dates for new rounds switched to Wednesday.

The ESPN deal lasted just one season. [[SPEED Channel]] will air all rounds of the 2008 Formula D season, as well as the World Championship, scheduled for after the Irwindale round. Airings will take place on Sundays, beginning with the Long Beach round on [[October 26]]. All airings will begin at 4 PM Eastern. <ref>[http://formulad.com/news/speed-press-release.html Formula DRIFT Announces SPEED Programming Block]</ref>

== Regulation differences between D1GP and Formula D ==
There are numerous differences between [[D1 Grand Prix]] and Formula D in terms of car and competition regulations
=== Car eligibility ===
D1GP only allow convertible models as long as a supplied hard top roof is used, whereas Formula D permits cars to be driven with its roof down. During the 2004 season, the [[Dodge Viper#Viper Competition Coupe|Dodge Viper Competition Coupe]] was permitted to compete, whereas it was ineligible in D1.

Although Formula D do not permit [[front wheel drive]] cars, it allows them to be converted to [[rear wheel drive]], one example of this is [[Ken Gushi]]'s [[Scion tC]].

=== Scoring and judging ===
Formula D uses a different scoring system to D1GP. In D1, points are given to drivers who compete in the tsuiou (twin run) round, known as ''Tandem Battle'' in Formula D; 20 for the winner going down to 2 for the 10th place finisher as well as 1 point for the rest of the drivers who competed in the tsuiou round.

In D1, drivers are given three runs during a tansou (solo run) round, in Formula D as ''Qualifying Single Runs'' and only the best of them will count which at the end of that round, drivers who score the perfect 100 points will be awarded one extra point to add to their championship score. In Formula D, competitors are given two non-consecutive judged runs during the ''Single Runs'' segment of the competition which both will be judged. Starting orders will consists of drivers from the lowest rank starting first with those of the highest rank starting last whereas in D1, it is the other way round as it is seen that lower ranked drivers can take advantage of the surface grip when they start last.<ref name = FD>[http://formulad.com/info.php?id=judginginfo Formula Drift - Professional Drifting Championship<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>

Formula D drivers are scored on a points-deduction system where every driver will start their judged run with a perfect score of 100 pts. For every mistakes, points will be deducted. These points will vary between .25 point to the most severe mistakes (-1.75).<ref name = FD />

When there is a tie in scores during a competition, rather than in D1 which will call for a rerun until the winner can be decided, in Formula D, judges will use the driver’s entry speed of the best run from the Qualifying Round as a tie breaker.<ref name = FD />

In D1GP, during a tsuiou round, if a driver wins his round but is unable to take his place up, due to breakages, they must forfeit their place to the losing opponent. If neither is able to compete, the winning driver gets his place and as a result, that following round will not take place. In Formula D,in that situation, should the driver be without an opponent, they will be allowed to run on his own.

=== Overtaking ===
Formula D rules are structured so as not to encourage drivers to overtake their opponents; doing so incurs a penalty. Overtaking is only permitted when the lead car makes a mistake, whereas in D1, being overtaken is seen as a disadvantage to the driver, incurring a loss.<ref name = FD />

== List of competing drivers in Formula Drift ==

(also includes former drivers)

