Post by Lee on Jan 11, 2022 9:25:40 GMT
Maserati has announced it intends to return to racing from 2023!
Sadly not in the GT category as has been whispered for some time, but in Formula E and will be joining Porsche, DS, Nissan and Jaguar, the brands that have chosen to remain faithful to the electric series after 2022. It was officially announced by the CEO of Maserati, Davide Grasso and by the head of Stellantis motorsport, Jean Marc Finot in a meeting with the press.
Maserati therefore becomes the first Italian brand to launch the challenge in the electric championship and will participate in season 9 of the championship, which will start in January 2023. The 2023 season will see the introduction on the new 3rd generation single-seaters with power increased from 250 to 350 kW, i.e. 470 horsepower, and a second motor generator in position for a greater energy recovery. There will also be cars with completely different aerodynamics and outward appearance that will put the teams in a position to start all from scratch, on an equal footing, expert teams and new teams, with completely new cars that will be for everyone to discover.
The team is expected to race in the colour blue, the color of the Trident and may be called Maserati Folgore which is the name the brand has chosen for all the electric models that Maserati will produce in the coming years. This is why Maserati has decided to take the big step in Formula E: to make the world that follows the sport understand that Maserati is starting a transformation from a luxury brand to an electric sports brand.
Davide Grasso says "In the next few years, by 2025, there will be an electric version of Maserati for each model of the Maserati range". In short, Formula E will be the technological training ground that Maserati will use to develop and refine its skills in the world of electric. Just in 2023, coinciding with the start of Maserati racing in the Formula E championship, the trident brand will launch its first two fully electric road models: the Grecale Folgore (a medium-large size SUV) and the MC20 Folgore. , the electric version of the two-seater coupé already on the market with a twin-turbo V6 engine, for which an output of close to 700 horsepower is announced. In the following two years, at the height of Maserati's Formula E activity, the future electric Granturismo and Gran Cabrio Folgore will also be released (these are the new GT 2 + 2 seats) and finally the electric Folgore versions of the Quattroporte (the flagship sedan of the brand) and the Levante (the SUV size maxi).
Another brand within the Stellantis group already runs in the electric series, DS, the French premium brand linked to the Chinese team Techeetah, it might have been thought that Maserati could take DS's place in the Techeetah team but this has been denied by the Stellantis motorsport manager, Jean Marc Finot, who said: "This will not happen: DS will continue to race in Formula E as well when Maserati enters the championship. So from 2023 we will have two brands of the Stellantis group in the electric series that will compete on the field ".
Maserati's return to racing takes place thirteen years after its last competitive engagement: in 2010 Maserati raced for the last time in the GT world championship with the MC12 which won numerous international titles in the Granturismo category. While we have to go back as far as 63 years ago for the last single-seater engagement: when in 1958 the Maserati 250F, which the year before had won the F1 world title with Juan Manuel Fangio, took part in the last race in F1. Maserati also had historic victories in 1939 and 1940 when the Maserati 8CTF won the legendary Indianapolis 500 for two consecutive years, giving Maserati an Indy-F1 double that only Lotus and McLaren in racing history have equaled. A success in the Formula E championship would see a hat-trick with single-seaters that is unique in history.