Two titles that appeared all but decided were finally wrapped up this weekend at the Formula 4 level, while several more battles in Asia and the Americas will continue into future rounds. Feeder Series reviews the second half of this weekend’s track action.
By Feeder Series
After covering all of the past weekend’s European single-seater races as well as F2’s latest stop in Baku yesterday, we continue our circumnavigation with reviews of the action in Asia and North America. Five of the six series that raced featured F4 machinery, showcasing some of the rawest talents – and now greenest champions – we cover all year.
One such winner was F4 SEA’s Alex Sawer, who wrapped up the title during the qualifying sessions for the season finale after chief rival Seth Gilmore failed to secure both poles. While his being a champion seemed a foregone conclusion since the start of the year, Cooper Shipman’s championship charge only came alive in round three at Mid-Ohio. He hasn’t lost a race since, even though he can afford to do so now.
As for the other series, Japanese F4 still has four more races in which its top four protagonists can dispute the crown. Only two remain now for FRegional Americas, NACAM F4 and the Ligier Junior Formula Championship, though their respective title battles are shaping up to be the closest each series has seen in recent years. Keep reading to find out how everything shook out the way it did.
- Japanese F4: Toyota junior Suzuki wins twice, narrows points gap to Sato
- F4 SEA: Sawer seals title as future Ferrari junior Maccagnani dominates
- FRegional Americas: Brooks dominates Virginia, but Sherlock maintains points lead
- F4 US: Shipman clinches title a round early with ninth consecutive win
- Ligier Junior Formula Championship: Irazú and Szuch’s title fight heads to Barber
- NACAM F4: Bobadilla, Martínez win in Puebla as Luque closes in on Ibrahim
Japanese F4: Toyota junior Suzuki wins twice, narrows points gap to Sato
Toyota junior Tokiya Suzuki took his second and third wins of the season at Sugo this weekend, having previously won at Sugo in FRegional Japan in August. Championship leader Itsuki Sato of Kageyama Racing seemed to be the fastest all weekend, but after a bad qualifying, he took just one win in the third race and left with a reduced 32.5-point advantage.
In qualifying, Suzuki was fastest, 0.433 seconds ahead of his rookie teammate Takahiro Kikuchi. Sato came third, 0.516s behind Suzuki.
The first race started behind the safety car, as the track was slightly damp. After two laps, the race got underway with a rolling start.
Suzuki had a good getaway out of the final corner and built a gap over Kikuchi, who then misjudged his braking point at Turn 1, ran wide and dropped to fifth. Sato therefore inherited second and closed the gap to Suzuki to just half a second over the next nine laps as the pair pulled away from the pack.
Sato stayed close to Suzuki, but a passing opportunity never opened up. On lap 14 his chase came to an end after Ragno Motor Sport debutant Kaoru Yamada, running 10th, crashed at Turn 4 to bring out the safety car, which stayed out until the 17-lap race’s conclusion.
Behind Suzuki and Sato, OTG Motor Sports’ Kenta Kumagai took his maiden podium, having started fourth.
The second race later that day likewise started with two laps behind the safety car on a track that wasn’t fully dry.
As in the first race, Suzuki built a gap at the start over his teammate, who this time maintained second place. Luck, however, just wasn’t on Kikuchi’s side this weekend. He was spun by Sato while attempting to defend his position at Turn 1 on lap six, dropping to the rear of the field. Sato’s teammate Ryo Shirasaki thus inherited third place.
Sato once again closed the gap to Suzuki and ended up within one second in the final three laps, but he wasn’t able to launch an attack. Suzuki took his second win of the weekend ahead of the Kageyama pair.
The first race’s fastest laps set the grid for the third race. Sato therefore started from pole ahead of Suzuki and Umegaki.
Again, the safety car led the field on the opening two laps. There were no position changes out front at the restart, and Sato could finally show his true pace, pulling away from Suzuki behind and building a two-second gap by lap nine.
On lap 10, Ponos Racing’s Ryota Horachi launched an attack for ninth position on OTG Motor Sports’ Miki Onaga at Turn 8. The pair collided and both drivers had to retire on the spot, triggering a safety car. Onaga was en route to becoming the first woman to score points in Japanese F4 this year.
The race returned to green-flag conditions at the end of lap 13 with no position changes at the front. Sato ended a three-race victory drought as Suzuki and Shirasaki completed the podium.

In the Independent Class, “Kentaro” won the first two races and led the third race until lap 14, when “Dragon” took him out. Imada ultimately won the third race, with just 16.5 points separating the top three.