[[Tony Angelo]] (Drift Alliance/Bridgestone [[Mazda RX-8]])<br />
[[Taka Aono]] (Falken [[Toyota AE86 Sprinter Trueno|AE86 Corolla]])<br />
[[Tony Brakohiapa]]<br />
[[Nathan Brasz]]<br />
[[Casper Canul]] (Cooper Tire Silvia S14.5)<br />
[[John Cena]] (WWE [[NISSAN GTR]])<br />
[[Ryan Clemens]]<br />
[[James Evans]]{{dn}} Bubba Drift [[GMC Caballero]]<br />
[[Lance Feliciano]]<br />
[[Ernie Fixmer]] (Fixmer Racing)<BR>
[[Rob Fleming (driver)|Rob Fleming]] (XAT Racing/Maxxis Tires [[Nissan 240SX]] S13)<br />
[[Chris Forsberg]] (Drift Alliance/NOS Energy Drink/Maxxis [[Nissan 350Z]] Roadster)<br />
[[Tanner Foust]] (AEM 350z)<br />
[[Vaughn Gittin, Jr.]] (Falken/DA [[Ford Mustang]])<br />
[[Conrad Grunewald]]<br />
[[Ken Gushi]] 具志健士郎(Toyo Tires [[Ford Mustang]])<br />
[[Ryan Hampton]] <br />
[[Mitsuru Haruguchi]]<br />
[[Kazu Hayashida]][Nissan Skyline R34<br />
[[Todd Ho]] (FC3S)<br />
[[Nick Hogan]](no longer licenced) [[Dodge Charger Mopar]]) <br />
[[Benson Hsu]] (privateer Nissan) [[Sileighty]])<br />
[[Samuel Hubinette]] ([[Mopar]] [[Dodge Viper]])<br />
[[James Huynh]] ([[Toyota Supra]])<br />
[[Kevin Huynh]] (Nissan [[180SX]])<br />
[[Sean Johnson]] ([[Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution]])<br />
[[Hiromi Kajikuma]]<br />
[[Gary Lang]]<br />
[[Aaron Losey]] Bubba Drift [[Chevrolet El Camino]]N/A conversion<br />
[[Quoc Ly]]<br />
[[Joon Maeng]][Nissan S13.5]<br />
[[Tyler Mcquarrie]] (Hankook/JIC [[porsche 911]])<br />
[[Darren McNamara]] [[Toyota AE86]] (with Nissan SR20DET engine)<br />
[[Verena Mei]]<br />
[[Christopher Mendoza]]<br />
[[Ryuji Miki]]<br />
[[Chris Milano]]<br />
[[Rod Millen]] [[Mazda RX-8]]<br />
[[Rhys Millen]] (Rhys Millen Racing [[Pontiac Solstice]])<br />
[[Kyle Mohan]][Mazda FC RX7]<br />
[[Robbie Nishida]][Nissan S14]<br />
[[Bryan Norris]]<br />
[[Yukinobu Okubo]] (Signal Japan [[Skyline GTR]])<br />
[[David Padron]]<br />
[[Stephan Papadakis]] (AEM [[Honda S2000]])<br />
[[Justin Pawlak]]<br />
[[Dan Pina]] (Drift Patrol [[Ford Mustang]])<br />
[[Michael Peters]][Nissan S13] (V8 Chevy Powerd)<br />
[[Ross Petty]] ([[Nissan 240sx]] (Stroked SR20DET))<br />
[[Daniel Pina]]<br />
[[Casey Quillen]]<br />
[[John Russakaoff]]<br />
[[Ben Reyes]]<br />
[[Jeffary Rodriguez]] (Veilside [[Mazda RX7 FD3S]])<br />
[[Emily rodriguez]] ([[Nissan Silvia S13]])<br />
[[Derrick Rogers]] Bubba Drift [[Chevrolet El Camino]]<br />
[[Rich Rutherford]]<br />
[[Ben Schwartz]] Sears/Falken [[Saturn Sky]]<br />
[[Tony Schulz]]<br />
[[Makoto Sezaki]]<br />
[[Bill Sherman]]<br />
[[Gary Simmons]]<br />
[[Tommy Suell]]<br />
[[Steven Sueppel]](AE86)<br />
[[Hiro Sumida]] (Falken Discount Tire [[Lexus IS350]])<br />
[[Ryan Tuerck]]Drift Alliance/Bridgestone Nissan S13<br />
[[Amy Tang]] ([[Toyota Soarer]])<br />
[[Robbie Unser]]<br />
[[Doug VanDenBrink]]<br />
[[Stephan Verdier]]<br />
[[Calvin Wan]] (Falken [[Infiniti G35]])<br />
[[Seigo Yamamoto]] (Falken/Garage-S/OS-Giken [[Toyota Chaser]])<br />
[[Kenji Yamanaka]]<br />
[[John Yim]] (Enjuku Racing [[Nissan 240SX]] S13.4)<br />
[[Daijiro Yoshihara]] (Rockstar/Nitto [[Nissan S13]])<BR>
[[Hubert Young]]

[[Chris Orsini]]

== Formula Drift Champions ==
=== US ===
* 2004 [[Samuel Hubinette]] - [[Dodge Viper#Viper Competition Coupe|Mopar Viper Competition Coupe]]
* 2005 [[Rhys Millen]] - RMR [[Pontiac GTO]]
* 2006 [[Samuel Hubinette]] - [[Dodge Viper#Third generation (2003-present)|Mopar Viper SRT-10]]
*2007 [[Tanner Foust]] - [[Nissan 350z]]



== Formula Drift Triple Crown Champions ==

*2006 [[Tanner Foust]] - [[Nissan 350z]]
*2007 [[Chris Forsberg]] - [[Nissan 350z]]

