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2025 Eurocup-3 season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 2025 Eurocup-3 season is scheduled to be the third season of the Eurocup-3 series. Eurocup-3 is a multi-event motor racing championship for single-seater open wheel formula racing cars held across Europe, created in 2023 as an alternative to the FIA-sanctioned Formula Regional European Championship and the Euroformula Open championship.[1]

Following an inaugural non-championship round in March 2024, the Eurocup-3 and Spanish F4 organisers announced the creation of a new Spanish Winter Championship for each series, held across the Iberian Peninsula in the early months of 2025.[2]

Main series

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Teams and drivers

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Teams will utilize the same Tatuus F3 T-318 chassis used in the Formula Regional European Championship, but fitted with a different body kit, and new intercoolers and a battery kits, as well as being 25 kg lighter. The car will use a 270 hp Alfa Romeo-Autotecnica engine and Hankook tires.[3]

Team No. Driver Status Rounds
Spain Palou Motorsport 10 France Luciano Morano[4] TBC
77 United Kingdom Isaac Barashi[4] TBC
TBA United States James Egozi[5] TBC
TBA Hungary Ádám Hideg[4] TBC
TBA Brazil Alceu Feldmann Neto[4] TBC
TBA New Zealand Zack Scoular[6] TBC
Netherlands MP Motorsport 12 Kazakhstan Alexander Abkhazava[7][a] TBC
24 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Jr.[8] TBC
TBA Peru Andrés Cárdenas[9] TBC
TBA Italy Mattia Colnaghi[10] R TBC
TBA Spain Juan Cota[11] TBC
TBA Poland Maciej Gładysz[12] TBC
TBA Italy Valerio Rinicella[13] TBC
France Saintéloc Racing 18 United States Garrett Berry[4] TBC
TBA Mexico Lorenzo Castillo[4] TBC
Spain Drivex 21 Kyrgyzstan Victoria Blokhina[a][14] TBC
TBA United States Preston Lambert[4] TBC
TBA Germany Lenny Ried[4] TBC
TBA Austria Oscar Wurz[14] TBC
Sweden Allay Racing[4] TBA Sweden Emil Hellberg[4] TBC
TBA Sweden Linus Hellberg[4] TBC
Spain Campos Racing[N 1]
Griffin Core by Campos[N 1][15]
TBA France Jules Caranta[16] TBC
TBA Mexico Jesse Carrasquedo Jr.[17] TBC
TBA Portugal Francisco Macedo[17] TBC
TBA Mexico Ernesto Rivera[16] TBC
TBA Poland Kacper Sztuka[17] TBC
TBA Thailand Enzo Tarnvanichkul[16] R TBC
Icon Legend
R Rookie
  1. ^ a b Cars No. TBA, No. TBA and No. TBA entered as Campos Racing, cars No. TBA, No. TBA and No. TBA entered as Griffin Core by Campos.

Race calendar

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The calendar for the 2025 season was announced on 18 November 2024. The race tally is scheduled to remain the same, at 16 races across eight tracks.[18] With a separate winter championship also taking place in 2025, the one-off non-championship round was not repeated. Monza Circuit will return to the calendar after a one-year absence, while the series is also scheduled to debut at TT Circuit Assen. Circuit Zandvoort and MotorLand Aragón left the schedule.[19]

Round Circuit Date Support bill Map of circuit locations
1 R1 Austria Red Bull Ring, Spielberg 16–18 May ESET Cup Series
Formula 4 CEZ Championship
R2
2 R1 Portugal Algarve International Circuit, Portimão 6–8 June F4 Spanish Championship
Campeonato de España de GT
R2
3 R1 France Circuit Paul Ricard, Le Castellet 20–22 June F4 Spanish Championship
Challenge Endurance VHC V de V
R2
4 R1 Italy Monza Circuit, Monza 5–6 July BOSS GP
GT4 Italy
R2
5 R1 Netherlands TT Circuit Assen, Assen 8–10 August JACK'S Racing Day
Supercar Challenge
R2
6 R1 Belgium Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot 4–5 September Michelin 992 Endurance Cup powered by Porsche Motorsport
R2
7 R1 Spain Circuito de Jerez, Jerez de la Frontera 19–21 September F4 Spanish Championship
Campeonato de España de GT
TCR Spain Touring Car Championship
R2
8 R1 Spain Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, Montmeló 14–16 November 7 Racing UK Championship
Campeonato de España de GT
TCR Spain Touring Car Championship
R2