Report by Finjo Muschlien
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying, Champion Class | Tokiya Suzuki, 1:32.355 | Takahiro Kikuchi, +0.433s | Itsuki Sato, +0.516s |
| Qualifying, Independent Class | “Kentaro”, 1:34.325 | Isao Nakashima, +0.351s | “Dragon”, +0.427s |
| Race 1 (17 laps) | Tokiya Suzuki, 28:51.273 | Itsuki Sato, +0.631s | Kenta Kumagai, +1.816s |
| Race 2 (17 laps) | Tokiya Suzuki, 25:54.974 | Itsuki Sato, +0.407s | Ryo Shirasaki, +4.959s |
| Race 3 (17 laps) | Itsuki Sato, 27:47.216 | Tokiya Suzuki, +1.583s | Ryo Shirasaki, +2.462ss |
| Standings | Champion Class | Independent Class | ||
| Drivers | Teams | Drivers | Teams | |
| P1 | Itsuki Sako, 184.5 | Kageyama Racing, 195.5 | “Dragon”, 163.5 | B-Max Racing Team, 201.5 |
| P2 | Tokiya Suzuki, 152 | TGR-DC RS, 152 | “Kentaro”, 150.5 | Field Motorsport, 150.5 |
| P3 | Ryo Shirasaki, 100.5 | HFDP with B-Max Racing Team, 114 | Nobuhiro Imada, 147 | Rn-sports, 136 |
| P4 | Kotaro Shimbara, 88 | Ponos Racing, 77 | Isao Nakashima, 87 | Buzz Racing, 75 |
| P5 | Syo Momose, 65 | B-Max Racing Team, 57 | Masayuki Ueda, 81 | Akiland Racing, 70 |
| P6 | Kiyoshi Umegaki, 59 | OTG Motor Sports, 47.5 | “Ken Alex”, 75 | Helm Motorsports, 46 |
| P7 | Ryota Horachi, 59 | TGM Grand Prix, 25 | Makio Saito, 70 | Eagle Sports, 44 |
| P8 | Tosei Moriyama, 57 | Drago Corse, 17 | Shoichiro Akamatsu, 40 | Bionic Jack Racing, 27 |
| P9 | Kenta Kumagai, 47.5 | Akiland Racing, 15 | William Sakai, 33 | Team 5Zigen, 14 |
| P10 | Ryuma Sako, 29 | Helm Motorsports, 4 | “Ikari”, 27 | DayDream Racing, 8.5 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
F4 SEA: Sawer seals title as future Ferrari junior Maccagnani dominates
Alex Sawer was crowned the champion of F4 SEA’s 2025 season after the season finale at Sepang despite not winning all weekend. The Vietnamese driver claimed the title Saturday morning after qualifying with a total of nine wins from 14 races and only two finishes off the podium.
Having joined the grid at the previous round, Niccolò Maccagnani made his mark on the weekend once again. The Italian topped not just one but both qualifying sessions and snatched all three wins, becoming the first driver outside of Evans GP’s Sawer and Seth Gilmore to do so.
For the first race on Saturday, Sawer started second behind Maccagnani, who immediately took off come lights out. While the Italian built a gap, Imran Putera and newcomer Rafael Vaessen began battling for sixth. They charged side by side multiple times throughout the race, but Imran remained on top.
BlackArts Racing teammates Joshua Berry and Ben Anh Nguyen then squabbled for eighth on lap nine, which ended with a brief off for Nguyen at Turn 5. Berry then had a spin soon after at the final hairpin, falling down to 10th, where he remained for the remainder of the race.
With a margin of 5.508 seconds, Maccagnani took his first win of the season and managed to snap Evans’ win streak. Sawer and Gilmore finished second and third, while Ayrton Asdathorn made a last-gap overtake on Iñigo Anton at the final corner to finish fourth.

The reversed grid for race two put Anton, the newly crowned rookie champion, in first. He got away well as he chased his first win, whilst Gilmore passed Asdathorn for second at Turn 4. The Thai driver then faced Maccagnani, who made his way past at Turn 9 before Sawer followed at Turn 11.
At the back, slow starter Putera sailed past opening-lap spinner Thomas Yu Lee for ninth on lap four. A lap later, Maccagnani had several looks at passing Gilmore for second, finally succeeding on the inside of Turn 4 on lap six.
