1991 British Touring Car Championship

The 1991 Esso RAC British Touring Car Championship season was the 34th British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season and marked the first year of the Super Touring era.

Will Hoy (pictured in 1995), the 1991 British Touring Car Champion.

Changes for 1991

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  • After a transitional year in 1990, the multi-class Group A regulations was fully dropped and replaced by the new Super Touring rules that had evolved out of Group A's Div. II category. Group A cars were still allowed to participate, but only as long as they were restricted to bring them down to Super Touring speeds.

Season summary

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Group A had towards the end of its existence been dominated by Ford and their Sierra RS500. Super Tourers had first appeared in 1990, and with BMW and Vauxhall running their cars in that category they effectively had a years head start on their opposition for 1991. BMW also had the numerical advantage, the factory Prodrive team entering two cars and the semi-factory Vic Lee Motorsport team entering four. Vauxhall had two cars, as had Toyota, while Ford only appeared with a single car for Robb Gravett's Trakstar team. Nissan missed the start of the season but then ran a single-car effort for Keith O'Dor driving a 2.0 Primera entered by Janspeed, and was joined by ex-Formula One driver Julian Bailey towards the end of the season and Mitsubishi was back, engineered by BTCC stalwart John McGuire Racing, fielding a one car team for Mark Hales, the team elected to run the Lancer GTI at the beginning of the season but was replaced by the larger Galant mid season.

The privateer entries would consist mainly of BMW M3s with the odd Ford Sierra entry, the most notable being Andy Middlehurst, and the odd appearance of Jeff Wilson in a Vauxhall Belmont.

Rover and Peugeot would also be represented briefly by privateers Grahame Davis and Andrew McKenzie while possible entries from Audi,[1] Honda,[2] Renault and Lancia [3] were mooted but never materialised.

The championship battle would stand between Will Hoy and John Cleland. Hoy won the first two races of the season and kept scoring consistently, but as the season progressed it was Cleland who came out on top more often than not. Hoy's consistency however put him in a position to claim the championship at the penultimate round at Thruxton, provided he scored a good enough result. Indeed, Hoy took the lead of the race thanks to BMW team tactics, but soon thereafter he was controversially tapped into a spin by works BMW driver Jonathan Palmer. Hoy dropped down the field and later retired after contact with Cleland. Cleland would go on to finish 8th with a damaged car, taking the championship to the final race. There Hoy was able to finish ahead of Cleland, and thus claiming the first Super Touring championship win. Andy Rouse finished third for Toyota, and Steve Soper ended up fourth overall despite missing several races due to clashing commitments in the German DTM championship.

The 7th meeting of the season at Silverstone would be notable for the debut of future 3-time Champion Matt Neal in a Pyramid Motorsport-run BMW M3, finishing 13th out of 17 finishers.

Teams and drivers

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Team Car No. Drivers Rounds
Manufacturer
  Trakstar Motorsport Ford Sierra Sapphire 1   Robb Gravett All
  Kaliber ICS Team Toyota Toyota Carina 3   Andy Rouse All
33   Gary Ayles All
  BMW Team Labatt's BMW M3 4   Tim Harvey All
9   Laurence Bristow 1–11, 13
  Armin Hahne 12
  Vauxhall Sport Vauxhall Cavalier 5   John Cleland All
6   Jeff Allam All
56   Bob Berridge 12–13
  BMW Team Listerine BMW M3 11   Will Hoy All
12   Ray Bellm All
  BMW Team Finance BMW M3 22   Jonathan Palmer All
44   Steve Soper 1, 3, 7–10, 12
  Tim Sugden 2, 5–6, 11, 13
  Christian Danner 4
  Nissan Janspeed Racing Nissan Primera eGT 23   Kieth O'dor 2–13
24   Julian Bailey 11–13
  John Maguire Racing Mitsubishi Lancer 88   Mark Hales 1–5
Mitsubishi Galant 8–13
Independent
  Pyramid Motorsport BMW M3 2   Frank Sytner 1–8, 10–11
  David Leslie 13
18   Matt Neal 7
  Alistair Fenwick 12
  Godfrey Hall 13
  Sean Walker Racing Ford Sierra RS500 7   Sean Walker 2
  BMW Team Sweden BMW M3 10   Nettan Lindgren 1–3, 5–6
91   Peggen Andersson 1–3, 6
  R&D Motorsport BMW 318is 13   Angus MacKay 1–2
  Alistair Lyall 4, 7, 13
  ACE Motorsport Peugeot 405 Mi16 17   Andrew MacKenzie 7, 10
  Judge Developments Ford Sierra RS500 19   Dennis Leech 1–4
  Moto-Build Rover 216GTi 20   Grahame Davis 1–2, 7, 10
  Brodie Brittain Racing Ford Sierra Sapphire 4x4 21   Dave Brodie 10–13
  Drambuie Racing BMW M3 45   Ian Forrest All
  HWR Motorsport Vauxhall Belmont 58   Jeff Wilson 9, 11, 13
  Tony Bardy 12
  BRR Motorsport BMW M3 59   Ian Flux 1, 3–5, 13
  Matt Neal 9
  Val Musetti 11
  Auto Trader Techspeed Team BMW M3 66   Nick Whale 1–5, 8–9, 11–13
  David Leslie 7
  John Llewellyn 10
77   Nick Baird 1–5, 7–8, 12–13
  Matt Neal 11
  Graham Goode Racing Ford Sierra RS Cosworth 99   Andy Middlehurst All

