September 19, 2025

Mazzeo becomes double World Champion in Chile

Raptor/Gimar driver Alessio Mazzeo has gone from being close in the past to becoming a double World Champion in less than 24-hours, the Italian taking the biggest win of his career today when he executed a flawless drive to win the IFMAR 1:8 Nitro GT World Championship final in Chile.  Winning the Electric GT World title yesterday in Santiago, and having hinted at what was to come as he put in a sterling performance in the battle for the Nitro TQ honours in the final qualifier, lining up behind Serpent’s eventually Top Qualifier Andrea Catanzani, he and Catanzani were the class of the field.  From the start of the 1-hour Main they pulled clear of the field around the Club de Aeromodelos de Chile track with it looking like the stage was set for a battle between the two different generations of drivers.  Unfortunately that anticipated fight to become the World No.1 lasted just four & a half minutes.  Catanzani would suffer a flame out and his demise was only the start of more problems to come for Italian drivers, the nation dominating qualifying and locking out all four direct qualifying spots in the main.  11-minutes in and Natanaele Senesi suffered the first of numerous flame-outs.  With Alex D’Angelo holding a comfortable second, just as Mazzeo put a lap on the Capricorn driver 36-minutes into the race, the 2023 Worlds Top Qualifier would come to a stop on track.  The issue proved terminal, his throttle servo having failed.  This promoted Carli Lopez to second making for a Raptor 1-2 on track.  Despite this being his first World Championships, the 21-year-old drove a superb final to maintain his position and take a hugely popular second place.  A driver who is no stranger to the World Championship stage, Brazil’s Flavio Elias would turn around a day that started off in the worst way possible when he was taken out of his Semi by another driver in pit lane while in a bump up position.  Having to go through the Last Chance Final, the WIRC driver won that to line up as the 11th car in the final and through all the drama found himself finally achieving a World Championship podium finish, a recovering Catanzani just 3-seconds back when they crossed the line.

While somewhat muted after his Electric GT Championship win, given the classes small entry, it was contrasting raw emotion for Mazzeo on taking the nitro title win.  Joining Toni Gruber and Joern Neumann as champions of the category, asked how it felt to become a double World Champion in the space of 24-hours, the super friendly Italian replied, ‘It’s incredible, I don’t think I realise yet what has just happened.’  He continued, ‘Today was a special day.  I was not stressed, I was really calm, and I was really confident in the work of Giovanni, Marco and my father back home, and I think we deserve this title.  I followed this dream from when I was young.  I was scared to make this long distance from my home but I did it to realise my dream and what I suggest to everybody if you are scared of something you need to fight it so you can realise you dreams.’  On his title win race, which looked near perfect from the outside, Mazzeo explain, ‘we lost almost 1-lap.  In the pit lane two times we had problems with the body, and I also lost 5-seconds with a crash with a lapping car but from the beginning I saw I had the speed.  When I see Andrea flame out, and I am really sorry for Andrea but he will be the future of this sport and will be a champion for sure, but when I see his car stopped I said “today can be the day”.  After that I just managed the car to the end and said to Giovanni when there was 2-minutes remaining we had won but before the last lap at the end of the straight I lose the rear and we broke the wheel and we arrive at the finish with a broken wheel, for this my last lap was 25-seconds.’  While many of his rivals had engine issues, the long time Gimar driver said, ‘we choose not the power, we chose to be safe and with the decision to risk or not I prefer to be safe because I was fast so I didn’t want to go faster.  I know this kind of final is very long, I had done them many times and I lose many times, so the choice was perfect.  The car was really perfect, everything worked good, the fuel was amazing, the tyres were perfect – that’s a dream.’

Reacting to his second place, Lopez said the biggest stress of the race for him was traffic, saying he had to deal with it a lot.  Asked how his race had panned out, the Puerto Rican driver replied, ‘All the time was OK, no flame out, the only issues was in the final 10-minutes one tyre exploded which we had to change.  With the one new tyre I put more steering on my radio but once the tyre warmed up it as all OK.’  With the Sweep controlled tyre coming in for much phrase for its performance at these championships, he added, ‘I don’t know why we had this failure with the tyre because for me they are a good tyre and I like them a lot.  Maybe it was just the 1-hour final.’  Qualifying sixth overall to line-up on pole for the Semi B Final, which he went on to win in the fastest time of both Semis putting him fifth on the starting grid, Lopez said while this is his first World Championships it is not his first time to race with the Italian.  Last year he travelled to Italy to take part in a round of their National GT Championship, the standard one of the best in the World as highlight here in Santiago, adding he ‘wasn’t surprised’ by their speed here and that he ‘needs to go race with them more in future’.

Getting close to a podium with fourth at the 1:8 Onroad World Championships in Brazil back in 2015, a decade on Elias was delighted to finally secure a Worlds podium finish.  After his dramas in the Semi, the Main Final started out looking like it might go the same way.  From last in the grid, a good start would move him up to fifth briefly before he was flipped over after contact from another car which put him back in last place.  With the pit lane closed for the first 7-minutes of the race, he would then run out of fuel after six & a half minutes however by the time his car was recovered and restarted, pit lane was open and he did suffer any penalty.  He said after that, pitting between 6 and 6:15, that the rest of the race was fine and he could climb back up the order and capitalise on the issues of other drivers.  Elias will return to track in a month and a half’s time when it is the turn of the 1:8 Onroad class to decide its next World Champion at the impressive CACH facility.

An understandably dejected Catanzani summed up the outcome of looked like a promising championship as ‘disappointing’.  Making a name for himself on his Worlds debut two years ago in Sydney, the 20-year had an impressive Day 1 of qualifying securing the TQ honours with three consecutive TQ runs ask about his final he explained, ‘We flamed out at 4 or 5 minutes for no reason, I don’t know why.  Then we restart, the race was long so we continue to race but we flamed out another time in the pit stop so we changed glow plug.’  He continued, ‘we also broke a wheel so we had to change tyres so maybe without his a podium was still possible.  The car was feeling strange and I thought the car was broken but when we checked it it was the wheel.’  With the fastest lap of the final, asked about the chance of having another go at Worlds success in Chile at the 1:8 Onroad World Championship, which start at the end of November, he said he still needs to discuss his participation with Serpent.



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