The safety car came out after Lee spun at Turn 9 on the seventh lap and stopped on track. With the grid bunched up at the restart, Maccagnani began looking to snatch the lead from Anton on the restart lap. After a strong defensive effort, the Filipino driver went wide onto the grass at Turn 15 and lost three places, allowing the young Italian through to take the lead and ultimately win from Gilmore and Sawer.
Anton, who had been feverish during the weekend, deteriorated after race two and missed the final race. Nine cars took the start, and Nguyen and Lee stalled off the line.
All the while, Sawer made a valiant effort to win yet another race and reach a double-digit victory total, but he was denied the opportunity by Maccagnani, who took a powerful victory with a margin of almost 20 seconds. Gilmore battled Sawer for second at the start but finished third ahead of mid-race battlers Asdathorn and Vaessen.
Report by Grayson Wallace
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying 1 | Niccolò Maccagnani, 2:09.027 | Alex Sawer, +0.348s | Seth Gilmore, +0.736s |
| Qualifying 2 | Niccolò Maccagnani, 2:08.848 | Alex Sawer, +0.702s | Iñigo Anton, +0.792s |
| Race 1 (13 laps) | Niccolò Maccagnani, 28:12.016 | Alex Sawer, +5.508s | Seth Gilmore, +15.748s |
| Race 2 (12 laps) | Niccolò Maccagnani, 28:02.482 | Seth Gilmore, +2.246s | Alex Sawer, +2.906s |
| Race 3 (13 laps) | Niccolò Maccagnani, 28:15.800 | Alex Sawer, +19.645s | Seth Gilmore, +20.819s |
| Standings | Drivers | Teams | Rookies |
| P1 | Alex Sawer, 357 | Evans GP, 609 | Iñigo Anton, 296 |
| P2 | Seth Gilmore, 261 | BlackArts Racing, 356 | Ben Anh Nguyen, 217 |
| P3 | Iñigo Anton, 182 | Pinnacle Motorsport, 159 | Ayrton Asdathorn, 202 |
| P4 | Niccolò Maccagnani, 158 | Star Performance, 159 | Niccolò Maccagnani, 188 |
| P5 | Rishon Rajeev, 156 | Origine Motorsport, 93 | Joshua Berry, 131 |
| P6 | Ayrton Asdathorn, 136 | BlackArts Racing Academy, 16 | Worapong Aiemwichan, 101 |
| P7 | Ben Anh Nguyen, 93 | Putera Hani Imran, 85 | |
| P8 | Wang Zhongwei, 93 | Rafael Vaessen, 45 | |
| P9 | Thomas Yu Lee, 93 | Kareen Kaur, 36 | |
| P10 | Kyuho Lee, 58 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
FRegional Americas: Brooks dominates Virginia, but Sherlock maintains points lead
Newcomer Christian Brooks of Toney Driver Development dominated FR Americas’ second-to-last round at Virginia by taking pole and winning both races, which were ended by safety car interventions. Titus Sherlock maintained the points lead after taking two podiums.
Brooks kept the lead from pole in race one as Jett Bowling crashed at Turn 3 and retired on the spot. The track remained green, however, and the safety car was not deployed. A lap later, Connor Roberts spun out of fifth on the exit of Oak Tree but managed to rejoin the race in 10th.
Two laps later, Bruno Ribeiro’s car began to smoke, forcing him to stop on the back straight and retire from the race. The safety car was deployed while marshals retrieved his car.
When the race restarted nine minutes later, Brady Golan momentarily took the lead from Brooks, but the Californian passed him as they exited Turn 1. he race was neutralised yet again a lap later after Landan Matriano Lim crashed at Oaktree. Three minutes later, the race resumed, but there was a bottleneck on the restart with James Lawley, Barrett Wolfe and Connor Roberts all picking up damage as a result.
On the following lap, Kevin Janzen crashed at Oaktree, causing the race to end prematurely. Brooks took the win as Golan and Sherlock joined him on the podium.

Brooks once again started on pole for race two and held off Ribeiro to lead the opening stages, as Sherlock began putting pressure on the Brazilian trying to take second away. Behind them on lap eight, Roberts overtook Lawley at the exit of Turn 1 to take sixth from the Canadian.
Three laps later, Golan spun off course in the esses and retired from the race, and the safety car to be deployed because his car was stuck in the infield. The race never fully got underway after Nicolas Ambiado crashed at the intended restart., As a result, Brooks took another win, with Sherlock and Bowling joining him on the podium. Ribeiro crossed the line in second but received a five-second penalty post-race for jumping the start, dropping him to 10th and last of the finishers.
