Formula Renault Eurocup was a Formula Renault motor racing championship. Eurocup raced only on European circuits.

It served as a support series to the Formula Renault 3.5 Series as part of the World Series by Renault from 2005 to 2015. Renault Sport offered a prize of €500,000 to the winner of the Eurocup until 2015. Following the 2020 season, the Formula Renault Eurocup merged with the Formula Regional European Championship due to COVID-19 pandemic.

History

The series was established in 1991, as the "Rencontres Internationales de Formule Renault", before switching to the "Eurocup Formula Renault" name in 1993.

In 2000, renamed to Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup and Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 since 2005 used up to now, excludes the 2003 season named Formula Renault 2000 Masters.

While a support series of the Formula Renault 3.5 many drivers stepped up to the senior category, for example the 2006 champion Filipe Albuquerque, fourth-place finisher Bertrand Baguette and 13th-place finisher Xavier Maassen being the first to do so that on the full-time basis for the 2007 season. 2007 champion Brendon Hartley did not follow suit however, and instead moved firstly to British Formula Three Championship. Meanwhile, Charles Pic and Alexandre Marsoin joined FR 3.5 for the 2008. 2008 champion Valtteri Bottas moved to the Formula 3 Euro Series, and only Anton Nebylitskiy who was placed 20th, made his debut in FR 3.5 in 2009. 2009 was the first season when the champion received money to graduate to FR 3.5 and Albert Costa used this opportunity. He was joined in the 2010 Formula Renault 3.5 Series season by sixth-place finisher Nathanaël Berthon. Like Costa, 2010 champion Kevin Korjus and his rivals Arthur Pic, Daniël de Jong and André Negrão moved to FR 3.5 in 2011. 2011 champion Robin Frijns not only graduated to FR 3.5 in 2012, he also became the first driver, who won both Eurocup and FR 3.5 Series consecutively. Other 2011 Eurocup graduates, who moved to FR 3.5 were Will Stevens and Vittorio Ghirelli. 2012 champion Stoffel Vandoorne and his contender Norman Nato headed to FR 3.5 in 2013. Pierre Gasly and Oliver Rowland, who fought till the last race for the 2013 Eurocup title, both graduated to FR 3.5 in 2014. They was joined by Luca Ghiotto, Matthieu Vaxivière and Roman Mavlanov. Nyck de Vries dominated the 2014 championship and moved to FR 3.5 in 2015. Egor Orudzhev, Aurélien Panis and Gustav Malja moved to Formula Renault 3.5 as well.

Car specifications

Sacha Fenestraz in 2017.

The chassis was built at Alpine's Dieppe plant, a Renault subsidiary. The aerodynamic kit was designed by Tatuus. All Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 cars use the same specifications.

  • Chassis: FR2.0/13. Carbon-fibre bodywork
  • Engine: Renault F4R 832 – 4-cylinder – 16 valve – 1998cc. 210 bhp at 7,500rpm. 220Nm at 5,500rpm
  • Transmission: SADEV seven-speed sequential + reverse gear. XAP electric control gearshift, semi-automatic steering-wheel mounted
  • Front suspension: ZF Race Engineering single damper, two-way adjustable
  • Rear suspension: ZF Race Engineering double damper, two-way adjustable
  • Brakes: Four-piston calipers with 278 x 18 mm steel discs
  • Rims: Aluminium one-piece 9 x 13 (front) and 10 x 13 (rear)
  • Tyres: Michelin 20-54 x 13 (front) and 24-57 x 13 (rear)
  • Length/width/height: 4270 / 1740 / 950mm
  • Front and rear track: 1502 / 1440mm
  • Fuel tank: 50 litres
  • Unloaded weight: 506 kg

Champions

Prior Formula Renault Eurocup

Rencontres Internationales de Formule Renault
SeasonChampionTeam
1991United Kingdom Jason PlatoUnited Kingdom Duckhams Van Diemen
1992Spain Pedro de la RosaSpain Racing for Spain
Eurocup Formula Renault
SeasonChampionTeam
1993France Olivier CouvreurFrance Synergie
1994United Kingdom James MatthewsUnited Kingdom Manor Motorsport
1995France Cyrille SauvageFrance Mygale
1996Brazil Enrique BernoldiItaly Tatuus JD Motorsport
1997Belgium Jeffrey van HooydonkItaly Tatuus JD Motorsport
1998France Bruno BessonItaly Tatuus JD Motorsport
1999Italy Gianmaria BruniItaly JD Motorsport
Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup
SeasonChampionTeam Champion
2000Brazil Felipe MassaItaly JD Motorsport
2001Brazil Augusto FarfusItaly RC Motorsport
2002France Eric SalignonFrance Graff Racing
2004United States Scott SpeedGermany Motopark Academy
Formula Renault 2000 Masters
SeasonChampionTeam Champion
2003Argentina Esteban GuerrieriItaly JD Motorsport
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
SeasonChampionTeam ChampionSecondary Class Champion
2005Japan Kamui KobayashiFrance SG Formulanot awarded
2006Portugal Filipe AlbuquerqueItaly JD Motorsport
2007New Zealand Brendon HartleySpain Epsilon RedBullJ: New Zealand Brendon Hartley
2008Finland Valtteri BottasFrance SG FormulaJ: Italy Andrea Caldarelli
2009Spain Albert CostaSpain Epsilon EuskadiJ: Portugal António Félix da Costa
2010Estonia Kevin KorjusFrance Tech 1 RacingJ: Estonia Kevin Korjus
2011Netherlands Robin FrijnsFinland Koiranen MotorsportJ: Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.
2012Belgium Stoffel VandoorneGermany Josef Kaufmann RacingJ: Russia Daniil Kvyat
2013France Pierre GaslyFrance Tech 1 RacingJ: France Pierre Gasly
2014Netherlands Nyck de VriesFinland Koiranen GPJ: Norway Dennis Olsen
2015United Kingdom Jack AitkenGermany Josef Kaufmann RacingR: United Kingdom Harrison Scott
2016United Kingdom Lando NorrisGermany Josef Kaufmann RacingR: United Kingdom Lando Norris

Formula Renault Eurocup

SeasonChampionTeam ChampionSecondary Class Champion
2017France Sacha FenestrazFrance R-ace GPR: United Kingdom Max Fewtrell
2018United Kingdom Max FewtrellFrance R-ace GPR: Denmark Christian Lundgaard
2019United Kingdom Oscar PiastriFrance R-ace GPR: Brazil Caio Collet
2020France Victor MartinsFrance ART Grand PrixR: United Kingdom Alex Quinn

Notes

External links