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2004 British Touring Car Championship season
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The 2004 Green Flag MSA British Touring Car Championship season was the 47th British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) season.
Changes for 2004
Teams and drivers
With the admittance of Super 2000-spec cars into the championship, the BTCC welcomed with it a new manufacturer, with SEAT Sport's UK division entering a pair of Toledos identical to those used in the European Touring Car Championship. At the wheel were Jason Plato, returning to the championship for the first time since his title victory in 2001, and youngster Rob Huff, who earned his drive through winning the inaugural SEAT Cupra UK Championship, for which Plato had acted as a mentor to young drivers. They were joined by reigning champions of the last three seasons Vauxhall, with Triple 8 Engineering again running a trio of Astra Coupes, 2003 champion Yvan Muller and 2003 runner-up and 2002 champion James Thompson remained alongside Luke Hines, who replaced Paul O'Neill on the back of claiming the Production class title in his debut season the previous year. Honda cut its Arena Motorsport-run Civic Type-R campaign down to a single car for the returning Tom Chilton, but the Civic challenge was augmented by a pair of cars entered by Team Dynamics for Matt Neal, returning to his family team from the works Honda set-up, and Dan Eaves, who brought with him Halfords sponsorship after the withdrawal of Vic Lee Racing. Proton completed the line-up of works teams, its two Impians now driven by two newcomers to British motorsport, experienced South African Shaun Watson-Smith and young Malaysian Farique Hairuman. Financial trouble forced MG Rover to pull its works backing from West Surrey Racing's MG ZS assault, but the team returned as an independent with young Colin Turkington and veteran Anthony Reid staying on board. Ex-works Vauxhall Astra Coupes were a popular choice amongst the other independents, with Michael Bentwood stepping up from the Production ranks in a 'VXR Junior' team prepared by Tech-Speed Motorsport, 2003 independent champion Rob Collard continuing to campaign an Astra for his self-run team, while GA Motorsport (now under the 'Team Sureterm' banner) continued to run a pair of Astra Coupes for the returning Paul Wallace and Renault Clio Cup graduate Charlie Butler-Henderson, while a Super 2000-spec Alfa Romeo 156 was also entered for Carl Breeze. Wallace was soon replaced by experienced BTCC driver Kelvin Burt, then later Irishman Gavin Smith and Stefan Hodgetts (son of ex-BTCC champion Chris), who then stepped in to replace Butler-Henderson when his funds ran out. Hodgetts then swapped cars with Breeze, who himself was replace by Gavin Pyper for the final round. Synchro Motorsport again returned with an ex-works Honda Civic Type R for former works driver James Kaye, Jason Hughes stepped up from the Production class, racing an ex-WSR MG ZS for his Kartworld Racing team, and John Batchelor's 'Team Varta' also stepped up, running Richard Marsh from the second round onwards in first a Super 2000 Civic Type-R, then an ex-Vic Lee Racing Peugeot 307. Marsh was replaced by Jay Wheals for the final round, for which the team returned to the Civic. Mardi Gras Motorsport had an abortive campaign, entering a Super 2000 Civic and later an ex-works Peugeot 406 Coupe, both LPG-powered, for businessman John George, and Edenbridge Racing briefly entered a Super 2000 BMW 320i for Justin Keen.
