2024 Formula 2 Championship

The 2024 FIA Formula 2 Championship is a motor racing championship for Formula 2 cars sanctioned by the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA). The championship is the fifty-eighth season of Formula 2 racing and the eighth season run under the FIA Formula 2 Championship moniker. It is an open-wheel racing category serving as the second tier of formula racing in the FIA Global Pathway. The category is run in support of selected rounds of the 2024 Formula One World Championship. As the championship is a spec series, all teams and drivers competing in the championship run the same car, the Dallara F2 2024.

Paul Aron is the current championship leader.

The 2024 season saw the debut of a new chassis and engine package.[1]

ART Grand Prix entered the championship as the reigning Teams' Champions, having secured their title at the final race of the 2023 season in Abu Dhabi.

Entries

The following teams and drivers are competing in the 2024 Formula 2 Championship. As the championship is a spec series, all teams compete with an identical Dallara F2 2024 chassis with a V6 turbo engine developed by Mecachrome. All teams compete with tyres supplied by Pirelli.

EntrantNo.Driver nameRounds
ART Grand Prix1 Victor Martins1–5
2 Zak O'Sullivan1–5
Prema Racing3 Oliver Bearman1–5[a]
4 Andrea Kimi Antonelli1–5
Rodin Motorsport5 Zane Maloney1–5
6 Ritomo Miyata1–5
DAMS Lucas Oil7 Jak Crawford1–5
8 Juan Manuel Correa1–5
Invicta Racing9 Kush Maini1–5
10 Gabriel Bortoleto1–5
MP Motorsport11 Dennis Hauger1–5
12 Franco Colapinto1–5
Van Amersfoort Racing14 Enzo Fittipaldi1–5
15 Rafael Villagómez1–5
Hitech Pulse-Eight16 Amaury Cordeel1–5
17 Paul Aron1–5
Campos Racing20 Isack Hadjar1–5
21 Pepe Martí1–5
Trident22 Richard Verschoor1–5
23 Roman Staněk1–5
PHM AIX Racing (1–3)
AIX Racing (4–5)
24 Joshua Dürksen1–5
25 Taylor Barnard1–5
Source: [2]

Team changes

Following the partnership that saw Invicta Watch Group become Virtuosi Racing's title sponsor in 2023, the company purchased an ownership stake in the team and entered the 2024 season under the Invicta Racing guise.[3]

After Rodin Cars became Carlin's majority shareholder in 2023 and rebranded the team as Rodin Carlin, the Carlin family departed the team, with Rodin taking full ownership and renaming the team Rodin Motorsport.[4] Rodin became the championship's first team ever to run under a non-European nationality.

PHM Racing now operated independently of Charouz Racing System, after the latter co-ran the team during the 2023 season. Ahead of the season, PHM also announced the AIX Investment Group as a new title sponsor, changing the team's name to PHM AIX Racing.[5]

DAMS became DAMS Lucas Oil following a strengthened sponsorship deal with American oil company Lucas Oil.[6]

Mid-season changes

The AIX Investment Group completed its acquisition of PHM Racing ahead of the fourth round of the season and rebranded the team to AIX Racing.[7]

Driver changes

Reigning champion Théo Pourchaire left ART Grand Prix and the series, moving to Japan to compete in the Super Formula Championship with Team Impul.[8] Williams Driver Academy member Zak O'Sullivan replaced him, having finished second in the previous year's FIA Formula 3 season with Prema Racing.[9]

Prema Racing saw 2023 runner-up Frederik Vesti leave the championship to join Cool Racing to compete in the LMP2 class of the European Le Mans Series.[10] Vesti was replaced by Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who skipped over FIA Formula 3 after securing the Formula Regional European Championship title in 2023.[11]

Rodin Motorsport replaced VAR-bound Enzo Fittipaldi with reigning Super Formula Champion Ritomo Miyata, who switched to racing in Europe to prepare for his endurance racing efforts with Toyota.[12][13]

DAMS saw both their drivers leave F2, with Ayumu Iwasa returning to Japan to compete in the Super Formula Championship with Team Mugen and Arthur Leclerc moving to the Italian GT Championship.[14][15] The team fielded an all-American driver lineup in 2024, consisting of Jak Crawford, who moved over from Hitech Pulse-Eight after coming 13th in the championship in 2023, and Juan Manuel Correa, who left Van Amersfoort Racing after coming 19th in his first year since returning after his accident in 2019.[16][17]

