Ginetta Junior Championship

(Redirected from Ginetta Junior)

The Ginetta Junior Championship is a British one-make junior motor racing championship organised around Ginetta sports cars. It is designed as an entry-level car racing series for young drivers moving from karting into circuit racing, with eligibility centred on drivers aged 14 to 17.[3][2] From the 2010 season, the championship has used the Ginetta G40, having previously used the Ginetta G20.[4] In 2026, SRO Motorsports Group took over operational management of the series.[5]

Ginetta Junior Championship
CategoryOne-make racing by Ginetta
CountryUnited Kingdom
AffiliationsSRO Motorsports Group
Inaugural season2005
ConstructorsGinetta
Engine suppliersFord Zetec
Tyre suppliersPirelli[1][2]
Drivers' championNetherlands Rocco Coronel
Teams' championUnited Kingdom R Racing
Official websitewww.ginetta.com/championships/junior-championship/
Current season
The previous Ginetta Junior car, the G20.
Ginetta G40 racing cars of Ollie and Jamie Chadwick at Thruxton, Hampshire.

The championship has acted as a development category for drivers who later progressed into touring cars, GT racing, single-seaters and international motorsport.[3][5] Alumni include Lando Norris, Tom Ingram, Jamie Chadwick, Tom Gamble, Luke Browning, Freddie Slater and Abbi Pulling.

Race format

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The championship is a one-make series, with drivers competing in Ginetta-built junior racing cars.[3] Race meetings usually consist of multiple races across a race weekend. The 2025 sporting regulations state that each driver's fastest qualifying lap determines the grid for race one, while the second-fastest qualifying lap determines the grid for race two. Where a third race is scheduled, the grid is formed from the finishing order of race two.[2]

Cars

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The championship originally used the Ginetta G20, before switching to the Ginetta G40 from the 2010 season.[4] The G40 Junior uses a sealed 1.8-litre Ford Zetec engine, a sealed Quaife six-speed sequential gearbox, a T45 tubular chassis and integral safety cage built to FIA standards, and controlled Pirelli road tyres.[4][2]

History

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The championship began in 2005 and became one of Ginetta's main junior racing categories in the United Kingdom.[3][6] The series initially used the Ginetta G20 before the Ginetta G40 was introduced for the 2010 season.[4] Over time, the championship became established as a pathway for drivers graduating from karting into circuit racing.[3][5]

The 2025 season was the championship's 20th anniversary season, during which the series reached its 500th race.[7][6]

In 2026, operational management of the championship moved to SRO Motorsports Group, as part of a wider change to Ginetta's UK one-make racing structure.[5]

Scholarship

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The Ginetta Junior Scholarship is an annual selection process associated with the championship. The competition assesses young drivers across areas including on-track driving, media and communication skills, and fitness. The winner receives support towards a season in the Ginetta Junior Championship, including championship entry, use of a G40 Junior Evo, insurance, tyres, fuel and professional car preparation.[8]

Development pathway and racing families

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The Ginetta Junior Championship has been used as an early car-racing category by drivers who later progressed into single-seaters, touring cars, GT racing, endurance racing and international motorsport. Ginetta has highlighted the series as part of the early careers of drivers including Lando Norris, Tom Ingram, Jamie Chadwick, Tom Gamble, Luke Browning, Freddie Slater and Abbi Pulling.[9]

The championship has also featured drivers from established motorsport families. Ginetta reported in 2026 that descendants of three Formula One world champions had competed in the series: Henry Surtees, son of John Surtees; Josh Hill, son of Damon Hill and grandson of Graham Hill; and Enzo Fittipaldi, grandson of Emerson Fittipaldi.[10]

Other drivers whose family backgrounds were noted by Ginetta include Will Palmer, son of former Formula One driver Jonathan Palmer; Sebastian Priaulx, son of touring car champion Andy Priaulx; Louis Foster, son of former British Touring Car Championship driver Nick Foster; and Rocco Coronel, son of touring car driver Tom Coronel and racing driver Paulien Zwart.[10]

