Karnataka Motor Sports Club: Difference between revisions
Davidindia (talk | contribs) Added 'See also' section |
Davidindia (talk | contribs) Added MS in India link - see also |
||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
* [[Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India]] |
* [[Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India]] |
||
* [[Indian National Rally Championship]] |
* [[Indian National Rally Championship]] |
||
* [[Motorsport in India|Motorsports in India]] |
|||
== References == |
== References == |
Revision as of 17:45, 13 December 2023
Karnataka Motor Sports Club, popularly known as KMSC, is a state association for governing and conducting motorsports in the Indian state of Karnataka. It is a founder member[1] of the Federation of Motor Sports Club of India (FMSCI), the governing body for motor sports in India. It is one of the oldest ‘active’ motorsports clubs in India.[2] It holds the record of organising the Karnataka – 1000 rally (K1000 rally) continuously for the last 48 years (except for two years).
KMSC was started by a group of petrol heads, under the stewardship of Fred Webb, in 1954 under the initial name, Bangalore Motor Sports Club (BMSC). After a meeting with like-minded people including Cyril Doveton and John Webb (Fred’s son) in the same year, the club was started and Fred Webb became its first president. Both Webb and Junior Webb took great interest in the club motorsports activities and conducted regular drag races at Yelahanka and Jakkur air strips.[3] They also took part in other parts of the country, specially Sholavaram. Then the club played a great role in starting the Federation, FMSCI and changed its nomen clature[1] from Bangalore Motor Sports Club to KMSC. Over the years, the Karnataka 1000 rally which was started in 1975 became one of the flagship events of the club. It is one of the oldest rallies conducted regularly in the world. It had a break for a couple of years due to reasons beyond the club’s control.[4]
K1000 rally
The Karnataka 1000 Rally, an annual rally run on Time, Speed, Distance (TSD) format over two to three days, was started in 1975. In the early years, the K1000 ran over 1000 miles covering dirt tracks of three states, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh. Over the years it became a popular destination for the top motorsports rally drivers in the country.[5] In 1988, it joined the National calendar as it was included as a round in the Indian National Rally Championship (INRC). In 1996, the rally shifted to European Special Stage format in line with all other INRC rounds under the aegis of FMSCI.
The first rally run in 1975 over 1850 km of mixed roads including gravel, kutcha, tarmac, was won by a Bangalore team Sivaram, D. Vinod Sivappa, Feroze Asgar Ali and Shivprasad, Bangalore in an ambassador. Those days, there used to be four drivers as the route is long with night driving. For the last few years, the rally is being held on the dirt tracks, near Gubbi in Tumakuru district.[6] The 2022 K1000 rally was won by Karna Kadur and co-driver Nikhil Pai. It was Kadur's maiden K1000 title.[7] The 47th edition will be held in Tumakuru from 21 to 23 December 2023.[1]
Office-bearers
Currently, KMSC is headed by Goutham Shanthappa, who is also the vice-president of FMSCI,[8][9] with Bhaskar Gupta as vice-president. Other members of the club, elected on 12 November 2020. Former K1000 champion in his class, Sanjeev Shah is the general secretary. BS Prakash is elected as the Joint Secretary while MD Sathyavratha is the Treasurer. Praneet Perumal, Janardan Babu and Shanmuga are the members of the managing committee. Advocate VS Harish is co-opted as legal adviser.[10]
BMSC's AD Jayaram was the FMSCI president in the year 1974-75.[11] Other presidents from KMSC include Ravi Gupta in 1980-81, Shramik Masturlal from 1996 to 99.and R Bharat Raj in 2014-15.[11] Goutham Shanthappa is the Vice-president for 2022-24. Earlier, Shivu Shivappa, the then president of KMSC served as vice-president for a term of two years from 2018.[12]
See also
- Madras Motor Sports Club
- Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India
- Indian National Rally Championship
- Motorsports in India
References
- ^ a b "History – FMSCI". Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ "Aboutus | Karnataka Motor Sports Club[KMSC]-Bangalore". web.archive.org. 2018-01-07. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ Thyagarajan,DHNS, Roshan. "More revs in Bengaluru's motor sports". Deccan Herald. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ Bodapati, David (2018-01-16). "Fredd Webb & how Bangalore Motor Sports Club (currently KMSC) started: Buildup to MRF 43rd K1000 rally". INDIA in F1. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ "7 best off-road car rally drivers in India". Red Bull. 2021-07-01. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ "K1000 Rally: Gaurav Gill And Musa Sheriff Clinch The INRC Title - Overdrive". web.archive.org. 2015-10-09. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ "Karna Kadur wins 2022 INRC, K-1000 rally as Gaurav Gill retires". Autocar India. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ Bureau, Sports (2022-09-29). "Akbar Ebrahim re-elected FMSCI president". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
{{cite news}}
:|last=
has generic name (help) - ^ "Council & Sub Committee – FMSCI". Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ Bodapati, David (2020-11-16). "Gautam and Sanjeev take over KMSC reins, promise more activities". INDIA in F1. Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ a b "Roll of Honour – FMSCI". Retrieved 2023-12-13.
- ^ Sportstar, Team (2018-11-27). "Prithiviraj elected FMSCI president". Sportstar. Retrieved 2023-12-13.