Championship standings

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Scoring system

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Points will be awarded to the top ten classified finishers. Additional points will be awarded for setting the fastest lap during a race or qualifying on pole position.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   Pole   FL 
Points 25 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1 2 1

Winter series

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After Eurocup-3 held a one-off non-championship winter event in 2024, plans for a full winter championship were revealed in late September of the same year.[2] This winter championship, together with its Eurocup-4 counterpart, was then officially launched a few days later, with its calendar and event format also confirmed.[20]

MP Motorsport won the winter series' Teams' Championship at the penultimate round of the season, while Maciej Gładysz, driving for MP Motorsport's KCL-branded satellite team, won the Drivers' Championship at the final race of the season and in doing so also became the Rookie Champion.

Teams and drivers

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Teams utilized the same Tatuus F3 T-318 chassis with a 270 hp Alfa Romeo-Autotecnica engine and Hankook tires used in the main series.[3]

Team No. Driver Status Rounds
Spain Campos Racing[NE3 1]
Griffin Core by Campos[NE3 1][15]
2 Portugal Francisco Macedo[21] R All
8 Bulgaria Nikola Tsolov[21] 1
Thailand Enzo Tarnvanichkul[22] R 2–3
24 Thailand Tasanapol Inthraphuvasak[21] 1
Spain Lucas Fluxá[23] R 2
Mexico Ernesto Rivera[22] R G 3
27 Mexico Jesse Carrasquedo Jr.[4] All
37 Poland Kacper Sztuka[22] 1–2
Spain Lucas Fluxá[23] R 3
83 France Jules Caranta[16] R All
Spain Palou Motorsport[NE3 2]
Sparco Palou MS[NE3 2]
3 Hungary Ádám Hideg[4] R All
5 France Luciano Morano[4] All
6 New Zealand Zack Scoular[23] 2–3
23 Brazil Alceu Feldmann Neto[4] R All
26 United Kingdom Isaac Barashi[4] All
48 United States James Egozi[5] R All
Spain Drivex 4 Spain Juan Cota[24] R 1–2
11 Austria Oscar Wurz[24] R All
17 Germany Lenny Ried[25] R All
21 Kyrgyzstan Victoria Blokhina[26][a] 1–2
25 United States Preston Lambert[27] R All
Netherlands MP Motorsport[NE3 3]
KCL by MP Motorsport[NE3 3]
7 Poland Maciej Gładysz[12] R All
12 Kazakhstan Alexander Abkhazava[7][a] All
18 Brazil Matheus Comparatto[21] R 1
33 Peru Andrés Cárdenas[9] R All
55 Italy Valerio Rinicella[23] 2–3
71 Italy Mattia Colnaghi[24] R All
77 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Jr.[8] All
87 United Kingdom Kai Daryanani[28] G 3
France Saintéloc Racing 10 Mexico Lorenzo Castillo[4] R All
18 United States Garrett Berry[23] 2
Sweden Allay Racing 43 Sweden Emil Hellberg[4] R All
46 Sweden Linus Hellberg[4] R All
Spain GRS Team 88 Mexico Cristian Cantú[4] R 1–2
Belgium Yani Stevenheydens[29] R 3
Icon Legend
R Rookie
G Guest driver
  1. ^ a b Cars No. 8, No. 24, and No. 83 entered as Campos Racing; cars No. 2, No. 27, and No. 37 entered as Griffin Core by Campos.
  2. ^ a b Cars No. 5, No. 6, No. 26 and No. 48 entered as Palou Motorsport, cars No. 3 and No. 23 entered as Sparco Palou MS.
  3. ^ a b Cars No. 12, No. 33, No. 55, No. 71 and No. 77 entered as MP Motorsport, cars No. 7, No. 18 and No. 87 entered as KCL by MP Motorsport.