Invicta Racing also had an all-new driver lineup, after Amaury Cordeel and Jack Doohan departed the team, with the former joining Hitech Pulse-Eight and the latter focusing on his reserve driver work for Alpine in Formula One.[18][19] Invicta's 2024 lineup consisted of reigning FIA Formula 3 Champion and McLaren junior Gabriel Bortoleto, partnered by Alpine junior Kush Maini, who switched from Campos Racing after coming eleventh with the team last season.[20]

MP Motorsport saw Jehan Daruvala leave the team ahead of the 2023 season finale as he left the series after four seasons to join Maserati MSG Racing for Season 10 of the Formula E World Championship.[21] The team fielded Williams Driver Academy member Franco Colapinto during the final round of 2023, and he stayed at the team for his first full-time F2 season, graduating after coming fourth with the team in FIA Formula 3.[22]

Both Van Amersfoort Racing drivers moved to other teams, with Juan Manuel Correa signing for DAMS and Richard Verschoor joining Trident.[17][23] VAR enlisted Enzo Fittipaldi, who left Rodin to embark on his third full season in the championship.[12] Rafael Villagómez partnered him, graduating from the team's FIA F3 outfit after three seasons in that championship that culminated in him finishing his 2023 campaign in 25th.[24]

Hitech Pulse-Eight also saw both their drivers switch teams, with Jak Crawford moving to DAMS and Isack Hadjar switching to Campos Racing.[16][25] They were replaced by Paul Aron, who already made his debut at the final round of 2023 with Trident after coming third in the 2023 FIA Formula 3 Championship, and Amaury Cordeel, who left Invicta Racing to embark on his third season in the championship after previously finishing 17th and 20th.[18]

Campos Racing driver Ralph Boschung ended his racing career after seven seasons in Formula 2, while his 2023 teammate Kush Maini moved to Invicta for his sophomore season.[26][20] The Spanish team had an all-Red Bull junior lineup in 2024, consisting of Pepe Martí, who graduated from the outfit's FIA Formula 3 team after coming fifth in 2023, and Isack Hadjar, who moved over from Hitech Pulse-Eight after coming 14th in 2023.[25]

Trident saw Richard Verschoor return to the team for his fourth F2 campaign after last racing for them in 2022.[23] He replaced Clément Novalak, who had already left the team ahead of the 2023 final to focus on competing in the 2024 European Le Mans Series with Inter Europol Competition.[27]

PHM AIX Racing saw another long-term F2 driver leave the series, with Roy Nissany stepping away from the championship after six years of competition. He was replaced by Joshua Dürksen, who mirrored Antonelli in stepping up directly from the Formula Regional European Championship, albeit after two seasons of competing there and taking a single podium.[28] Josh Mason did also not return to the team, with Taylor Barnard being named as his replacement. He graduated to Formula 2 after a race-winning campaign with Jenzer Motorsport in FIA Formula 3, where he finished tenth in the championship.[29]

Race calendar

RoundCircuitSprint raceFeature race
1 Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir1 March2 March
2 Jeddah Corniche Circuit, Jeddah8 March9 March
3 Albert Park Circuit, Melbourne23 March24 March
4 Imola Circuit, Imola18 May19 May
5 Circuit de Monaco, Monaco25 May26 May
6 Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló22 June23 June
7 Red Bull Ring, Spielberg29 June30 June
8 Silverstone Circuit, Silverstone6 July7 July
9 Hungaroring, Mogyoród20 July21 July
10 Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot27 July28 July
11 Monza Circuit, Monza31 August1 September
12 Baku City Circuit, Baku14 September15 September
13 Lusail International Circuit, Lusail30 November1 December
14 Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi7 December8 December
Source:[30]

Calendar changes

Regulation changes

Technical regulations

  • The season saw the introduction of a brand new chassis and engine package. The Dallara F2 2018 chassis, which had been used by Formula 2 since the 2018 season, was replaced by the new Dallara F2 2024 chassis, which was adapted to the current concept of a Formula One car. Like last season, a turbocharged 3.4-litre V6 Mecachrome engine is being used, albeit being an evolution of the previous one.[32]
  • Formula 2 ran with 55% sustainable fuel supplied by Aramco in 2023.[33] An increase in sustainability was implemented for 2024 to continue working towards the usage of 100% sustainable fuel by 2027.[34]

Sporting regulations

From this season, a new rule in order to try and prevent drivers benefitting from causing red flags during qualifying sessions was brought in for both the Formula 2 and FIA Formula 3 championships. Thus, if the stewards deem a driver to be the sole cause for the issuing of a red flag, the driver responsible will have their fastest lap time of that session deleted, as well as being prevented from taking any further part in that session.[35]