With one round left, Sherlock leads Ambiado by 13.5 points, while Ribeiro is a further seven back heading into Barber. Kiwi Motorsport has already clinched the teams’ title, and they currently lead Crosslink Motorsports by 189 points.
Report by Marco Albertini
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying | Christian Brooks, 1:44.666 | Titus Sherlock, +0.179s | Bruno Ribeiro, +0.277s |
| Race 1 (12 laps) | Christian Brooks, 27:13.710 | Brady Golan, +0.471s | Titus Sherlock, +0.875s |
| Race 2 (14 laps) | Christian Brooks, 29:20.570 | Titus Sherlock, +0.393s | Jett Bowling, +0.863s |
| Standings | Drivers | Teams | Rookies |
| P1 | Titus Sherlock, 248.5 | Kiwi Motorsport, 560 | Bruno Ribeiro, 228 |
| P2 | Nicolas Ambiado, 235 | Crosslink Motorsports, 371 | Brady Golan, 115 |
| P3 | Bruno Ribeiro, 228 | Atlantic Racing Team, 258.5 | Connor Roberts, 117 |
| P4 | Jett Bowling, 193 | Toney Driver Development, 226 | Nicolas Stati, 82 |
| P5 | Brady Golan, 155 | Momentum Motorsports, 13.5 | Barrett Wolfe, 54.5 |
| P6 | Connor Roberts, 117 | JENSEN, 6 | Jake Pollack, 42 |
| P7 | James Lawley, 103.5 | Daniel Quimby, 40 | |
| P8 | Nicolas Stati, 82 | Alex Benavitz, 29 | |
| P9 | Barrett Wolfe, 54.5 | Callum Baxter, 12 | |
| P10 | Christian Brooks, 50 | Lincoln Day, 11 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
F4 US: Shipman clinches title a round early with ninth consecutive win
With one round left in the calendar, Cooper Shipman wrapped up the F4 US title after taking nine wins in a row. Two of them came over the weekend at Virginia, both from pole position, while Alex Popow scored two podiums to inch closer to Kekai Hauanio in the standings.
Polesitter Shipman kept the lead at the start of race one. Popow fell from second to fourth in the first sector but passed Caleb Campbell for third before Turn 14. On the following lap, Popow regained second after passing Hauanio in the esses.
On lap seven, Demitri Nolan passed Clemente Huerta for fifth at Turn 1, holding off the Chilean’s attacks later on in the lap to hold on to fifth. They swapped places multiple times over the next few laps before Huerta spun off into the grass on lap 13 and retired from the race, forcing the safety car to be deployed.
Just as in FR Americas, the race was ended behind the safety car as Shipman won ahead of Popow and Hauanio. Huerta was classified in ninth despite not crossing the line.

Just as cars exited the pits ahead of race two, a collision between Campbell and Oliver Savoie put them out of the race before the formation lap. Huerta also did not take the start.
When the race got underway, Shipman pulled away from the pack as Hauanio went from fifth to second at the first corner. On lap two, however, Hauanio spun out of second at Turn 10 and was hit by Popow. They dropped to third and sixth respectively, but both were able to continue without entering the pits.
Luke Powers got up to second in the midst of the chaos, while Popow started his own recovery drive. He got up to third by lap five – passing Savoie, Nolan and Hauanio in the process – and began chasing Powers.
On the following lap, Popow got past Powers to get up into second. Toney Driver Development’s Powers then began exchanging positions with Nolan from lap 11 to 15, when Nolan got ahead at Turn # for the final time.
Up ahead, Shipman took his ninth win of the season to secure the title with one race to spare, as Popow and Nolan completed the podium. Powers finished fourth, while Hauanio and Savoie were the last cars to cross the line in fifth and sixth.
While Shipman has already clinched the title, the runner-up spot is yet to be decided, with 10.5 points dividing Hauanio and Popow heading into Barber next month.