Race calendar

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The calendar was revealed when the winter championship was launched on 4 October 2024. The first two rounds of the three-round 2024 season consisted of three races, therefore differing from Eurocup-3's normal format of two races per weekend.[20][30] On 18 November, it was revealed that the last round at Circuito de Navarra would be replaced with a two-race round at MotorLand Aragón.[20][31]

Round Circuit Date Support bill Map of circuit locations
1 R1 Spain Circuito de Jerez, Jerez de la Frontera 8 February Eurocup-4 SWC
R2
R3 9 February
2 R1 Portugal Algarve International Circuit, Portimão 22 February Eurocup-4 SWC
R2
R3 23 February
3 R1 Spain MotorLand Aragón, Alcañiz 29 March TCR Spain Touring Car Championship
F4 Spanish Championship
R2 30 March

Race results

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Round Circuit Pole position Fastest lap Winning driver Winning team Rookie winner
1 R1 Spain Circuito de Jerez Italy Mattia Colnaghi Italy Mattia Colnaghi Italy Mattia Colnaghi Netherlands MP Motorsport Italy Mattia Colnaghi
R2 France Jules Caranta Peru Andrés Cárdenas Netherlands MP Motorsport Peru Andrés Cárdenas
R3 Poland Maciej Gładysz Poland Kacper Sztuka Poland Maciej Gładysz Netherlands KCL by MP Motorsport Poland Maciej Gładysz
2 R1 Portugal Algarve International Circuit Italy Valerio Rinicella Italy Valerio Rinicella Italy Valerio Rinicella Netherlands MP Motorsport Poland Maciej Gładysz
R2 United States James Egozi United States James Egozi Spain Palou Motorsport United States James Egozi
R3 Italy Valerio Rinicella Italy Valerio Rinicella Italy Mattia Colnaghi Netherlands MP Motorsport Italy Mattia Colnaghi
3 R1 Spain MotorLand Aragón Poland Maciej Gładysz Poland Maciej Gładysz Poland Maciej Gładysz Netherlands KCL by MP Motorsport Poland Maciej Gładysz
R2 United States James Egozi Italy Valerio Rinicella United States James Egozi Spain Palou Motorsport United States James Egozi

Season report

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The first edition of Eurocup-3’s Winter series commenced at Circuito de Jerez with MP Motorsport’s Mattia Colnaghi taking pole position for the first race. At the start, Palou Motorsport’s James Egozi challenged Colnaghi, but the Italian kept first place. He controlled the race afterwards to secure victory, while Egozi was closely pursued by KCL/MP’s Maciej Gładysz throughout the event.[32] The second race saw MP’s Andrés Cárdenas starting from reverse-grid pole position. His teammate Emerson Fittipaldi Jr. lined up alongside him before being overtaken by Drivex’s Juan Cota on the opening lap. That allowed Cárdenas to establish a lead and he went on to claim victory, while Fittipaldi was unable to regain second place despite persistent efforts.[33] In the final race of the weekend, Gładysz secured pole position in qualifying. However, Campos Racing drivers Jules Caranta and Nikola Tsolov overtook him on the opening lap. The pair spent the next laps battling, before they collided. That allowed Gładysz to reclaim the lead, while Caranta dropped to second and Tsolov retired. Gładysz went on to win, with Colnaghi finishing third and concluding the opening weekend with a four-point lead in the standings.[34]

The second round at the Algarve International Circuit featured a wet qualifying session, in which Rinicella secured pole position. The first race took place on a damp track, leading to an early reshuffling as Rinicella fell behind Egozi and Gładysz. Following a restart, Cárdenas joined the battle for the lead. Gładysz initially took first place while Egozi dropped to fourth, with Rinicella moving into second. The leading duo pulled away from the field before Rinicella reclaimed first place on the final lap to secure victory. In the second race, Egozi redeemed himself after his earlier loss. Starting from fourth, he overtook Rinicella and MP’s Alexander Abkhazava before passing Drivex's pole-sitter Oscar Wurz on the second lap. Colnaghi and Rinicella also advanced past Wurz in the following laps but were unable to challenge Egozi for the win.[35] The second qualifying session saw Rinicella claim another pole position. However, a slow start allowed Colnaghi to take the lead, with Gładysz slotting into third. The trio remained closely matched until Gładysz retired due to a technical issue, promoting Griffin Core’s Kacper Sztuka to third. This result enabled Colnaghi to establish a 28-point advantage over Gładysz ahead of the final two races.[36]

