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2020 Alpine Elf Europa Cup

The 2020 Alpine Elf Europa Cup was the third season of the Alpine Elf Europa Cup, the one-make sports car racing series organized by Alpine for Alpine A110 Cup cars. It began on 22 August at Nogaro and concluded on 1 November at Portimão, after 1 triple-header and 3 double-header meetings.

Entry List

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Team No. Drivers Class Rounds
France  Racing Technology 3 Poland  Gosia Rdest All
9 Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois G All
11 France  Pierre Sancinéna 1
76 France  Pierre Sancinéna 2–4
110[N 1] France  Thomas Laurent G 1
Brazil  André Negrao G
Monaco  Arthur Leclerc G 2
France  Julien Febreau G G 3
France  Philippe Quetaud G G 3–4
France  Herrero Racing by Milan Competition 5 France  Stéphane Proux G All
6 France  Stéphane Auriacombe G 2–3
7 France  Franc Rouxel G All
21 France  Marc Guillot All
26 France  Frédéric Croullet[N 2] G 3
29 France  Mateo Herrero J All
31 France  Louis Méric J 1–2
France  Tierce Racing 6 France  Stéphane Auriacombe G 1
France  Autosport GP 17 France  Jean-Baptiste Mela J All
18 France  Pierre Macchi G All
44 France  Lilou Wadoux J All
69 France  Laurent Hurgon All
97 France  Léo Boulay J 3
98 France  Edwin Traynard J All
France  Mirage Racing 38 France  Yves Lemaître G 1–3
France  Race Cars Consulting 41 France  Anthony Fournier G All
77 France  Franck Labescat[N 2] G 4
Entry Lists: [1][2]
Icon Class
G Gentlemen
J Junior
G Guest

Race calendar and results

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The 2020 calendar was released at the end of season awards ceremony for the 2019 season.[3] The series will be traveling to Misano and Portimão for the first time with the latter also becoming the new season finale. The rounds at Hockenheimring and Silverstone have been dropped while Barcelona, and Le Castellet have new dates. On 10 March 2020, the French government banned gatherings of more than 1000 people in response to the coronavirus pandemic.[4] As a result, the Nogaro round has been moved to July.[5] On 27 April 2020, the final calendar was released consisting of four rounds, down from the planned six, and a dramatically changed schedule primarily focused around France with the exception of the final round at Portimão.[6] With this new schedule, the series traveled to Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours for the first time. The series also utilized a three race format for some rounds.

Round Circuit Date Pole Position Race Winner Junior Winner Gentlemen Winner Supporting
1 R1 France  Circuit Paul Armagnac, Nogaro 22 August France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 9 Racing Technology FFSA GT Championship
French F4 Championship
French Renault Clio Cup
Peugeot 308 Racing Cup
France  Mateo Herrero France  Mateo Herrero France  Mateo Herrero Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois
R2 23 August France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 9 Racing Technology
France  Mateo Herrero France  Mateo Herrero France  Mateo Herrero Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois
R3 France  No. 29 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 98 Autosport GP France  No. 98 Autosport GP France  No. 6 Tierce Racing
France  Mateo Herrero France  Edwin Traynard France  Edwin Traynard France  Stéphane Auriacombe
2 R1 France  Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours 12 September France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 9 Racing Technology GT World Challenge Europe Sprint Cup
French F4 Championship
French Renault Clio Cup
Formula Renault Eurocup
France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois
R2 13 September France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 6 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition
France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Stéphane Auriacombe
3 R1 France  Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet 3 October France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 9 Racing Technology FFSA GT Championship
French F4 Championship
French Renault Clio Cup
Peugeot 308 Racing Cup
France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois
R2 4 October France  No. 69 Autosport GP France  No. 69 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 5 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition
France  Laurent Hurgon France  Laurent Hurgon France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Stéphane Proux
R3 France  No. 69 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 41 Race Cars Consulting
France  Laurent Hurgon France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Anthony Fournier
4 R1 Portugal  Algarve International Circuit, Portimão 31 October France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 77 Race Cars Consulting European Le Mans Series
Michelin Le Mans Cup
France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Franck Labescat
R2 1 November France  No. 76 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 76 Herrero Racing by Milan Competition France  No. 17 Autosport GP France  No. 77 Race Cars Consulting
France  Pierre Sancinéna France  Pierre Sancinéna France  Jean-Baptiste Mela France  Franck Labescat