Race calendar and winners

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All races were held in the United Kingdom.

Round Circuit Date Pole Position Fastest Lap Winning Driver Winning Team
1 R1 Silverstone Circuit (National) 1 April   Steve Soper   Will Hoy   Will Hoy BMW Team Listerine
2 R2 Snetterton Circuit 14 April   John Cleland   Will Hoy   Will Hoy BMW Team Listerine
3 R3 Donington Park (Grand Prix) 28 April   Steve Soper   John Cleland   Steve Soper BMW Team Finance
4 R4 Thruxton 27 May   Will Hoy   Will Hoy   John Cleland Vauxhall Sport
5 R51 Silverstone Circuit (National) 9 June   Tim Sugden   Andy Rouse   John Cleland Vauxhall Sport
6 R6 Brands Hatch (Indy) 30 June   Tim Sugden   Will Hoy   Tim Sugden BMW Team Finance
7 R7 Silverstone Circuit (Grand Prix) 14 July   Steve Soper   Steve Soper   Steve Soper BMW Team Finance
8 R8 Donington Park (National) 28 July   John Cleland   Andy Rouse   Andy Rouse Kaliber ICS Team Toyota
R9   Ray Bellm   Andy Rouse Kaliber ICS Team Toyota
9 R10 Oulton Park (International) 11 August   John Cleland   Gary Ayles   John Cleland Vauxhall Sport
10 R11 Brands Hatch (Indy) 26 August   Andy Rouse   Andy Rouse   Andy Rouse Kaliber ICS Team Toyota
R12   Ray Bellm   Will Hoy BMW Team Listerine
11 R13 Donington Park (Grand Prix) 15 September   John Cleland   John Cleland   John Cleland Vauxhall Sport
12 R14 Thruxton 22 September   Jonathan Palmer   Tim Harvey   Steve Soper BMW Team Finance
13 R15 Silverstone Circuit (Grand Prix) 6 October   Andy Rouse   Tim Harvey   Tim Harvey BMW Team Labatt's
  1. ^  – Race was stopped after 10 laps due to heavy rain. The race was not restarted and no points were awarded.

