All eyes were on Monza for the grand finale of the 2025 Italian GT Sprint Championship, where both the GT3 and GT Cup titles came down to the wire in a weekend packed with drama, controversy, and redemption.
Italian GT – Monza: 19-year-old Frassineti crowned champion
The title fight in the Italian GT Sprint Championship reached boiling point as Andrea Frassineti clinched the championship with victory in Race 2 for the #63 VSR Lamborghini Huracán GT3–but not without debate.
The weekend began with BMW Ceccato Racing on top: Jens Klingmann and Jesse Krohn dominated Race 1 in the #1 BMW M4 GT3 to seize the championship lead, while Frassineti and Edoardo Liberati saw their title hopes dented after first-corner contact.
On Sunday, the pendulum swung back VSR’s way. Frassineti converted pole into victory, supported by aggressive team tactics that saw VSR cars defend hard against the #1 BMW Italia Ceccato Racing. The race was marred by clashes and warnings for blocking, including contact between Klingmann and Alessio Deledda, which inadvertently eliminated BMW’s #2 Pro-Am entry. Despite the chaos, Frassineti and Liberati stayed clear to seal the win and the title, completing a 1-2 finish ahead of Sandy Mitchell and Loris Spinelli in the sister Lamborghini.
Klingmann and Krohn fought to the end, finishing third and losing the title by a narrow margin.
Read the full Race 1 and Race 2 reports and find out who won the Pro-Am and Am championships.
Italian GT Cup – Monza: Redemption and glory for DL Racing and Fontana
The GT Cup class produced its own share of heartbreak and triumph. Saturday’s opener saw Vittorio Viglietti and Riccardo Ianniello robbed of victory by a last-lap mechanical failure, handing the win to Franco Girolami and Leonardo Arduini for MM Motorsport. The battle between Arduini and Alessandro Mainetti—championship leader Andrea Fontana’s co-driver for the weekend—raged to the flag, setting the stage for a tense Sunday showdown.
Race 2 brought redemption. Viglietti and Ianniello bounced back to claim victory for DL Racing, leading home Giuseppe Forenzi and Francesco Coassin (Invictus Corse). Andrea Fontana sealed the GT Cup championship with third place, capping a consistent season with Target Racing.
Read the full Race 1 and Race 2 reports and find out who won the Pro-Am and Am championships in Division 1 and 2 of GT Cup.
Up Next: Season finales in Australia and Japan
The 2025 racing season is winding down, but there’s still action left around the world. Next weekend, GT World Challenge Australia heads to Hampton Downs for its double-header season finale, while Super GT brings the curtain down at Motegi. The following week, the FIA World Endurance Championship concludes under the lights with the 8 Hours of Bahrain.
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