2010 Formula BMW Pacific season

The 2010 Formula BMW Pacific season was the seventh and final Formula BMW Pacific season. The championship began on 3 April in Sepang and finished on 21 November in Macau[1] after fifteen races held at six meetings. The series was axed at the end of the season, in favour of a new Formula BMW Talent Cup starting in 2011.[2] Motorsport Asia will continue to run a rebranded JK Racing Asia Series from 2011,[3] without BMW support.[4]

Singapore-licensed, British driver Richard Bradley[5] won the championship for Eurasia Motorsport with two races in hand, after dominating for most of the season, winning seven races outright as well as an eighth by being the top finisher behind the guest drivers – Carlos Sainz Jr. and Daniil Kvyat took five overall victories between them but were ineligible for championship points – run by the EuroInternational team. He also took three other podium finishes en route to a 76-point championship-winning margin over his nearest rival, Meritus driver Óscar Andrés Tunjo. Tunjo finished the season runner-up despite failing to finish any of the final two races, but E-Rain Racing's Jordan Oon or Mofaz Racing's Calvin Wong could not capitalise on Tunjo's misfortune.

Tunjo, Oon and Wong all took overall victories in Singapore, Guangdong and Okayama respectively, but Tunjo's consistent finishing kept him ahead of Oon and Wong, who each added a class win to their overall wins. Bradley's team-mate Nabil Jeffri completed the top five in the championship, and their results along with Kotaro Sakurai and Duvashen Padayachee helped Eurasia claim the Teams' Championship. Other class victories were claimed by EuroInternational's Dustin Sofyan and James Birch of Motaworld Racing.

  1. ^ "Formula BMW Pacific gears up for watershed season". bmw-motorsport.com. Formula BMW. 2009-12-21. Archived from the original on 2010-01-07. Retrieved 2010-01-03.
  2. ^ Hornsby, Tom (2010-07-08). "Europe and Asia series axed". motorstv.com. Motors TV. Archived from the original on 2012-03-05. Retrieved 2010-07-08.
  3. ^ Hornsby, Tom (11 February 2011). "Junior single seater series bolstered by Indian tyre company". Motors TV. LMC. Archived from the original on 2012-03-19. Retrieved 30 March 2011.
  4. ^ Wilkinson, Andy (2010-07-09). "Motorsport Asia to continue FBMW Pacific". motorstv.com. Motors TV. Archived from the original on 2012-03-05. Retrieved 2010-07-09.
  5. ^ "Introducing...Richard Bradley". Autosport. 203 (12). Haymarket Publications: 61. 24 March 2011. Singapore put itself on the international motorsport map three years ago when it hosted its first world championship grand prix, but so far it has never produced a driver worthy of competing at the top level of single-seater racing. That could all be about to change. Well, sort of. Because although Formula BMW Pacific champion Richard Bradley competes using a Singapore licence, he actually hails from Greenwich.