2014 World Touring Car Championship


The 2014 FIA World Touring Car Championship was a motor racing competition organised by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile for Super 2000 Cars. It was the eleventh FIA World Touring Car Championship, and the tenth since the series was revived in 2005.
After making a race-winning début on home soil during the 2013 campaign, Argentina's José María López won the drivers' championship after performing strongest during the season. Driving for the Citroën team, López won ten races during the season, significantly more than team-mates Yvan Muller – the defending series champion – and Sébastien Loeb, who was in his first season in the championship. López finished all but one race during the season, with his only retirement coming during the second race in Russia, and finished the season 126 points clear of his next closest challenger, which was Muller. Muller took four victories during the season, all coming from pole position. Loeb finished a further 41 points behind Muller, taking a pair of victories, in Morocco and the only race in Slovakia.
Only one other driver won more than one race, as Robert Huff won the first races for Lada Sport in the World Touring Car Championship. Huff won the second races in Beijing and Macau; his win in the latter was his seventh at the circuit, over the previous seven years. Single race winners during 2014 were Gabriele Tarquini, Tom Chilton, Gianni Morbidelli, Mehdi Bennani and Ma Qing Hua in Russia. Morbidelli's win was his first in the series, while the victories for Bennani and Ma were the first in FIA competition for their respective countries, Morocco and China.
Citroën dominated the manufacturers' championship, taking a total of 17 overall wins out of the 23 races. The marque finished almost 300 points clear of Honda, who finished in second position. In the TC2-only Yokohama Drivers' Trophy, Franz Engstler finished well clear of the field in his final WTCC season before moving to the TCR International Series. Engstler achieved 20 victories and a pair of second places from 23 starts, and finished 90 points clear of closest rival John Filippi, who won the second race in Japan. The other race winners were Pasquale Di Sabatino in Hungary, and ETCC regular Petr Fulín, who won the race in Slovakia. In the Yokohama Teams' Trophy for non-manufacturer teams, ROAL Motorsport, with Chilton and Tom Coronel as its drivers, finished 91 points clear of the single-car team of Zengő Motorsport and driver Norbert Michelisz. The Yokohama Performer of the Year award went to López, taking the most fastest laps of the season, with eleven.

Teams and drivers

For the 2014 season, the series' technical regulations were altered. Cars built to the 2014 specifications were classified as "TC1", whilst cars built prior to 2014 were classified as "TC2".

Team changes

The sporting and technical regulations were approved by the FIA, at the July 2013 meeting of the World Motor Sport Council:

Sporting regulations

The series introduced a raft of changes to the technical regulations for the 2014 season. The cars were still built to Super 2000 regulations, but with significant changes compared to the 2011 generation of cars. The minimum weight of the cars was reduced from to, and was accompanied by an increase in the power output of the engine, which rose to 380 bhp, an increase of between 50 and 60 bhp depending on the engine being used. The size of the wheels being used increased to 18", with MacPherson strut suspension being introduced to all cars. The dimensions of the cars changed, with a maximum width of, and a front splitter. Changes to the aerodynamic package allowed teams to use flat floors, and introduce single-plane rear wings that were allowed, but to be no higher than the roof of the car.

Calendar

The provisional 2014 schedule was announced on 4 November 2013. The season was once again contested over twenty-four races at twelve circuits.
RaceRace NameCircuitDate
11Race of Morocco Circuit International Automobile Moulay El Hassan13 April
12Race of Morocco Circuit International Automobile Moulay El Hassan13 April
23JVC Kenwood Race of France Circuit Paul Ricard20 April
24JVC Kenwood Race of France Circuit Paul Ricard20 April
35Race of Hungary Hungaroring4 May
36Race of Hungary Hungaroring4 May
47Race of Slovakia Automotodróm Slovakia Ring11 May
48Race of Slovakia Automotodróm Slovakia Ring11 May
59Race of Austria Salzburgring25 May
510Race of Austria Salzburgring25 May
611Lukoil Race of Russia Moscow Raceway8 June
612Lukoil Race of Russia Moscow Raceway8 June
713Race of Belgium Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps22 June
714Race of Belgium Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps22 June
815Race of Argentina Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo3 August
816Race of Argentina Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo3 August
917Race of Beijing Goldenport Park Circuit5 October
918Race of Beijing Goldenport Park Circuit5 October
1019Race of Shanghai Shanghai International Circuit12 October
1020Race of Shanghai Shanghai International Circuit12 October
1121JVC Kenwood Race of Japan Suzuka Circuit26 October
1122JVC Kenwood Race of Japan Suzuka Circuit26 October
1223Guia Race of Macau Guia Circuit16 November
1224Guia Race of Macau Guia Circuit16 November

Calendar changes

Races

Compensation weights

The most competitive cars keep a 60 kg compensation weight. The other cars get a lower one, calculated according to their results for the three previous rounds. The less the cars get some good results, the less they get a compensation weight, from 0 kg to 60 kg. The compensation weights were introduced starting from the third round.
During the whole season, the Citroën C-Elysée was the reference car with the best races results and so was handicapped by a 60 kg compensation weight to limit its performances, as well as during the qualifications than during the races.
CarHungaroringSlovakia RingSalzburgringMoscowSpa-FrancorchampsTermas de Río HondoBeijingShanghaiSuzukaMacau
Citroën C-Elysée WTCC+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg+60 kg
Honda Civic WTCC0 kg0 kg0 kg+20 kg+20 kg+20 kg+30 kg+20 kg+30 kg+30 kg
Chevrolet RML Cruze TC10 kg0 kg0 kg+20 kg+20 kg+40 kg+20 kg+40 kg+30 kg+40 kg
Lada Granta 1.6T0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg0 kg

Results

Championship standings

Drivers' Championship

† – Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 75% of the race distance.

Manufacturers' Championship

Yokohama Trophies

World Touring Car Championship promoter Eurosport Events organised the Yokohama Drivers' Trophy and the Yokohama Teams' Trophy within the 2014 FIA World Touring Car Championship.
Yokohama Drivers' Trophy
All TC2 entries were eligible for the Yokohama Drivers' Trophy.
Yokohama Teams' Trophy
All non-manufacturer teams were eligible to score points towards the Yokohama Teams' Trophy.
† – Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 75% of the race distance.
Yokohama Performer of the year
Driver
1 José María López11
2 Yvan Muller3
3 Sébastien Loeb2
3 Gabriele Tarquini2
4 Tom Chilton1
4 Ma Qing Hua1
4 Robert Huff1
4 Tiago Monteiro1
4 Hugo Valente1
Eurosport Asia Trophy

Footnotes