Season report

Round 1: Bahrain

Kush Maini set the fastest qualifying time for the opening round at Bahrain International Circuit, but was later disqualified from the results for a technical infringement. Gabriel Bortoleto therefore inherited feature race pole position. Jak Crawford qualified tenth to start the reverse-grid sprint race from first place. ART Grand Prix drivers Victor Martins and Zak O'Sullivan gained places to run second and third in the opening laps, but would later drop outside the podium positions. In the following laps, eighth-place starter Zane Maloney made overtakes to take second place by lap six, and passed Crawford for the lead two laps later. Maloney held the position for the remainder of the race to claim his first Formula 2 race win. The podium was completed by Crawford and Pepe Martí, who started eleventh and claimed a podium finish on his Formula 2 debut.

Pole-sitter Bortoleto immediately fell to third place at the start of the feature race behind Isack Hadjar and Maloney, who improved from third to first. Bortoleto then collided with Hadjar at the first corner, causing Bortoleto to lose further positions and to take a penalty. Hadjar was then hit by Enzo Fittipaldi, eliminating both drivers from the race and necessitating the deployment of the safety car. The safety car was later deployed again to recover Victor Martins's broken-down car. Maloney maintained his lead during the restarts to claim victory in consecutive races. Martí and Paul Aron, both of whom started outside the top ten, finished second and third respectively. Maloney's double victory placed him first in the Drivers' Championship at the end of the round, 12 points ahead of second-placed Martí.

Round 2: Saudi Arabia

Oliver Bearman set the fastest qualifying time at the Jeddah Corniche Circuit, but later withdrew from the round to replace Carlos Sainz Jr. at Ferrari for the remainder of the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.[36] Kush Maini inherited feature race pole position as the second-fastest qualifier. Paul Aron started the sprint race from first place and maintained his position at the start. The safety car was deployed on the opening lap when Victor Martins hit the wall and retired. Aron was overtaken for the lead by Richard Verschoor on lap 8, and again by Dennis Hauger for second place with three laps remaining. Verschoor crossed the line first, but was later disqualified from the results along with Trident teammate Roman Staněk for a technical violation, promoting Hauger to victory and Enzo Fittipaldi to the podium. Championship leader Zane Maloney, who had qualified 15th, improved to fourth in the race.

At the start of the feature race, pole-sitter Maini held his lead, and a poor start from third-placed Martins allowed Fittipaldi to move up into the podium positions. The safety car was deployed shortly afterwards to recover the collided cars of Pepe Martí and Roman Staněk. Fittipaldi gained a place on Jak Crawford during the early pit stops, and later overtook Maini for the net race lead. On lap 16, damage from contact with the wall forced Franco Colapinto into retirement. The resultant safety car allowed Amaury Cordeel, who started 20th, to make his pit stop and retain his position at the front. He held on to a podium position until the final corner of the final lap, when fifth-placed Hauger passed him and Crawford to claim third. Fittipaldi's victory was his second in the category, and promoted him to second in the Drivers' Championship, 15 points behind leader Maloney.

Round 3: Australia

Dennis Hauger took his first pole position in Formula 2 in Melbourne ahead of Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Richard Verschoor. At the start of the sprint race, a collision between Isack Hadjar, Pepe Martí and Gabriel Bortoleto immediately off the start line eliminated the latter two. Hadjar then took the lead from sprint pole-sitter Roman Staněk at the first corner before the safety car was deployed. After racing resumed, a group of cars challenged Staněk for second place before Antonelli and Verschoor both spun out and Paul Aron damaged his front wing, causing another safety car period. Hauger, who started tenth, overtook Kush Maini on the penultimate lap to claim the final podium position. Hadjar crossed the finish line first but was later judged to have caused the first-lap crash. He received a 10-second time penalty, promoting Staněk to the top step of the podium, which marked his first win and podium finish in Formula 2.

Antonelli overtook Hauger for the lead of the feature race on the opening lap, but Hauger reclaimed the position shortly afterwards. Maini, who started fourth, soon passed both drivers to claim first place. Most of the top ten then made pit stops to shed their soft-compound tyres, with the exception of Maini, who started on the harder compound, and eighth-placed Hadjar. Pole-sitter Hauger crashed on his lap out of the pits, causing a safety car deployment. This allowed Hadjar to make his pit stop and emerge ahead of all drivers who had pitted. Hadjar took the lead when Maini made his pit stop and claimed his first victory of the season, with the podium completed by Aron and Maloney, who made overtakes after their pit stops. Maloney held his lead of the Drivers' Championship, 15 points ahead of Aron.