Other changes
- The number of total races was increased from 20 to 30 by holding three races at each meeting instead of two
- The grid for the second race of each meeting was decided by the results of the first but with the top ten reversed; the grid for the third race was simply the finishing order of the second race
- Cars built to Super 2000 specification were allowed, with an equivalency formula designed to ensure that they would have similar performance to their BTCC counterparts
- Points penalties for engine changes now apply only to the team, not the driver
- The "production class" and its associated championship was abolished
Teams and Drivers
M = Manufacturer team
I = Independent team
E = Car built to Super 2000 regulations
Race calendar and winners
| Round |
Circuit |
Date |
Winning driver |
Winning team |
1
2
3 |
Thruxton |
11 April |
James Thompson
Jason Plato
Yvan Muller |
VX Racing
SEAT Sport UK
VX Racing |
4
5
6 |
Brands Hatch (Indy) |
25 April |
Matt Neal
Luke Hines
James Thompson |
Computeach Racing with Halfords
VX Racing
VX Racing |
7
8
9 |
Silverstone (International) |
9 May |
Matt Neal
James Thompson
Tom Chilton |
Computeach Racing with Halfords
VX Racing
Team Honda |
10
11
12 |
Oulton Park (Island) |
23 May |
Yvan Muller
Dan Eaves
Yvan Muller |
VX Racing
Computeach Racing with Halfords
VX Racing |
13
14
15 |
Mondello Park |
13 June |
Yvan Muller
Jason Plato
Colin Turkington |
VX Racing
SEAT Sport UK
WSR |
16
17
18 |
Croft |
25 July |
Anthony Reid
Jason Plato
Jason Plato |
WSR
SEAT Sport UK
SEAT Sport UK |
19
20
21 |
Knockhill |
8 August |
Anthony Reid
Jason Plato
Anthony Reid |
WSR
SEAT Sport UK
WSR |
22
23
24 |
Brands Hatch (Indy) |
22 August |
Matt Neal
Jason Plato
Rob Huff |
Computeach Racing with Halfords
SEAT Sport UK
SEAT Sport UK |
25
26
27 |
Snetterton |
5 September |
James Thompson
Luke Hines
Rob Huff |
VX Racing
VX Racing
SEAT Sport UK |
28
29
30 |
Donington Park (National) |
26 September |
Jason Plato
Tom Chilton
Yvan Muller |
SEAT Sport UK
Team Honda
VX Racing |
Championship results
| Driver's championship |
| Position |
Driver |
Points |
| 1 |
James Thompson |
274 |
| 2 |
Yvan Muller |
273 |
| 3 |
Jason Plato |
224 |
| 4 |
Anthony Reid |
213 |
| 5 |
Matt Neal |
181 |
| 6 |
Colin Turkington |
173 |
| 7 |
Robert Huff |
148 |
| 8 |
Dan Eaves |
148 |
| 9 |
Tom Chilton |
116 |
| 10 |
Luke Hines |
115 |
| 11 |
James Kaye |
49 |
| 12 |
Rob Collard |
44 |
| 13 |
Michael Bentwood |
42 |
| 14 |
Shaun Watson-Smith |
28 |
| 15 |
Carl Breeze |
14 |
| 16 |
Kelvin Burt |
11 |
| 17 |
Jason Hughes |
5 |
| 18 |
Stefan Hodgetts |
4 |
| 19 |
Justin Keen |
2 |
| 20 |
Gavin Smith |
2 |
| 21 |
Paul Wallace |
1 |
| 22 |
Charlie Butler-Henderson |
1 |
| 23 |
Fariqe Hairuman |
0 |
| 24 |
John George |
0 |
| 25 |
Richard Marsh |
0 |
| 26 |
Jay Wheals |
0 |
| 27 |
Gavin Pyper |
0 |
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| Independent's championship |
| Position |
Driver |
Points |
| 1 |
Anthony Reid |
312 |
| 2 |
Colin Turkington |
300 |
| 3 |
Dan Eaves |
254 |
| 4 |
Matt Neal |
253 |
| 5 |
James Kaye |
164 |
| 6 |
Rob Collard |
152 |
| 7 |
Michael Bentwood |
131 |
| 8 |
Jason Hughes |
89 |
| 9 |
Carl Breeze |
75 |
| 10 |
Charlie Butler-Henderson |
33 |
| 11 |
John George |
27 |
| 12 |
Richard Marsh |
27 |
| 13 |
Kelvin Burt |
22 |
| 14 |
Justin Keen |
18 |
| 15 |
Stefan Hodgetts |
17 |
| 16 |
Paul Wallace |
9 |
| 17 |
Gavin Smith |
8 |
| 18 |
Jay Wheals |
7 |
| 19 |
Gavin Pyper |
5 |
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| Manufacturer's championship |
| Position |
Make |
Points |
| 1 |
Vauxhall |
732 |
| 2 |
Honda |
548 |
| 3 |
SEAT |
421 |
| 4 |
Proton |
96 |
|
| Team's championship |
| Position |
Team |
Points |
| 1 |
VX Racing |
536 |
| 2 |
SEAT Sport UK |
360 |
| 3 |
WSR |
325 |
| 4 |
Computeach Racing with Halfords |
303 |
| 5 |
Team Honda |
111 |
| 6 |
Synchro Motorsport |
54 |
| 7 |
Collard Racing |
50 |
| 8 |
Team Sureterm (GA Motorsports) |
44 |
| 9 |
VXR Jnr c/o Tech-Speed Motorsport |
26 |
| 10 |
Team PSP |
11 |
| 11 |
Edenbridge Racing |
3 |
| 12 |
Mardi Gras Motorsport |
0 |
| 13 |
Team Quest/Varta |
0 |
| 14 |
Kartworld Racing |
-3 |
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