== All-time Formula Drift event winners list ==
# [[Samuel Hubinette]] - 9 wins (2004 at Road Atlanta, Houston, and Infineon; 2005 at Road Atlanta and Chicago; 2006 at Long Beach, Chicago and Wall; 2007 at Summit Point)
# [[Rhys Millen]] - 5 wins (2004 at Irwindale; 2005 at Wall; 2006 at Infineon; 2008 at Road Atlanta and Seattle)
# [[Chris Forsberg]] - 4 wins (2005 at Irwindale; 2007 at Road Atlanta and Infineon; 2008 at Long Beach)
# [[Tanner Foust]] - 4 wins (2006 at Road Atlanta; 2007 at Irwindale; 2008 at Englishtown and Sonoma)
# [[Daijiro Yoshihara]] - 3 wins (2006 at Irwindale; 2007 at Seattle and Wall)


One win each for:
# [[Ken Gushi]] (2005 at Houston)
# [[Calvin Wan]] (2005 at Infineon)
# [[Yukinobu Okubo]] (2006 at Seattle)
# [[Mitsuru Haraguchi]] (2007 at Long Beach)
# [[Toshiki Yoshioka]] (2008 at Las Vegas)

== References ==

<references/>

== External links ==
{{commonscat|Formula Drift}}
*[http://www.formulad.com/ Formula D's official website]
*[http://www.g4tv.com/formulad/index.html G4TV.com's ''Formula D'' page]
*[http://www.formulad.com.au/index.asp Formula Drift Australia official site]
*[http://www.wreckedmagazine.com Wrecked Magazine - Drifting's home in the USA]
*[http://www.driftlive.com DriftLive.com - Unofficial Formula D Coverage]
*[http://www.driftcentral.com]
*[http://thedriftzone.com/ The DriftZone - Formula D's official video podcast coverage]

[[Category:G4 television series]]
[[Category:Auto racing series]]
[[Category:Sports Car Club of America]]
[[Category:Drifting]]
[[Category:Sports entertainment]]

[[es:Formula Drift]]

Revision as of 05:55, 11 October 2008

File:Oldfdlogo.jpg
First Formula D logo, in use from 2004 to 2006

Formula D is a United States' drifting series. It is not a racing formula, the name is taken for vanity's sake only.

The series is sponsored by the popular video game series, Need for Speed. Its official name is Need for Speed Formula Drift Presented by Circuit City. It was inaugurated in 2004.

The 2008 series schedule has seven official rounds, each at a different track. These are the locations Formula D visits in 2008:

The asterisk next to the Englishtown and Las Vegas rounds indicate that they are new venues. Round 3 was previously scheduled to be held at Wall Speedway in Wall Township, New Jersey, but the track was closed, as expected, and the event moved to Englishtown.[1]

Formula D had somewhat of a partnership with the Champ Car World Series, holding demonstration events at Champ Car race weekends, most prominently, the Long Beach Grand Prix. In 2007, five demonstration events were held as team events, and counted towards a points system separate from the individual championship. Only two team events for scheduled for 2008, one at Long Beach, and the other at Portland International Raceway.[2]

There was also a Formula D in Australia, which was announced in June 2005. The three tracks Formula D Australia visited in 2005 were Mallala Motorsport Park in South Australia, Oran Park Raceway in New South Wales, and Winton Raceway in Victoria. The series was held in conjunction with the DRIFT AUSTRALIA Championship. After the season, the series' website was no longer updated, and has since been taken down.

The American Formula D series advertises nine tire manufacturers (Nitto Tires, Toyo Tires, Bridgestone Tires, Maxxiss Tires, Federal Tires, Falken Tires, Cooper Tires, Dunlop Tires, Hankook Tires, and Kumho Tires).

Formula D television coverage

Former Fox Soccer USA host Brandon Johnson hosted the Formula D show for G4 in 2006. Rossi Morreale was the show's host in 2005. Johnson was joined by Attack of the Show co-host Olivia Munn who covered the pits and drivers during the events and drifting expert Adam Matthews who provided commentary and insight on the tandem battles. G4 aired each round on a tape-delayed basis. Jarod DeAnda is the public address announcer at each event, earning him the moniker, "The Voice of Formula D." In 2005, G4 used DeAnda's event commentary track, but for 2006, used Johnson and Matthews calling each battle like a typical play-by-play/color commentator combination. Johnson and Matthews were on-site for each event, but it sounded as if they had taped their commentary after the event had already taken place. This practice is not uncommon in the motorsports business; an article in the December 2006 issue of Car and Driver revealed that longtime motorsports announcer Rick Benjamin uses this same method when calling USAR Hooters Pro Cup Series races. Benjamin travels to Atlanta, views a tape of the most recent event, makes notes, then tapes his commentary.