Championship Standings

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Drivers' Championship

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Scoring system

Points are awarded to the top 20 drivers. If less than 75% of the race distance is completed then half points are awarded. If less than two laps are completed then no points are given.[7]

Position 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 11th-20th PP FL
Points 20 15 12 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1 1 1
Pos. Driver NOG
France 
MAG
France 
LEC
France 
PRT
Portugal 
 Pts. 
1 France  Jean-Baptiste Mela 3 2 2 1 1 1 2 1 1 4 166
2 France  Laurent Hurgon 4 3 6 2 2 2 1 2 3 3 129
3 France  Pierre Sancinéna 2 4 5 3 3 5 4 3 5 1 113
4 France  Mateo Herrero 1 1 3 5 Ret 3 3 13 13 DNS 89.5
5 France  Marc Guillot 5 5 4 6 6 4 9 5 8 2 76.5
6 France  Edwin Traynard 6 11 1 Ret 5 11 7 4 2 5 68.5
7 France  Lilou Wadoux 7 6 8 4 4 7 5 7 4 7 65
8 Poland  Gosia Rdest 8 7 10 8 Ret 6 6 6 6 6 43
9 Belgium  Phillippe Bourgois 10 9 13 9 13 9 14 10 10 9 24
11 France  Anthony Fournier 11 10 12 12 Ret 10 15 8 12 11 18
10 France  Louis Méric 12 Ret 9 7 7 15
12 France  Stéphane Proux 15 14 17 10 10 15 10 Ret 11 12 13.5
13 France  Stéphane Auriacombe DNS Ret 11 11 8 12 Ret 9 11
14 France  Yves Lemaître 14 13 15 13 9 13 11 11 10
15 France  Léo Boulay 8 8 14 9
16 France  Pierre Macchi Ret 15 14 15 12 16 12 Ret 14 13 7.5
17 France  Franc Rouxel 13 12 16 14 11 DNS WD WD 15 14 6.5
Drivers ineligible to score points
France  Franck Labescat 7 8
Brazil  André Negrao 9 7
France  Thomas Laurent 8
France  Philippe Quetaud Ret 9 10
France  Frédéric Croullet 14 13 12
Monaco  Arthur Leclerc Ret DNS
France  Julien Febreau Ret
Pos. Driver NOG
France 
MAG
France 
LEC
France 
PRT
Portugal 
 Pts. 

Half points were awarded for the first race at Portimão because the race had to be red-flagged due to an accident and so completed less than 75% of the scheduled distance.

Notes

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  1. ^ Guest drivers in the #110 Racing Technology entry are ineligible for points and invisible as far as awarding points to other drivers.
  2. ^ a b Drivers who started their first race of the season at the final or penultimate rounds are ineligible for points and invisible as far as awarding points to other drivers".
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References

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  1. ^ "Liste des engagés". Alpine Elf Europa Cup. August 20, 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-09-23.
  2. ^ "Essais libres 1 Classement". September 11, 2020. Archived from the original on 2020-09-23.
  3. ^ "The Alpine Elf Europa Cup looks ahead to 2020!". www.alpineelfeuropacup.com. Retrieved 2020-02-07.
  4. ^ "France bans gatherings of more than 1,000 people to contain coronavirus". France 24. 2020-03-08. Retrieved 2020-03-12.
  5. ^ "Start of the 2020 Alpine Elf Europa Cup season postponed". www.alpineelfeuropacup.com. Retrieved 2020-03-12.
  6. ^ "The Alpine Elf Europa Cup adjusts its 2020 calendar". www.alpineelfeuropacup.com. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  7. ^ "SPORTING REGULATION ALPINE EUROPA CUP". Alpine Elf Europa Cup. Archived from the original on 2019-12-06.