Champions

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Season Drivers' champion Champion's team Winter Series winner Scholarship winner
2005 United Kingdom Toby Newton
2006 United Kingdom James Harrison
2007 United Kingdom Nigel Moore Hepworth International United Kingdom Kieran Vernon
2008 United Kingdom Dino Zamparelli Muzz Racing United Kingdom Josh Hill
2009 United Kingdom Sarah Moore Tockwith Motorsport United Kingdom Aaron Williamson
2010 United Kingdom Tom Ingram Hillspeed United Kingdom Seb Morris
2011 United Kingdom Seb Morris Hillspeed United Kingdom George Gamble United Kingdom Sennan Fielding
2012 United Kingdom Charlie Robertson HHC Motorsport United Kingdom Harry Woodhead United Kingdom Oli Basey-Fisher
2013 United Kingdom Harry Woodhead HHC Motorsport United Kingdom James Kellett United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick
2014 United Kingdom Jack Mitchell JHR Developments United Kingdom Jamie Caroline United Kingdom Alex Sedgwick
2015 United Kingdom Jamie Caroline HHC Motorsport United Kingdom Stuart Middleton United Kingdom Stuart Middleton
2016 United Kingdom Will Tregurtha HHC Motorsport United Kingdom Sebastian Priaulx United Kingdom Daniel Harper
2017 United Kingdom Tom Gamble JHR Developments / Elite Motorsport United Kingdom Adam Smalley United Kingdom Adam Smalley
2018 United Kingdom Adam Smalley Elite Motorsport United Kingdom James Hedley United Kingdom James Taylor
2019 United Kingdom James Hedley Elite Motorsport United Kingdom James Taylor United Kingdom Ethan Brooks
2020 United Kingdom Tom Lebbon Elite Motorsport Cancelled United Kingdom Tom Lebbon
2021 United Kingdom Aston Millar R Racing United Kingdom Josh Rowledge United Kingdom Maurice Henry
Netherlands Robert de Haan[11]
2022 United Kingdom Josh Rowledge R Racing United Kingdom Freddie Slater United Kingdom Alisha Palmowski[12]
2023 United Kingdom Freddie Slater R Racing United Kingdom Jude Peters[13]
2024 United Kingdom Ethan Jeff-Hall R Racing United Kingdom Isaac Phelps United Kingdom Fred Green
2025 Netherlands Rocco Coronel[14] R Racing[14] United Kingdom Jesse Phillips[15] Netherlands Devon Hagelen[8]

Notable alumni

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The following drivers competed in the Ginetta Junior Championship and later achieved notable results in national or international motor racing. The series has been described by Ginetta and motorsport publications as an early development category for drivers who later progressed into Formula One, IndyCar, touring cars, GT racing and endurance racing.[5][9][16]

