Motorsports
Final Lap Fever
TGR Philippine Cup Gears Up for Grand Finale at Clark Speedway
The TOYOTA GAZOO Racing (TGR) Philippine Cup is headed for a high-octane finish as it returns to Clark International Speedway in Mabalacat, Pampanga on August 9 for its third and final race weekend of 2025.
Organized by Toyota Motor Philippines (TMP), this event is free for all motorsports fans and will be livestreamed via the TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Philippines Facebook and YouTube pages starting at 8:30 a.m.

Standings Before the Final Showdown
In the Super Sporting Class, Russel Cabrera of TOYOTA Team Cebu – Standard Insurance leads the pack, followed by Alain Gabriel Alzona (TOYOTA General Santos – Smart Communications Racing) and Michael Bryan Co (R Garage / TOYOTA Dagupan Group).
Jesse Garcia of Obengers Racing – TOYOTA Balintawak is ahead in the Sporting Class standings, with Russel Reyes (TOYOTA Gazoo Racing Philippines) and Raymond Cudala (R Racing – MADkart) close behind.
Meanwhile, Luis Moreno of TOYOTA Gazoo Racing Philippines – Novice Team is currently topping the Novice Class, with teammates Pablo Salapantan and TMP President Masando Hashimoto in second and third.
Race Weekend 3 Highlights
The final weekend features two Sprint Races and the return of the Endurance Race — a 1.5-hour test of stamina and performance.
Making its debut is the Tamaraw Sprint Race Exhibition, starring the Tamaraw one-make race cars first teased at Villar City during Race Weekend 2. Racing these units are past Vios Cup Super Sporting champions including Allan Uy, Daniel Miranda, Estefano Rivera, John Dizon, and former test driver Tyson Sy.
The Next Generation Tamaraw will also be pushed to its limits in a special drag race exhibition.
Other events include:
- Club Race for GR Yaris, GR Supra, and GR 86 owners
- Drifting Exhibition for fans of sideways action
- Sim Racing Rigs and eSports Qualifiers for aspiring virtual racers
Off-Track Attractions
Visitors can explore booths with freebies, join games, and take part in qualifiers for the 2025 TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Philippines eSports GT Championship — all free of charge.
Toyota will also display its GR and GR-S lineups, club cars, and sell original GR merchandise like caps, shirts, and umbrellas.
Capping off the day will be a live performance by local band Over October, followed by the awarding ceremony.
“It’s the final race weekend of the year, so we want to end on a high,” said Andy Ty, TMP Assistant Vice President for Marketing Services. “With the return of the Endurance Race and the new Tamaraw Sprint Race, we’ve packed in even more excitement.”
Event Support and Partners
The event is sanctioned by the Automobile Association Philippines, with support from Petron, GT Radial, Seiko, Toyota Financial Services, Tuason Racing, and more.
For more details, visit toyota.com.ph/tgrphilippines or follow TOYOTA GAZOO Racing Philippines on Facebook, Instagram, X, YouTube, and TikTok.
Motorsports
Rings on the Grid
German carmaker Audi has revealed its first Formula One car ahead of its full factory entry under the sport’s new 2026 rules, laying out a long-term target to fight for titles before the decade ends.

The car, called the Audi R26, was shown in Paris and introduces the brand’s first-ever single-seater. The livery carries a mostly grey finish, with Audi’s four rings highlighted in red on the rear wing. The team said the design aims to stand out visually while keeping a clean and restrained look.

Audi enters Formula One after taking over the Sauber operation, which will run under the Audi name from 2026. The transition keeps continuity on the driver side, with Nico Hülkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto staying on after racing for Sauber last season.

Project head Mattia Binotto said the incoming technical regulations offered the right entry point for the brand, allowing Audi to build its programme around a clean-sheet rule set.
Team principal Jonathan Wheatley described the car as the product of years of work across Audi’s facilities, while stressing that the unveiling marks only the beginning. He said the focus now is on building habits, systems, and a competitive mindset that improve with every race weekend.