Championship standings

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Scoring system

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For the first and last races of the weekend, points were awarded as follows:

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th   Pole   FL 
Points 25 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1 2 1

The second race of the weekend, called the sprint race, was shorter and therefore awards less points:

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   FL 
Points 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1 1

Two points were awarded for qualifying on pole position, and one point was awarded for setting the fastest lap during a race.[37]

No sprint race was held at the final round as it only featured two races.

Drivers' standings

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Pos Driver JER
Spain
POR
Portugal
ARA
Spain
Pts
R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 R3 R1 R2
1 Poland Maciej Gładysz 3 9 1 2 5 26† 1 2 115
2 Italy Mattia Colnaghi 1 7 3 5 2 1 24 13 97
3 United States James Egozi 2 6 9 12 1 4 10 1 88
4 Peru Andrés Cárdenas 6 1 12 3 7 7 4 3 78
5 Italy Valerio Rinicella 1 3 2 13 7 70
6 Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Jr. 8 3 6 8 9 5 3 Ret 54
7 France Jules Caranta 7 10 2 10 6 11 7 8 46
8 Mexico Jesse Carrasquedo Jr. Ret 8 5 16 24† 13 2 4 42
9 Spain Lucas Fluxá 7 21 6 6 9 28
10 Spain Juan Cota 5 2 15 17 8 14 27
11 Poland Kacper Sztuka 9 5 10 11 Ret 3 27
12 Bulgaria Nikola Tsolov 4 4 Ret 22
13 Thailand Enzo Tarnvanichkul 6 19 8 12 6 22
14 Austria Oscar Wurz 10 11 7 9 4 12 15 12 19
15 Kazakhstan Alexander Abkhazava 18 24† 8 4 11 9 11 19 19
16 Thailand Tasanapol Inthraphuvasak 11 12 4 12
17 France Luciano Morano 14 16 16 14 12 17 8 15 6
18 United States Preston Lambert 17 Ret 11 Ret 10 15 9 16 4
19 Hungary Ádám Hideg 13 17 Ret 13 13 16 14 10 2
20 United States Garrett Berry DSQ DSQ 10 1
21 Belgium Yani Stevenheydens 17 11 1
22 Germany Lenny Ried 12 15 Ret 21† 22 24 21 14 0
23 Portugal Francisco Macedo 16 13 13 Ret Ret WD 25† 24 0
24 United Kingdom Isaac Barashi 23 14 14 Ret 14 18 23 25† 0
25 Mexico Lorenzo Castillo 15 18 19 15 15 20 19 17 0
26 New Zealand Zack Scoular 22 16 23 Ret 22 0
27 Sweden Emil Hellberg 21 22 17 18 17 21 20 20 0
28 Sweden Linus Hellberg DNS 20 Ret 19 18 22 18 18 0
29 Mexico Cristian Cantú 19 19 18 Ret 20 19 0
30 Brazil Alceu Feldmann Neto 22 23 20 20 23 25 22 23 0
31 Kyrgyzstan Victoria Blokhina 20 21 21 WD WD WD 0
Brazil Matheus Comparatto WD WD WD 0
guest drivers inelegible to score points
Mexico Ernesto Rivera 5 5 0
United Kingdom Kai Daryanani 16 21 0
Pos Driver R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 Pts
JER
Spain
POR
Portugal
ARA
Spain
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole

Italics – Fastest Lap

† — Did not finish, but classified
Rookie

Teams' standings

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Each team counted their two best results per race and the bonus points for fastest laps if applicable.