Round 4: Italy (Imola)

After three consecutive race retirements, Gabriel Bortoleto took pole position at Imola Circuit ahead of Oliver Bearman and Isack Hadjar. Amaury Cordeel started the sprint race from first place. On the first lap, Paul Aron took the lead from his teammate as a collision between Franco Colapinto, Roman Staněk, and Hadjar into the first corner led to several other incidents and eliminated the latter two, as well as Dennis Hauger, Enzo Fittipaldi, and Joshua Dürksen, necessitating the deployment of the safety car. Cordeel was overtaken for second place by Colapinto on lap 7, and again by Zane Maloney for the final podium position with three laps remaining. Aron held on to first place until the final lap, where he was passed by Colapinto around the outside at Tamburello corner. Colapinto claimed the fastest lap and his first Formula 2 race win.[37]

A slow start from pole-sitter Bortoleto dropped him to fourth place at the start of the feature race behind Bearman, Hadjar and Dürksen. During the early pit stops, race leader Bearman stalled and dropped outside of the points, and Bortoleto regained a position from Dürksen. Later in the race, Cordeel and Pepe Martí were eliminated after their wheels were fitted improperly and detached in the pit lane. Hadjar crossed the finish line to win a second consecutive feature race. He was followed by Bortoleto, who claimed his first Formula 2 podium, and Dürksen, who achieved his team's first points finish since 2022. Maloney retained the lead of the Drivers' Championship, with his advantage cut to five points over Aron.

Round 5: Monaco

Richard Verschoor took his maiden pole position in Formula 2 at the Circuit de Monaco, and Victor Martins set the fastest time in the second group to qualify second. Taylor Barnard started the sprint race from first place. Two safety car periods were called in the early laps; firstly when contact broke Martins's front wing at the first corner, causing him to hit the wall, and secondly when Pepe Martí crashed on lap six. With six laps remaining, contact involving championship leader Maloney, Zak O'Sullivan and Juan Manuel Correa caused Maloney to spin and Kush Maini to stall in avoidance, blocking the track and causing the race to be red-flagged. Barnard maintained his lead through both safety cars and after the race was resumed to take his first victory and points finish in Formula 2.

Pole-sitter Verschoor led at the start of the feature race and a slow start from Martins allowed Hadjar and Aron into second and third, respectively. Verschoor reported power issues on lap 19 and began to lose positions before eventually retiring. In the closing laps, 15th-place starter O'Sullivan was the only driver yet to pit in anticipation of a safety car. A virtual safety car came with two laps remaining when Joshua Dürksen collided with Maloney whilst exiting the pits, allowing O'Sullivan to change tyres and emerge ahead of Hadjar to claim his first Formula 2 victory. Podium finishes for Hadjar and Aron promoted them ahead of Maloney in the Drivers' Championship, with Aron leading by two points.

Results and standings

Season summary

RoundCircuitPole positionFastest lapWinning driverWinning teamReport
1SR Bahrain International Circuit Enzo Fittipaldi[b] Zane Maloney Rodin MotorsportReport
FR Gabriel Bortoleto[c] Dennis Hauger Zane Maloney Rodin Motorsport
2SR Jeddah Corniche Circuit Paul Aron Dennis Hauger[d] MP MotorsportReport
FR Kush Maini[e] Enzo Fittipaldi Enzo Fittipaldi Van Amersfoort Racing
3SR Albert Park Circuit Isack Hadjar Roman Staněk[f] TridentReport
FR Dennis Hauger Jak Crawford Isack Hadjar Campos Racing
4SR Imola Circuit Franco Colapinto Franco Colapinto MP MotorsportReport
FR Gabriel Bortoleto Victor Martins Isack Hadjar Campos Racing
5SR Circuit de Monaco Andrea Kimi Antonelli Taylor Barnard AIX RacingReport
FR Richard Verschoor Dennis Hauger Zak O'Sullivan ART Grand Prix
6SR Circuit de Barcelona-CatalunyaReport
FR
7SR Red Bull RingReport
FR
8SR Silverstone CircuitReport
FR
9SR HungaroringReport
FR
10SR Circuit de Spa-FrancorchampsReport
FR
11SR Monza CircuitReport
FR
12SR Baku City CircuitReport
FR
13SR Lusail International CircuitReport
FR
14SR Yas Marina CircuitReport
FR

Scoring system

Points are awarded to the top eight classified finishers in the sprint race, and to the top ten classified finishers in the feature race. The pole-sitter in the feature race also receives two points, and one point is given to the driver who set the fastest lap in both the feature and sprint races, provided that driver finished inside the top ten. If the driver who set the fastest lap is classified outside the top ten, the point is given to the driver who set the fastest lap of those inside the top ten. No extra points are awarded to the pole-sitter in the sprint race as the grid for it is set by reversing the top ten qualifiers.