Like the rest of the grid, Audi’s new car will not make a public debut straight away. Initial running is scheduled for closed tests next week at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, where teams will begin early validation work ahead of the 2026 season.

Audi becomes the latest major manufacturer to commit fully to Formula One, joining the championship at a time when new engine rules and sustainability targets are reshaping the sport’s long-term direction.
Motorsports
Silver Arrows Shakeup
Mercedes has confirmed that chief designer John Owen will leave the Formula One team later this year, ending a long run at the Brackley-based outfit that dates back nearly two decades.
Owen, 52, joined the team in 2007 when it was still operating as Honda. He stayed through the dramatic transition to Brawn GP, which stunned the paddock by winning both the drivers’ and constructors’ championships in 2009. When the operation became the Mercedes Formula One Team, Owen remained a central figure in its technical structure.
During Mercedes’ dominant era from 2014 to 2021, the team secured seven drivers’ titles and eight constructors’ championships. Owen’s work in car design placed him among the key architects of that success.

Mercedes said Owen has decided to step away from Formula One and will begin a period of gardening leave later this year. The team added that he will remain involved during the transition period to ensure continuity.
His role as director of car design will be taken over by Giacomo Tortora, who currently serves as engineering director. Deputy technical director Simone Resta will oversee the design group as part of the restructuring.
The announcement comes as the Formula One season approaches. Pre-season testing begins next month in Bahrain Pre-Season Testing, ahead of the season-opening Australian Grand Prix on March 8.
Mercedes said Owen’s departure was amicable and acknowledged his long-standing contribution to the team’s competitive history.
Motorsports
Sixth Time Lucky
Nasser Al-Attiyah sealed his sixth Dakar Rally car title in Yanbu on Saturday after a controlled final stage, while Argentina’s Luciano Benavides clinched the bike crown by two seconds in one of the closest finishes in recent memory.

Driving a Dacia, Al-Attiyah entered the final 105km stage with a comfortable buffer and avoided mistakes to finish ninth on the day, enough to secure overall victory by almost 10 minutes over Spain’s Nani Roma in a Ford. Roma’s teammate Mattias Ekstrom won the last stage and completed the overall car podium in third.

The win gave Al-Attiyah his sixth Dakar car title after previous victories in 2011, 2015, 2019, 2022, and 2023. The 55-year-old also brought his career Dakar stage win total to 50 during the rally. Competing with Belgian co-driver Fabian Lurquin, he took control of the standings early and stayed clear of late drama.

“We’ve worked very hard since last year. I might not be showing much emotion yet, but it’s there. We are so happy to win,” Al-Attiyah said at the finish.

For Romanian manufacturer Dacia, the victory came at only its second Dakar attempt and delivered its first overall win in the event.
Al-Attiyah now sits alone in second place on the all-time Dakar car winners list, moving ahead of Ari Vatanen and Carlos Sainz, who both have four titles. Stephane Peterhansel remains the benchmark with eight car wins.
“This is my sixth victory. I still need to break Peterhansel’s record,” Al-Attiyah said.
Last year’s champion Yazeed Al Rajhi retired earlier in the rally due to mechanical problems.

In the bike category, Benavides secured his first Dakar title after finishing second on the final stage aboard a KTM, edging Honda rider Ricky Brabec by two seconds overall. Brabec, a two-time Dakar winner, lost time near the finish after taking a wrong line.

“I’ve dreamed of this moment my whole life,” Benavides said after the result was confirmed.
Brabec had been on course for a third title before the navigation error in the closing kilometers. Benavides said the opportunity appeared late in the stage and he committed when it mattered.
“Even yesterday it seemed impossible, but I still felt it could happen,” he said. “I saw the opening and I went for it.”

Spain’s Edgar Canet won the final bike stage, while Tosha Schareina finished third on the day and third overall.
The victory added another chapter to the Benavides family history at Dakar, following earlier wins by Luciano’s older brother Kevin.
“Nine years in the Dakar and my first win,” Benavides said. “My brother and I are making history. It’s a dream come true.”

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