Gordon Moodie

Gordon Moodie
Nationality United Kingdom British
Born (1981-02-15) February 15, 1981
Kirkcaldy, Fife
BriSCA Formula 2 Stock Cars career
Debut season 1998
Car no. 7

Gordon Moodie (born 15 February 1981) is a BriSCA Formula 2 Stock Cars racing driver from Windygates, Fife who races under number 7. Moodie is the most successful driver of his generation, having won the National Points Championship on eleven occasions.

Racing career

Moodie began racing Formula 2 stock cars at the age of 17 in 1998, using one of his father’s cars and racing as number 79. After winning the World Championship in 2006,[1] Moodie elected to race under number 7 in honour of his father, who used that number. Since then, Moodie has retained number 7.

Moodie’s first championship success came at the 2003 Scottish Championship at Cowdenbeath, a success which he regards as the turning point in his career.[2] In the same season, Moodie won his first National Points Championship, beating his main rival Barry Goldin who had won the Points Championship for the previous three seasons. It was the first of five consecutive National Points Championships, and Moodie also won another five consecutive titles between 2010 and 2014.[3]

Moodie finished first in the 2008 World Championship, but was subsequently disqualified and suspended from racing after scrutineering revealed a problem with his carburettor. Moodie proclaimed his innocence and later investigations revealed that there was a manufacturing fault in a batch of carburettors, of which Moodie’s was one.[4] However, Moodie remained suspended and his lack of racing meant that he did not win the National Points Championship in both 2008 and 2009. A four-month ban imposed towards the end of 2014 saw Moodie miss the first half of the 2015 season, ruling him out of contention for the National Points Championship in 2015.[5]

Honours

Notes

  1. "World Championship". BriSCA F2. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  2. Reeves 2013, p.28.
  3. "National Points Championship". BriSCA F2. Retrieved 31 December 2012.
  4. Reeves 2013, p.30.
  5. "Disciplinary News". BriSCA F2. Retrieved 1 November 2016.

References

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