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Flag of JapanTeam Taisan

タイサンインターナショナル
Professional JP
Data refreshed daily
Founded
1983
Based In
Fukushima Prefecture, Japan

Team Taisan (チーム・タイサン, stylized as Team TAISAN) is a Japanese auto racing team founded in 1983 by Yasutsune "Ricky" Chiba (3 April 1945 - 7 June 2024) and owned by the Taisan Industrial Company. Most active in the Super GT Series, formerly known as the All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship (JGTC), Taisan has been involved in all but one season from 1994 to 2018, taking a sabbatical in 2015. During that time they have won eight team championships and four drivers championships, representing manufacturers Ferrari, Porsche, Dodge, Toyota, Nissan, and Audi. Team Taisan has also participated in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, winning their class on their debut in 2000. For nearly their entire career, Taisan has been sponsored by tire manufacturer Yokohama Rubber Company, often carrying the name of Yokohama's Advan brand.

Series

Asian Le MansSuper Gt

Key Personnel

Team Principal Yasunori Chiba
Owner Yasutsune Chiba

Drivers

S
Shinnosuke Yamada
S
Shintaro Kawabata

Season Results

Year Chassis Engine Points Position
2018 Audi R8 LMS 16 19th
2017 Audi R8 LMS 11 24th
2016 Audi R8 LMS 27 16th
2014 Nissan GT-R GT3 24 16th
2013 Porsche 911 GT3-R 40 9th
2012 Porsche 911 GT3-R 102 1st
2011 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 19 16th
2010 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 12 20th
2009 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 38 11th
2008 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 83 4th
2007 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 72 5th
2006 Porsche 996 GT3-RS 10 18th
2005 Porsche 996 GT3-RS NC 0

Team History

History

The Team Taisan Endless Porsche which won the 2012 GT300 Drivers and Teams Championships
The team was initially formed through Nova Engineering [ja] and their efforts in the All Japan Endurance Championship and Fuji Long Distance Series. Taisan operated one of the teams' Porsche 962C with drivers Kunimitsu Takahashi and Kenji Takahashi. Kunimitsu went on to win the Endurance Championship three times from 1985 to 1987, while Nova Engineering won the team championships in the Fuji Long Distance Series those same years. Taisan expanded their program to include the Japanese Touring Car Championship in 1989 with BMW M3s, adding Briton Will Hoy to the team in 1990. A Group A category Nissan Skyline GT-R was added to the team in 1991 for Kenji Takahashi and Keiichi Tsuchiya while their BMWs continued in the lower JTC-2 category. Kunimitsu replaced Kenji in the Skyline for 1992 and 1993 before Kunimitsu and Tsuchiya left to form their own racing team and the JTCC eliminated the Group A cars from the series, leaving the team with a single Super Touring BMW for Kazuo Mogi in 1994.

Taisan returned to sports car racing in 1994 in the new All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship, the team participating with one of their former 962Cs and teamed alongside a Ferrari F40. Masahiko Kondo and Anthony Reid won one race for the Porsche while Tetsuya Ota and Oscar Larrauri earned one victory in the Ferrari. A switch to a pair of Porsche 911 GT2s earned three GT1 victories in 1995 and the teams championship for the GT1 category, while the team also added a GT2 class campaign under the Team Taisan Jr. moniker for a Porsche 964. Taisan Jr. became a dominant team in the rechristened GT300 class, winning the drivers and teams championships in 1996, followed by second place in 1997 and another championship in 1998 while campaigning a new Toyota MR2 in cooperation with Tsuchiya Engineering.

Taisan's success led to the team being invited to participate in the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2000 for the LMGT category. Their Porsche 911 GT3-R, driven by Hideo Fukuyama, Atsushi Yogo, and Bruno Lambert won the category by a six-lap margin. Upon returning to Japan, Taisan began a streak of four consecutive GT300 team championships from 2000–2003, including a drivers championship with Fukuyama in 2000. Another Le Mans also earned the team a podium finish in their class for 2002. Taisan downsized to a single Porsche team from 2004 onward as the JGTC transitioned to the new Super GT Series; Taisan eventually joined with Endless for a joint program that earned them another drivers and teams championships in 2012. The team expanded once again in 2013, retaining the Porsche in Super GT while joining the new Asian Le Mans Series with a Ferrari 458 Italia GT2, winning the series championship and earning the team an automatic invitation to Le Mans, their first since 2006. A difficult 2014 season with a new Nissan GT-R led Taisan to take a sabbatical year from Super GT, returning in 2016 with an Audi R8 LMS in cooperation with SARD.