In the 2005 season, there were two people working the pits — driver interviewer Mayleen Ramey, who was a roving reporter for the half-hour episodes, and a second anchor, who patrolled around the car show at each event. In 2005, G4 used three reporters for this job. From the round in Wall to the round in Houston, actor Emeka held the job. At the Infineon round, Attack of the Show co-host Kevin Pereira took the duties, while Street Fury host Big C finished things out in Chicago and Irwindale. Also, G4 showed half-hour episodes in-between rounds, most of which focused on the network having its own drift car built from scratch, with other segments focusing on the aspects of drifting. One of the first half-hour episodes in 2005 had one Formula D competitor, Chris Forsberg go to Japan, and meet up with another competitor, Daijiro Yoshihara, to explore the country and get more perspective on the birth of drifting. Episodes that featured event coverage lasted an hour-and-a-half, and featured the top 16 tandem rounds, including those that needed to be run again, because the judges deemed them too close to call. These episodes aired the night after the next round in the series had already taken place.

In 2006, however, coverage was dramatically different. The half-hour episodes were gone, and event coverage was reduced to an hour, and their scheduling was quite random. The Long Beach and Atlanta rounds premiered on June 18, with the Chicago round airing on July 2, and the Sonoma round airing a week after it took place. During the Sonoma round, G4 noted that the Seattle round would premiere on September 10, but that date was changed to October 8, with the last two rounds (Wall and Irwindale) airing every other week afterward. These episodes featured more interviews and driver profiles, many of which would've been placed in a half-hour show last year, and many of the tandem battles have been cut out, and any battle that needed to be run again did not have its second run shown. This led to some criticism from those in the drifting community, including fans and some Formula D drivers.

At the 2006 SEMA Show in Las Vegas, Formula D co-founders Jim Liaw and Ryan Sage announced that the series would have a new television partner in 2007. That partner was ESPN2. Each round began airing in a one-hour block on November 15 with the Long Beach round. All subsequent airings were supposed to be every Thursday afterward, but beginning with the Evergreen Speedway round on December 5, the air dates for new rounds switched to Wednesday.

The ESPN deal lasted just one season. SPEED Channel will air all rounds of the 2008 Formula D season, as well as the World Championship, scheduled for after the Irwindale round. Airings will take place on Sundays, beginning with the Long Beach round on October 26. All airings will begin at 4 PM Eastern. [3]

Regulation differences between D1GP and Formula D

There are numerous differences between D1 Grand Prix and Formula D in terms of car and competition regulations

Car eligibility

D1GP only allow convertible models as long as a supplied hard top roof is used, whereas Formula D permits cars to be driven with its roof down. During the 2004 season, the Dodge Viper Competition Coupe was permitted to compete, whereas it was ineligible in D1.

Although Formula D do not permit front wheel drive cars, it allows them to be converted to rear wheel drive, one example of this is Ken Gushi's Scion tC.

Scoring and judging

Formula D uses a different scoring system to D1GP. In D1, points are given to drivers who compete in the tsuiou (twin run) round, known as Tandem Battle in Formula D; 20 for the winner going down to 2 for the 10th place finisher as well as 1 point for the rest of the drivers who competed in the tsuiou round.

In D1, drivers are given three runs during a tansou (solo run) round, in Formula D as Qualifying Single Runs and only the best of them will count which at the end of that round, drivers who score the perfect 100 points will be awarded one extra point to add to their championship score. In Formula D, competitors are given two non-consecutive judged runs during the Single Runs segment of the competition which both will be judged. Starting orders will consists of drivers from the lowest rank starting first with those of the highest rank starting last whereas in D1, it is the other way round as it is seen that lower ranked drivers can take advantage of the surface grip when they start last.[4]

Formula D drivers are scored on a points-deduction system where every driver will start their judged run with a perfect score of 100 pts. For every mistakes, points will be deducted. These points will vary between .25 point to the most severe mistakes (-1.75).[4]

When there is a tie in scores during a competition, rather than in D1 which will call for a rerun until the winner can be decided, in Formula D, judges will use the driver’s entry speed of the best run from the Qualifying Round as a tie breaker.[4]

In D1GP, during a tsuiou round, if a driver wins his round but is unable to take his place up, due to breakages, they must forfeit their place to the losing opponent. If neither is able to compete, the winning driver gets his place and as a result, that following round will not take place. In Formula D,in that situation, should the driver be without an opponent, they will be allowed to run on his own.