Championship results

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Drivers Championship

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Pos Driver SIL SNE DON THR SIL BRH SIL DON OUL BRH DON THR SIL Pts
1   Will Hoy 1 1 Ret 3 3 2 2 Ret DNS 2 2 1 3 Ret 5 155
2   John Cleland 3 9 2 1 1 12 6 3 10 1 4 3 1 8 9 132
3   Andy Rouse 5 3 9 8 4 3 7 1 1 4 1 Ret Ret 4 2 115
4   Steve Soper 18 1 1 2 Ret 3 6 Ret 1 96
5   Ray Bellm 6 2 6 7 5 7 4 6 2 6 14 Ret 4 5 6 90
6   Jeff Allam 2 4 5 2 2 5 8 5 Ret Ret 8 Ret 6 10 8 80
7   Jonathan Palmer 7 Ret Ret 6 11 6 5 4 3 5 7 6 Ret 2 21 66
8   Tim Harvey 10 7 DSQ 4 7 4 3 Ret 6 7 Ret 5 2 Ret 1 421
9   Andy Middlehurst 4 Ret 13 Ret 10 Ret 16 7 7 8 11 4 8 7 3 41
10   Tim Sugden Ret 12 1 5 Ret 32
11   Robb Gravett 20 13 Ret 14 18 9 Ret 9 4 9 5 2 7 9 13 28
12   Frank Sytner DNS 5 3 Ret 6 8 10 Ret DNS 9 7 Ret 26
13   Laurence Bristow Ret 6 7 12 16 10 11 8 5 Ret Ret DNS Ret 7 20
14   Gary Ayles 9 DSQ 4 Ret 8 Ret Ret Ret DNS Ret 3 DNS 14 Ret 10 19
15   Armin Hahne 3 12
16   David Leslie 9 4 12
17   Kieth O'dor Ret Ret 11 13 15 Ret 10 8 10 Ret Ret 9 6 11 10
18   Christian Danner 5 8
19   Peggen Andersson 8 8 12 11 6
20   Dennis Leech 16 14 8 Ret 3
21   Nick Baird 11 Ret 15 9 14 12 12 9 DNS 17 2
22   Ian Flux 13 Ret 10 9 14 1
23   Mark Hales 17 10 16 16 DNS 14 Ret 14 13 Ret Ret 11 Ret 1
24   Nettan Lindgren 19 Ret 10 13 14 1
25   Nick Whale 14 12 14 13 17 11 Ret 11 10 12 19 1
26   John Llewellyn 10 Ret 0
27   Ian Forrest 12 11 11 15 15 14 15 13 NC 12 12 Ret 12 13 22 0
28   Jeff Wilson 13 11 Ret 0
29   Julian Bailey Ret Ret 12 0
30   Matt Neal 13 Ret DNS 0
31   Valentino Musetti 13 0
32   Angus MacKay 15 15 0
33   Dave Brodie Ret DNS DNS Ret 15 0
34   Bob Berridge Ret 16 0
35   Andrew MacKenzie 17 DNS DNS 0
36   Alistair Lyall DNS Ret 18 0
37   Godfrey Hall 20 0
 —   Grahame Davis DNS DNS DNS Ret DNS 0
 —   Sean Walker DNS 0
 —   Tony Bardy DNS 0
 —   Alistair Fenwick DNS 0
Pos Driver SIL SNE DON THR SIL BRH SIL DON OUL BRH DON THR SIL Pts
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)
  • Note: bold signifies pole position, italics signifies fastest lap.
  1. ^  – Tim Harvey was docked 48 points in round 3 for not keeping within the limits of noise regulations.

† Race was stopped early due to heavy rain, and no points were awarded. Note: Most fastest laps are unknown.

Manufacturers Championship

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Pos Manufacturer SIL SNE DON THR SIL BRH SIL DON OUL BRH DON THR SIL Pts
1 BMW / BMW Team Listerine/BMW Team Labatt's/BMW Team Finance 1 1 1 3 3 1 1 2 2 2 2 1 2 1 1 134
2 Vauxhall / Vauxhall Sport 2 4 2 1 1 5 6 3 10 1 4 3 1 8 8 116
3 Toyota / Kaliber ICS Team Toyota 5 3 4 8 4 3 7 1 1 4 1 Ret 14 4 2 111
4 Ford / Trakstar Motorsport 4 13 8 14 10 9 16 7 4 8 5 2 7 7 3 102
5 Nissan / Nissan Janspeed Racing Ret Ret 11 13 15 Ret 10 8 10 Ret Ret 9 6 11 53
6 Mitsubishi / John Maguire Racing 17 10 16 16 DNS 14 Ret 14 13 Ret Ret 11 Ret 45
Pos Manufacturer SIL SNE DON THR SIL BRH SIL DON OUL BRH DON THR SIL Pts

References

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  1. ^ "BTCC 1991: BBC Grandstand Season Preview (4:52)". YouTube. August 2022.
  2. ^ "20240711 161137 — Postimages".
  3. ^ "British Touring Car Championship". 7 July 2014.