Filed under:
Motorsports,
Audi,
BMW,
Mercedes-Benz,
Racing
It won't be until 2015 at the earliest, but the International Motor Sports Association (IMSA), Grand-Am and the Internationale Tourenwagen-Rennen have agreed to a licensing and cooperation deal that could bring a version of Germany's DTM series to the US.
When the
American Le Mans Series and
Grand-Am are officially combined next year, the resulting body will be called United SportsCar Racing (USCR). IMSA will be the sanctioning body for that series, and DTM races could be run as support events. It was also
suggested by an ALMS chief that DTM races could be standalone or join
NASCAR and
IndyCar weekends.
With the so-called DTM America finally agreed to, there is now a way for manufacturers to run the same DTM-type cars in Europe, the US and Japan - last year Japan's Super GT series
agreed to adopt "the basic technical regulations" of DTM for the GT500 class, the top class in the series. That already puts six manufacturers in play:
Mercedes-Benz,
Audi and
BMW that run in Germany's DTM and
Honda,
Nissan and
Lexus that run in Super GT. The DTM oversight body has invited American brands to Germany for the opening round of the 2013 season, and will begin actively courting their participation in the US series. Check out the press release from Audi with comments on the deal
below.
Continue reading GRAND-AM, IMSA announce deal to bring DTM racing to US
GRAND-AM, IMSA announce deal to bring DTM racing to US originally appeared on
Autoblog on Fri, 29 Mar 2013 10:15:00 EST. Please see our
terms for use of feeds.
Permalink |
Email this |
Comments
More...