Team Taisan also began to embrace electric motorsport by participating in the All Japan EV-GP Series in 2011 with Tesla Roadsters as well as a modified Porsche 914, winning the 2011 championship. The team also began developing electric karts. In 2018 Chiba announced an auction of many former Taisan racing cars dating back to the early 1990s, including several JGTC and Super GT machines. Chiba also announced at the conclusion of the 2018 Super GT season that the team would cease participation in Super GT, instead concentrating solely on electric motorsports.

1991 Nissan Skyline GT-R Group A

1994 Porsche 962C

1994 Ferrari F40

2012 Porsche 911 GT3 R

2014 Nissan GT-R GT3

2017 Audi R8 LMS

^ O'Connell, RJ (6 November 2018). "Team Taisan Set To Withdraw From Super GT". DailySportsCar. Retrieved 8 November 2018.

^ "タイサン、2015年はSGT/ル・マンの活動を休止" [Taisan suspend SGT / Le Mans activities in 2015] (in Japanese). Auto Sport Web. 4 February 2015. Retrieved

Taisan International

Taisan's success led to the team being invited to participate in the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2000 for the LMGT category. Their Porsche 911 GT3-R, driven by Hideo Fukuyama, Atsushi Yogo, and Bruno Lambert won the category by a six-lap margin. Upon returning to Japan, Taisan began a streak of four consecutive GT300 team championships from 2000–2003, including a drivers championship with Fukuyama in 2000. Another Le Mans also earned the team a podium finish in their class for 2002. Taisan downsized to a single Porsche team from 2004 onward as the JGTC transitioned to the new Super GT Series; Taisan eventually joined with Endless for a joint program that earned them another drivers and teams championships in 2012. The team expanded once again in 2013, retaining the Porsche in Super GT while joining the new Asian Le Mans Series with a Ferrari 458 Italia GT2, winning the series championship and earning the team an automatic invitation to Le Mans, their first since 2006. A difficult 2014 season with a new Nissan GT-R led Taisan to take a sabbatical year from Super GT, returning in 2016 with an Audi R8 LMS in cooperation with SARD.

^ Cite error: The named reference Taisan Sale was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

^ "タイサン、2015年はSGT/ル・マンの活動を休止" [Taisan suspend SGT / Le Mans activities in 2015] (in Japanese). Auto Sport Web. 4 February 2015. Retrieved 8 November 2018.

Taisan Electric

Team Taisan also began to embrace electric motorsport by participating in the All Japan EV-GP Series in 2011 with Tesla Roadsters as well as a modified Porsche 914, winning the 2011 championship. The team also began developing electric karts. In 2018 Chiba announced an auction of many former Taisan racing cars dating back to the early 1990s, including several JGTC and Super GT machines. Chiba also announced at the conclusion of the 2018 Super GT season that the team would cease participation in Super GT, instead concentrating solely on electric motorsports.

1991 Nissan Skyline GT-R Group A

1994 Porsche 962C

1994 Ferrari F40

2012 Porsche 911 GT3 R

2014 Nissan GT-R GT3

2017 Audi R8 LMS

^ "Team TAISAN and Power Japan Plus Form Partnership to Develop World's First Electric Vehicle Powered by the Ryden Dual Carbon Battery". Business Wire. 16 June 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2018.

^ Cite error: The named reference Taisan Sale was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

^ Hirano, Ryuji (7 December 2018). "チーム・タイサン、2018年限りでスーパーGTでの活動に幕。今後はEVレースへ転換" [Team Taisan ends activities in Super GT in 2018, now turns to EV racing]. Autosport Web. Retrieved 28 December 2018.

History adapted from Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 4.0).

About Team Taisan

Team Taisan is a Japan professional-level racing team based in Fukushima Prefecture, Japan. Founded in 1983, the team competes in Asian Le Mans, Super Gt. Team Taisan is listed on Race Team Wiki, the world's largest free racing wiki — over 1.1 million teams and counting.

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