Overtaking

Formula D rules are structured so as not to encourage drivers to overtake their opponents; doing so incurs a penalty. Overtaking is only permitted when the lead car makes a mistake, whereas in D1, being overtaken is seen as a disadvantage to the driver, incurring a loss.[4]

List of competing drivers in Formula Drift

(also includes former drivers)

Tony Angelo (Drift Alliance/Bridgestone Mazda RX-8)
Taka Aono (Falken AE86 Corolla)
Tony Brakohiapa
Nathan Brasz
Casper Canul (Cooper Tire Silvia S14.5)
John Cena (WWE NISSAN GTR)
Ryan Clemens
James Evans[disambiguation needed] Bubba Drift GMC Caballero
Lance Feliciano
Ernie Fixmer (Fixmer Racing)
Rob Fleming (XAT Racing/Maxxis Tires Nissan 240SX S13)
Chris Forsberg (Drift Alliance/NOS Energy Drink/Maxxis Nissan 350Z Roadster)
Tanner Foust (AEM 350z)
Vaughn Gittin, Jr. (Falken/DA Ford Mustang)
Conrad Grunewald
Ken Gushi 具志健士郎(Toyo Tires Ford Mustang)
Ryan Hampton
Mitsuru Haruguchi
Kazu Hayashida[Nissan Skyline R34
Todd Ho (FC3S)
Nick Hogan(no longer licenced) Dodge Charger Mopar)
Benson Hsu (privateer Nissan) Sileighty)
Samuel Hubinette (Mopar Dodge Viper)
James Huynh (Toyota Supra)
Kevin Huynh (Nissan 180SX)
Sean Johnson (Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution)
Hiromi Kajikuma
Gary Lang
Aaron Losey Bubba Drift Chevrolet El CaminoN/A conversion
Quoc Ly
Joon Maeng[Nissan S13.5]
Tyler Mcquarrie (Hankook/JIC porsche 911)
Darren McNamara Toyota AE86 (with Nissan SR20DET engine)
Verena Mei
Christopher Mendoza
Ryuji Miki
Chris Milano
Rod Millen Mazda RX-8
Rhys Millen (Rhys Millen Racing Pontiac Solstice)
Kyle Mohan[Mazda FC RX7]
Robbie Nishida[Nissan S14]
Bryan Norris
Yukinobu Okubo (Signal Japan Skyline GTR)
David Padron
Stephan Papadakis (AEM Honda S2000)
Justin Pawlak
Dan Pina (Drift Patrol Ford Mustang)
Michael Peters[Nissan S13] (V8 Chevy Powerd)
Ross Petty (Nissan 240sx (Stroked SR20DET))
Daniel Pina
Casey Quillen
John Russakaoff
Ben Reyes
Jeffary Rodriguez (Veilside Mazda RX7 FD3S)
Emily rodriguez (Nissan Silvia S13)
Derrick Rogers Bubba Drift Chevrolet El Camino
Rich Rutherford
Ben Schwartz Sears/Falken Saturn Sky
Tony Schulz
Makoto Sezaki
Bill Sherman
Gary Simmons
Tommy Suell
Steven Sueppel(AE86)
Hiro Sumida (Falken Discount Tire Lexus IS350)
Ryan TuerckDrift Alliance/Bridgestone Nissan S13
Amy Tang (Toyota Soarer)
Robbie Unser
Doug VanDenBrink
Stephan Verdier
Calvin Wan (Falken Infiniti G35)
Seigo Yamamoto (Falken/Garage-S/OS-Giken Toyota Chaser)
Kenji Yamanaka
John Yim (Enjuku Racing Nissan 240SX S13.4)
Daijiro Yoshihara (Rockstar/Nitto Nissan S13)
Hubert Young

Chris Orsini

Formula Drift Champions

US


Formula Drift Triple Crown Champions

All-time Formula Drift event winners list

  1. Samuel Hubinette - 9 wins (2004 at Road Atlanta, Houston, and Infineon; 2005 at Road Atlanta and Chicago; 2006 at Long Beach, Chicago and Wall; 2007 at Summit Point)
  2. Rhys Millen - 5 wins (2004 at Irwindale; 2005 at Wall; 2006 at Infineon; 2008 at Road Atlanta and Seattle)
  3. Chris Forsberg - 4 wins (2005 at Irwindale; 2007 at Road Atlanta and Infineon; 2008 at Long Beach)
  4. Tanner Foust - 4 wins (2006 at Road Atlanta; 2007 at Irwindale; 2008 at Englishtown and Sonoma)
  5. Daijiro Yoshihara - 3 wins (2006 at Irwindale; 2007 at Seattle and Wall)


One win each for:

  1. Ken Gushi (2005 at Houston)
  2. Calvin Wan (2005 at Infineon)
  3. Yukinobu Okubo (2006 at Seattle)
  4. Mitsuru Haraguchi (2007 at Long Beach)
  5. Toshiki Yoshioka (2008 at Las Vegas)

References

External links