Report by Marco Albertini
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying | Cooper Shipman, 1:52.691 | Alex Popow, +0.519s | Caleb Campbell, +1.687s |
| Race 1 (15 laps) | Cooper Shipman, 31:25.587 | Alex Popow, +1.025s | Kekai Hauanio, +1.672s |
| Race 2 (16 laps) | Cooper Shipman, 30:26.433 | Alex Popow, +15.453s | Demitri Nolan, +28.648s |
| Standings | Drivers | Teams | Rookies |
| P1 | Cooper Shipman, 298.5 | Kiwi Motorsport, 453 | Cooper Shipman, 298.5 |
| P2 | Kekai Hauanio, 226.5 | Crosslink Motorsports, 336.5 | Kekai Hauanio, 226.5 |
| P3 | Alex Popow, 216 | MLT Motorsports, 216 | Alex Popow, 216 |
| P4 | Caleb Campbell, 139 | LC Racing Academy, 139 | Caleb Campbell, 139 |
| P5 | Clemente Huerta, 128.5 | Rase Motorsports, 59.5 | Clemente Huerta, 128.5 |
| P6 | Demitri Nolan, 110 | Toney Driver Development, 53 | Demitri Nolan, 110 |
| P7 | Ty Arbogast, 53.5 | Scuderia Buell, 14 | Ty Arbogast, 53.5 |
| P8 | Luke Powers, 53 | Luke Powers, 53 | |
| P9 | Oliver Savoie, 32 | Oliver Savoie, 32 | |
| P10 | Conor Grant, 14 | Conor Grant, 14 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
Ligier Junior Formula Championship: Irazú and Szuch’s title fight heads to Barber
Ligier Junior Formula Championship points leader Gaston Irazú had a realistic chance to clinch the title at Virginia International Raceway this weekend, but he instead endured his worst weekend yet. He now has only a 23-point gap over Drew Szuch heading to the season finale at Barber.
Following Roman Felber’s disqualification from qualifying, Irazú’s championship rival Drew Szuch had pole for race one and led the opening laps, though Beckham Jacir briefly took over first approaching Turn 1. Jacir was then passed by Irazú, who started third, on the back straight.
Several drivers went off track in the first couple of laps before the safety car came out for Ronan Bray, who backed his car into the wall on the straight on lap three.
Szuch held the lead over Irazú at the restart. Alex Berg, who started 14th after also being disqualified, surged forward, battling for fourth with Jacir and Cash Felber.
With 10 minutes to go, Irazú got a run on Szuch on the back straight and took the lead entering the Roller Coaster. It didn’t last long, however. Szuch fought right back to retake the top spot at the bottom of the Roller Coaster, only to go over the rumble strips and slip to third. That moment opened the door for Berg to snatch second before passing Irazú for the lead.
Szuch rallied to take the lead with three laps left with a big run entering the Roller Coaster. As Irazú tried to pass Berg, he was sent wide and off the track, dropping to sixth.
Szuch hung on to take the chequered flag first after 13 laps. Berg originally finished second, but he didn’t stay there, receiving a 30-second time penalty for defensive driving against Irazú that relegated him to 12th. Irazú also dropped from sixth to seventh with a five-second penalty for a false start. Roman Felber and Cash Felber completed the podium.

Berg had pole for race two after setting the fastest lap in race one, with Szuch alongside and Irazú third.
Irazú briefly claimed the lead at the start. Just two corners later, he locked up his right-front tyre and surrendered all his progress, but the worst was yet to come. Szuch turned Irazú around at Turn 4, causing a five-car accident in which Cash Felber climbed up and over Szuch. All five drivers involved eventually retired.
After a red flag, Berg led the field to the restart but ran wide at Oak Tree, losing the lead. Jacir inherited first place but received a drive-through penalty for passing under double yellows, handing Roman Felber, who took the restart seventh, the lead.
With seven minutes left, Max Mokarem took second from Berg and set his sights on Felber. Harbir Dass then passed Berg as the Canadian boxed with an issue.
After 10 laps, Felber crossed the line first for his maiden victory in the series. Mokarem and Dass joined him on the podium, with Ava Hanssen just 0.031s behind in a career-best fourth.