Year Driver Ginetta Junior result Later notable achievements
2008 United Kingdom Dino Zamparelli Champion Three-time Porsche Carrera Cup GB runner-up[16]
2010 United Kingdom Tom Ingram Champion 2022 and 2025 British Touring Car Championship champion
United Kingdom Jake Hill Runner-up 2024 British Touring Car Championship champion
2011 United Kingdom Seb Morris Champion 2017 British GT3 champion[16]
United Kingdom Sennan Fielding Scholarship-class winner 2022 British GT4 champion
United Kingdom George Gamble Winter Series champion 2024 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain champion
2012 United Kingdom Charlie Robertson Champion 2015 ELMS LMP3 champion[16]
2013 United Kingdom Jamie Chadwick Scholarship-class winner 2015 British GT4 champion; three-time W Series champion[16][9]
2014 United Kingdom Jack Mitchell Champion 2018 British GT4 champion
United Kingdom Lando Norris Rookie-class champion 2016 Autosport BRDC Award winner; 2025 Formula One World Champion[16][17]
2016 United Kingdom Jamie Caroline Champion 2017 British F4 and 2020 British GT4 champion
United Kingdom Dan Harper Rookie-class champion 2019 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain and 2023 British GT3 champion[9]
2017 United Kingdom Tom Gamble Champion 2018 Autosport BRDC Award winner; 2020 ELMS LMP3 champion
United Kingdom Sebastian Priaulx Runner-up 2019 British GT4 runner-up; 2021 Porsche Carrera Cup North America champion
United Kingdom Kiern Jewiss Rookie-class champion 2018 British F4 and 2022 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain champion
2018 United Kingdom Adam Smalley Champion 2023 Porsche Carrera Cup Great Britain and 2024 British GT3 Silver-Am champion[9]
United Kingdom Louis Foster Runner-up 2024 Indy NXT champion; 2025 IndyCar Series driver[18]
United Kingdom Luke Browning Third place 2022 Autosport BRDC Award winner; 2022 GB3 champion; 2023 Macau Grand Prix winner
United Kingdom Abbi Pulling 21st 2024 F1 Academy champion; first female winner in the F4 British Championship[19][20]
2019 United Kingdom Zak O'Sullivan Runner-up 2021 Autosport BRDC Award winner; 2021 GB3 champion
2020 United Kingdom Tom Lebbon Champion 2024 GT4 European Series champion[9]
United Kingdom Josh Rattican Runner-up 2024 GT4 European Series champion[9]
2021 Netherlands Robert de Haan Rookie-class champion 2023 Porsche Carrera Cup Benelux champion
United Kingdom Callum Voisin Sixth place 2023 GB3 Championship champion
2023 United Kingdom Freddie Slater Champion 2024 Italian F4 champion; 2024 Euro 4 runner-up; 2025 FRECA champion[9][21]

See also

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References

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  1. "New Horizons: Ginetta and Pirelli Agree New Partnership". Ginetta. 24 October 2023. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  2. 1 2 3 4 "2025 Ginetta Junior Championship Sporting, Technical and Commercial Regulations" (PDF). British Racing and Sports Car Club. 1 April 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Ginetta Junior Championship". British Racing and Sports Car Club. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  4. 1 2 3 4 "Ginetta G40 Junior Evo". Ginetta. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Goodwin, Graham (18 February 2026). "SRO Takes Over Operational Management Of Ginetta's UK One-Make Series". DailySportscar. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  6. 1 2 "British GT & Ginetta Roll Into Silverstone For The 500". British Racing and Sports Car Club. 25 April 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  7. "Coronel Wins 500th Ginetta Junior Race In Silverstone Treble". Ginetta. 29 April 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  8. 1 2 "Devon Hagelen Wins 2026 Ginetta Junior Scholarship". Ginetta. 20 October 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Ginetta Alumni Celebrate Standout 2024 Success". Ginetta. 11 December 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  10. 1 2 "Ginetta Juniors: Successful Racing Legacies". Ginetta. 16 May 2026. Retrieved 16 May 2026.
  11. Paice, Simon (21 December 2020). "Henry and de Haan Win 2021 Ginetta Junior Scholarship". Ginetta.com. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  12. Paice, Simon (8 November 2021). "Alisha Palmowski Wins 2022 Ginetta Junior Scholarship". Ginetta.com. Retrieved 29 December 2021.
  13. "Jude Peters Wins 2024 Ginetta Junior Scholarship". Ginetta. 30 October 2023. Retrieved 1 February 2024.
  14. 1 2 "Rocco Coronel Seals Ginetta Junior Title In Donington Park Finale". Ginetta. 6 October 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  15. "Jesse Phillips Wins 2025 Ginetta Junior Winter Series Title". Ginetta. 4 November 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  16. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Introducing Ginetta's One-Make Series, Championships". DailySportscar. 8 August 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  17. "Tearful Norris takes F1 title as Verstappen wins Abu Dhabi race". Reuters. 7 December 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  18. "INDY NXT Champion Louis Foster Joins Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing's NTT INDYCAR SERIES Program In Multi-Year Deal". Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing. 9 October 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  19. "Abbi Pulling: F1 Academy championship leader makes history with British F4 race win". Sky Sports. 13 May 2024. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  20. "Pulling on her breakthrough season and the next challenge". Formula 1. 29 January 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
  21. "Freddie Slater crowned 2025 Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine Champion". Formula Regional European Championship by Alpine. 25 October 2025. Retrieved 13 May 2026.
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