It’s not just about competing in the WRC. It’s also about building a fast WR car and a team capable of winning.
Both people and cars are trained and strengthened when they are exposed to conditions that exceed the imagination during competition. TOYOTA GAZOO Racing “hates” to lose, and of course we do not want to lose in WRC.
Akio Toyoda, TGR-WRT Chairman
The real world is full of vastly different roads – rough, uneven, unpaved roads to smoothly paved mountain roads and roads with icy patches hidden under new-fallen snow. Learning about them is essential to developing top quality cars. To achieve our goal of manufacturing ever-better cars, we need an intimate understanding of how ordinary people deal with these roads in everyday life.
The WRC is considered the greatest event of motor sports, which makes it the ideal arena for us to learn about the world’s roads. By going for the top WRC category with the GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID, which was developed based on the production GR YARIS, we accomplished three goals:
These are the reasons Toyota decided to take on the WRC in the first place.
All time Toyota statistics of participating in WRC:
WRC starts
Outright wins
Total podiums
Stage wins
First tier of the rally pyramid.
The WRC is divided into the Drivers’ and Co-drivers’ Championship and the Manufacturers’ Championship. Various types of cars are allowed to compete in WRC, and from 2022 the new specification of Rally1 cars — including the GR YARIS Rally1 HYBRID — will form the top category, taking the place of the World Rally Car rules that were first introduced in 1997 and evolved every few years.
The new technical regulations include the introduction of hybrid power for the first time and the use of a fully sustainable fuel, as well as a simplification of the aerodynamics and transmissions seen on the most recent World Rally Cars. Manufacturers can nominate up to three cars for each rally, and the top two cars contribute points to the manufacturers’ rankings.
Additional teams using Rally1 cars can also enter the championship as a WRC Team. However, they are only permitted to nominate a maximum of two cars for each rally, and must enter at least seven rallies, including one rally that takes place outside Europe.
More information on our Rally1 car can be found under CUSTOMER MOTORSPORT.
The second tier of the rally pyramid.
The Rally2 category makes up the second tier of the rally pyramid, with performance levels that are second only to the top Rally1 category. Rally2 is intended primarily for customer teams and drivers, with a number of different manufacturers producing and offering cars for competitors.
Like Rally1 cars, all Rally2 cars have four-wheel drive, but have more features in common with their road-going counterparts. This includes engines that must be based on one used in a series production road car.
Rally2 cars are suitable for a wide range of different drivers, from young up-and-coming talents to enthusiastic amateur or ‘gentleman’ drivers. With more than 1000 cars already sold around the world by different manufacturers, competition levels are intense.
It forms the basis for WRC2, the highly competitive secondary class that make up WRC events. It’s also the primary category in the European Rally Championship and numerous other regional and national championships across the globe.
TGR-WRT is excited to have developed its own GR Yaris Rally2 car. More information on our Rally2 can be found under CUSTOMER MOTORSPORT.
TGR-WRT Chairman
Team Principal
Project Director
Sporting Director
Technical Director