Report by Trey Lower
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying | Drew Szuch, 1:57.093 | Beckham Jacir, +0.205s | Harbir Dass, +0.372s |
| Race 1 (13 laps) | Drew Szuch, 31:01.273 | Roman Felber, +1.886s | Cash Felber, +4.747s |
| Race 2 (10 laps) | Roman Felber, 30:02.330 | Max Mokarem, +1.699s | Harbir Dass, +7.852s |
| Standings | Drivers | Teams | Rookies |
| P1 | Gaston Irazú, 196 | Champagne Racing, 384 | Gaston Irazú, 196 |
| P2 | Drew Szuch, 173 | Berg Racing, 307.5 | Cash Felber, 126.5 |
| P3 | Harbir Dass, 130.5 | Cará Origin Motorsports, 126.5 | Roman Felber, 100 |
| P4 | Cash Felber, 126.5 | Momentum Motorsports, 100 | Max Mokarem, 87 |
| P5 | Daniel Cará, 126.5 | Scuderia Buell, 91 | Beckham Jacir, 79 |
| P6 | Roman Felber, 100 | LC Racing Academy, 82 | Ava Hanssen, 69 |
| P7 | Max Mokarem, 87 | Ava Hanssen Racing, 69 | Augusto Paschetta, 36 |
| P8 | Beckham Jacir, 79 | Kiwi Motorsport, 24 | Zach Fourie, 31 |
| P9 | Ava Hanssen, 69 | Crosslink Motorsports, 13 | Luca Day, 15 |
| P10 | Pablo Benites, 55 | Jensen, 11 | Michael Fatutta, 13 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
NACAM F4: Bobadilla, Martínez win in Puebla as Luque closes in on Ibrahim
The NACAM F4 title battle tightened significantly in the season’s second-to-last round at Puebla, with Fernando Luque finishing second in all three races to inch closer to Zaky Ibrahim’s points lead. Alejandro Bobadilla won twice andJosé Martínez took the spoils for the first time this season in race two, both edging closer to the points lead themselves.
Bobadilla qualified on pole for race one, which wasn’t streamed, and held off Luque and Martínez to win, Ivanna Richards went from sixth to fourth and finished just a second away from third-place finisher Martínez.
Zezatti rounded out the top five, having started eighth, while points leader Ibrahim wasn’t able to convert his fourth-place starting position into a podium as he finished down in sixth.
Zezatti started first for race two as Martínez and Ibrahim slotted in behind him, while Richards fell from second to fourth at the start. Richards then passed Ibrahim on the following lap to take back third at Turn 1.
Zezatti then lost the lead to Martínez on lap three before falling to ninth after locking up heading into Turn 12. Ibrahim, meanwhile, fell to fourth a lap later after being passed by Luque, who began hunting down Richards.
It was to no avail, as Richards held off Luque for her first podium in single-seaters. Up ahead, Martínez took a dominant first win of the season, whilst points leader Ibrahim finished just off the podium in fourth.

Bobadilla started on pole for the final race of the weekend and maintained the lead through the opening stages as Luque and Martínez followed close behind. On lap nine, Luque began attacking Bobadilla for the lead, but the Alessandros Silver driver held him off.
Behind them, on lap 11, Elías Vignola spun out from fifth on the first transition from the oval to the infield, forcing Zezatti to take avoiding action and subsequently go to the grass. In doing so, he opened the door for Richards to get alongside him at Turn 9, but the Alessandros Blue driver spun after taking to the grass to stay alongside Zezatti on corner exit. Richards retired on the spot, but no yellow flags were displayed.
At the front, Bobadilla held off Luque and Martínez to take his third win in five races, whilst Ibrahim and Zezatti rounded out the top five.
With one round left, Ibrahim remains on top of the provisional standings, with a chance to win the title in race one next month. Luque is 26 points behind, while Martínez and Bobadilla are now 35 and 36 behind respectively.
Report by Marco Albertini
| Results | P1 | P2 | P3 |
| Qualifying | Alex Bobadilla, 1:24.482 | Fernando Luque, +0.326s | José Martínez, +0.451s |
| Race 1 (15 laps) | Alex Bobadilla, 21:29.716 | Fernando Luque, +1.141s | José Martínez, +1.489s |
| Race 2 (15 laps) | José Martínez, 21:25.749 | Ivanna Richards, +3.150s | Fernando Luque, +3.610s |
| Race 3 (15 laps) | Alex Bobadilla, 21:16.379 | Fernando Luque, +0.228s | José Martínez, +1.146s |
| Standings | Drivers | Teams |
| P1 | Zaky Ibrahim, 233 | Alessandros Silver, 404 |
| P2 | Fernando Luque, 207 | Alessandros Blue, 334 |
| P3 | José Martínez, 198 | RAM Racing 1, 310 |
| P4 | Alex Bobadilla, 197 | RAM Racing 2, 212 |
| P5 | Marco Alquicira, 125 | Santinel Racing Team, 125 |
| P6 | Elías Vignola, 109 | RAM Racing 3, 56 |
| P7 | Alan Zezatti, 103 | HRI Racing, 14 |
| P8 | Max Mora, 81 | |
| P9 | Ivanna Richards, 44 | |
| P10 | Fernando Rivera, 42 |
Read the previous round’s report here.
Header photo credit: Gavin Baker
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