Pos Driver JER
Spain
POR
Portugal
ARA
Spain
Pts
R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 R3 R1 R2
1 Netherlands MP Motorsport 1 1 3 1 2 1 3 3 250
6 3 6 3 3 2 4 7
2 Spain Campos Racing 4 4 2 6 6 6 7 6 115
7 10 4 7 19 8 12 8
3 Netherlands KCL by MP Motorsport 3 9 1 2 5 26† 1 2 111
WD WD WD
4 Spain Palou Motorsport 2 6 9 12 1 4 8 1 90
14 14 14 14 12 17 10 15
5 Spain Griffin Core by Campos 9 5 5 11 24† 3 2 4 83
16 8 10 16 Ret 13 6 9
6 Spain Drivex 5 2 7 9 4 12 9 12 50
10 11 11 17 8 14 15 14
7 Spain Sparco Palou MS 13 17 20 13 13 16 14 10 2
22 23 Ret 20 23 25 22 23
8 France Saintéloc Racing 15 18 19 15 15 10 19 17 1
DSQ DSQ 20
9 Spain GRS Team 19 19 18 Ret 20 19 17 11 1
10 Sweden Allay Racing 21 20 17 18 17 21 18 18 0
Ret 22 Ret 19 18 22 20 20
Pos Driver R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 R3 R1 R2 Pts
JER
Spain
POR
Portugal
ARA
Spain

Notes

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  1. ^ a b c d Blokhina is Russian, but she competes under a Kyrgyz licence as Russian national emblems were banned by the FIA following the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Abkhazava, a Russo-Georgian, competes under a Kazakh licence for the same reason.