Sprint race points

Points are awarded to the top eight classified finishers, excluding the fastest lap point which is given to the top ten classified finishers.

Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  FL 
Points1086543211
Feature race points

Points are awarded to the top ten classified finishers. Bonus points are awarded to the pole-sitter and to the driver who set the fastest lap and finished in the top ten.

Position 1st  2nd  3rd  4th  5th  6th  7th  8th  9th  10th  Pole  FL 
Points25181512108642121

Drivers' Championship standings

Pos.DriverBHR
JED
ALB
IMO
MON
CAT
RBR
SIL
HUN
SPA
MNZ
BAK
LUS
YMC
Points
SRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFR
1 Paul Aron532F10182267380
2 Isack Hadjar4Ret15†Ret6F1Ret18278
3 Zane Maloney1F147103311Ret1069
4 Dennis Hauger88F132RetPRet1236F56
5 Gabriel Bortoleto65P10RetRetRet62P2850
6 Andrea Kimi Antonelli141066Ret41044F748
7 Zak O'Sullivan7416†Ret8Ret91310140
8 Franco Colapinto18611Ret4DSQ1F551338
9 Kush Maini13782P312814Ret1734
10 Enzo Fittipaldi17Ret31F1217Ret1791232
11 Jak Crawford2Ret54910F14713Ret32
12 Pepe Martí327RetRet1316RetRet1426
13 Oliver Bearman1615WDWD14951911418
14 Richard Verschoor1014DSQ8Ret671016RetP17
15 Ritomo Miyata991215551315171516
16 Joshua Dürksen151191217RetRet31818†15
17 Amaury CordeelRetRetRet516114Ret14Ret15
18 Juan Manuel Correa12RetRet14111415812514
19 Roman StaněkRet13DSQRet115Ret1861613
20 Victor Martins11RetRet1178129FRet911
21 Taylor BarnardRet1613131316DSQ2011110
22 Rafael Villagómez1912149157111615Ret8
Pos.DriverSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRPoints
BHR
JED
ALB
IMO
MON
CAT
RBR
SIL
HUN
SPA
MNZ
BAK
LUS
YMC
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
SilverSecond place
BronzeThird place
GreenOther points position
BlueOther classified position
Not classified, finished (NC)
PurpleNot classified, retired (Ret)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
BlankDid not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)
Did not enter (empty cell)
AnnotationMeaning
PPole position
FFastest lap


Notes:

  • † – Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed more than 90% of the race distance.

Teams' Championship standings

Pos.TeamBHR
JED
ALB
IMO
MON
CAT
RBR
SIL
HUN
SPA
MNZ
BAK
LUS
YMC
Points
SRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFR
1 Campos Racing327Ret6F116182104
4Ret15†RetRet13RetRetRet14
2 Hitech Pulse-Eight532F5162267395
RetRetRet1018114Ret14Ret
3 MP Motorsport86132RetP1F536F94
188F11Ret4DSQRet12513
4 Rodin Motorsport1F14753311171085
9912151051315Ret15
5 Invicta Racing65P82P31262P2884
13710RetRetRet814Ret17
6 Prema Racing141066144544F466
1615WDWDRet91019117
7 ART Grand Prix7416†117899F10151
11RetRetRet8Ret1213Ret9
8 DAMS Lucas Oil2Ret54910F14712546
12RetRet14111415813Ret
9 Van Amersfoort Racing171231F127111691240
19Ret1491517Ret1715Ret
10 Trident1013DSQ81671061630
Ret14DSQRetRet15Ret1816RetP
11 PHM AIX Racing (1–3)
AIX Racing (4–5)
15119121316Ret311125
Ret16131317RetDSQ201818†
Pos.TeamSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRSRFRPoints
BHR
JED
ALB
IMO
MON
CAT
RBR
SIL
HUN
SPA
MNZ
BAK
LUS
YMC
Key
ColourResult
GoldWinner
SilverSecond place
BronzeThird place
GreenOther points position
BlueOther classified position
Not classified, finished (NC)
PurpleNot classified, retired (Ret)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
BlankDid not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrawn (WD)
Did not enter (empty cell)
AnnotationMeaning
PPole position
FFastest lap


Notes:

  • † – Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed more than 90% of the race distance.
  • Rows are not related to the drivers: within each team, individual race standings are sorted purely based on the final classification in the race (not by total points scored in the event, which includes points awarded for fastest lap and pole position).

Notes

References