References

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  1. ^ Wood, Ida (17 November 2022). "New Eurocup-3 series launched to rival Euroformula and FREC". Formula Scout. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
  2. ^ a b Arroyo, Juan; Muschlien, Finjo (30 September 2024). "Exclusive: Two new winter single-seater series coming to Europe in 2025". Feeder Series. Retrieved 19 January 2025.
  3. ^ a b "The Car". eurocup3.org. Retrieved 20 November 2023.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Wood, Ida (4 February 2025). "Eurocup-3 grid grows as paddock prepares for winter series". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  5. ^ a b Wood, Ida (5 February 2025). "Sztuka chooses to step down the ladder after 2024 F3 struggles". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  6. ^ Eurocup-3 [@eurocup_3] (12 February 2025). "‼️BREAKING NEWS‼️ Welcome to #Eurocup3, @zack.scoular! 🔥 He's gearing up for the 2025 season with @paloumotorsport—let the battle begin!" – via Instagram.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. ^ a b "Abkhazava moves over to MP Motorsport for sophomore year in Eurocup-3". MP Motorsport. 23 December 2024. Retrieved 23 December 2024.
  8. ^ a b Wood, Ida (4 February 2025). "Emmo Fittipaldi remains in Eurocup-3 for title attack". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  9. ^ a b "Cardénas promoted to Eurocup-3 line-up at MP Motorsport". MP Motorsport. 3 February 2025. Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  10. ^ "Colnaghi moves up to Eurocup-3 with MP Motorsport". MP Motorsport. 27 January 2025. Retrieved 27 January 2025.
  11. ^ a b "MP Motorsport on Instagram: 'From gold in the 🇪🇸 suit to the MP family — Juan Cota is in for our 2025 Spanish F4 team! The FIA Motorsport Games winner and 4x F4 race winner joins our six-car Spanish F4 line-up just in time for this weekend's season opener at Motorland Aragon. Juan will also join our Eurocup-3 team during 3 rounds during the year. 👀'". Instagram. 28 March 2025. Retrieved 28 March 2025.
  12. ^ a b "Gładysz stays with MP Motorsport for Eurocup-3 graduation". MP Motorsport. 17 December 2024. Retrieved 17 December 2024.
  13. ^ "Rinicella to continue with MP Motorsport in Eurocup-3". MP Motorsport. 18 December 2024. Retrieved 18 December 2024.
  14. ^ a b Wood, Ida (17 December 2024). "Red Bull junior Feghali among Drivex's signings for Spanish series". Formula Scout. Retrieved 17 December 2024.
  15. ^ a b "Griffin Core Steps Up to Eurocup-3 with Campos Racing". Campos Racing. 28 January 2025. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  16. ^ a b c d "Red Bull Junior Team bets on Eurocup-3 and confirms Rivera, Tarnvanichkul, and Caranta with Campos Racing". Campos Racing. 28 January 2025. Retrieved 28 January 2025.
  17. ^ a b c "Jesse Carrasquedo, Francisco Macedo, and Kacper Sztuka Sign with Griffin Core by Campos for 2025 Eurocup-3 Campaign". Campos Racing. 4 February 2025. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
  18. ^ "Eurocup-3 announces calendar for 2025". eurocup3.org. Retrieved 18 November 2024.
  19. ^ Wood, Ida (19 November 2024). "Eurocup-3 to race at Assen in 2025". Formula Scout. Retrieved 19 November 2024.
  20. ^ a b c "The Eurocup-3 Spanish Winter Championship is born and confirms its 2025 calendar". eurocup3.org. 4 October 2024. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
  21. ^ a b c d Spanish Winter Championship [@swchofficial] (5 February 2025). "Here are the drivers that will take part of the first ever round of the #SpanishWinterChampionship ❄️👉🏻" – via Instagram.
  22. ^ a b c "Jerez Marks the Start of the Winter Series for Eurocup-3 and F4 Spain". www.camposracing.com. 5 February 2025. Retrieved 6 February 2025.
  23. ^ a b c d e Spanish Winter Championship [@swchofficial] (19 February 2025). "Here's the entry list for the second round of the #SpanishWinterChampionship 😉✅" – via Instagram.
  24. ^ a b c Tirado, Seb (28 January 2025). "Eurocup-3: Who's going where in 2025?". Feeder Series. Retrieved 28 January 2025.
  25. ^ "Feeder Series on Bluesky: 'UPDATE | 🇩🇪 Lenny Ried has also been confirmed to race with Drivex in the main Eurocup-3 season.'". Bluesky. 3 February 2025. Retrieved 3 February 2025.
  26. ^ "Feeder Series on Bluesky: 'UPDATE | 🇰🇬 Victoria Blokhina will race for Drivex in the Eurocup-3 Spanish Winter Championship as well.'". Bluesky. 1 February 2025. Retrieved 1 February 2025.
  27. ^ "Drivex Team on X: '🇺🇸 Preston Lambert will race with us the 2025 @Eurocup_3 season! 🔥'". X. 14 January 2025. Retrieved 14 January 2025.
  28. ^ "Spanish Winter Championship on Instagram: 'The final entry list for the #SpanishWinterChampionship 2025 is officially here, and it's stacked! 🏎️'". Instagram. 26 March 2025. Retrieved 27 March 2025.
  29. ^ GRS Team [@grsteam] (25 March 2025). "🚨DRIVER NEWS 🇺🇸@yanistevenheydens joins GRS Team to race in the EuroCup-3 @swchofficial season finale, which will be held this weekend at @motorlandaragon" – via Instagram.
  30. ^ Wood, Ida (4 October 2024). "Eurocup-3 Spanish Winter Championship launched for 2025". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 October 2024.
  31. ^ @swchofficial (18 November 2024). "The Spanish Winter Championship calendar is here!" – via Instagram.
  32. ^ Wood, Ida (8 February 2025). "Spanish F4 champion Colnaghi makes perfect start to life in Eurocup-3". Formula Scout. Retrieved 3 April 2025.
  33. ^ Wood, Ida (8 February 2025). "MP's Andres Cardenas keeps it cool for Eurocup-3 winter series win". Formula Scout. Retrieved 3 April 2025.
  34. ^ Scout, Formula (9 February 2025). "Gladysz wins after Red Bull juniors collide in Eurocup-3 winter series". Formula Scout. Retrieved 3 April 2025.
  35. ^ Wood, Ida (22 February 2025). "Rinicella pips Gladysz then Egozi gets redemptive Eurocup-3 Algarve win". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
  36. ^ Wood, Ida (23 February 2025). "Rinicella's slow start hands Eurocup-3 victory to Colnaghi at Algarve". Formula Scout. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
  37. ^ "Eurocup-3 Spanish Winter Championship 2025 - Sporting regulations" (PDF). RFEDA. 2025. Retrieved 4 February 2025.
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