PHOTO CREDIT: Red Bull Content Pool |
Traveling through Europe with his family, and their team, as a kid, he immediately became involved - cleaning and preparing racing tyres, as well as driving the teams truck around the paddock, and getting stuck into pitstops in STCC.
Unlike his father, Johan opted for a different career route. He decided to compete in Cross Country Skiing, where he achieved a top 10 ranking in Sweden, but after completing school, his career in motorsport well and truly kicked into high-gear.
It was 2008, when he climbed into a race car for the first time in the Junior Touring Car Championship, and after his very first race, the Swede was hooked.
As his career developed, he gained the necessary experience for the success, which would soon grace his record.
Johan Kristoffersson wins the first STCC race of the season at Mantorp Park. PHOTO CREDIT: Mediaempire.se |
The two years that followed kept Kristoffersson grounded, but 2013, saw him make the transition from circuit racing to rallycross, and it wasn’t until 2014, that he claimed his first rallycross victory in the European Championship.
A year later, he claimed a third-place finish in the World Rallycross Championship, but as the years progressed, he continued to apply his trade in different championships.
But, it wasn’t until 2017, when he teamed up with Petter Solberg’s PSRX Volkswagen Sweden, and despite getting off to a slow start, acheiving two podium finishes in rounds 2 and 3, thereafter, he claimed seven straight wins in the 12-round calendar.
Returning with PSRX Volkswagen in 2018, Kristoffersson won all but one round, which would begin a record breaking career in rallycross.
Despite missing the 2019 season, after Volkswagen Motorsport withdrew from the championship. He returned with family-run – Kristoffersson Motorsport, in a modified version of his 2016 VW Polo, but despite having some pressure applied throughout the season, he went on to win another championship.
Kristoffersson celebrating after winning upon return to World RX in 2020. PHOTO CREDIT: FIA.com |
After years of talking, 2022 was finally the year of implementation, as the World Rallycross Championship went fully-electric, with teams retrofitting their cars with Austrian firm Kriesel’s powertrains.
The future within World Rallycross did not seem all that clear for Kristoffersson Motorsport, but as we all know, the Swedish team never gave up, as they managed to secure two VW Polo R5 chassis’ from long-term partner Volkswagen Sweden.
Starting from a blank slate seems a lot easier then retrofitting the Kriesel powertrain to an already existent chassis, or is it? “I think it was much more difficult to build a brand new car,” Kristoffersson explains. “I mean if we had the possibility, and if we had the choice from just out of the driver and engineer point of view. You would definitely convert an old car with all the benefits that come together with that. But we didn't have the possibility, so we just had to build a brand new car.”
Working away on developing a new car, Kristoffersson Motorsport engineered what would become an all conquering machine, that went on to win 8 of 10 rounds in the inaugural electric rallycross season.
With his wealth of experience, Kristoffersson’s input into the design and the development is certainly something that a team would factor in, the likes of, if the car should have more understeer or oversteer 6.
He explains: “I was lucky enough to work with the guys that developed our cars since 2017. So, the engineer that is project leader of the electric car build has been my chassis engineer since 2018. So, we did the 2018 World Rallycross Championship season together, and we also did the 2019 TCR season and 2020/21 World Rallycross Championships together, the latter with the Audi S1. So, we’ve actually raced three different cars plus some others... I've done some rallying together with him, as well so I've driven the R5.”
“I think he knows me very well and how I want the car to be set up… So, I think in terms of how involved I am on the project. Yes, I am involved because I'm curious, but I think not involved in daily meetings because they already have all the data that we’ve collected over the years.”
A year later, the World Rallycross Championship encountered one of it’s most challenging moments, as two cars - Special One Racing, the teams equipment and a truck caught a light.
The future of the championship seemed bleak, as round after round was canceled, but in an extraordinary move, the FIA World Motor Sport Council elected to continue the championship with equal machinery [RX2e cars], but despite these challenges, Kristoffersson kept his finger on the pulse to clinch a sixth World Rallycross Championship.
He also clinched the Extreme Championship with team-mate Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinsky in Chile.this year.
Mikaela Ahlin-Kottulinsky and Johan Kristoffersson celebrate their 2023 Extreme E Championship win in Chile. PHOTO CREDIT: Extreme E Media |
“I think having equal cars makes it a completely different kind of a championship,” he said. “And for me, it wouldn’t be a world championship because there is no manufacture title if there are equal cars. If you compete with equal cars, it's more like a national championship or Porsche Carrera Cup.”
Having achieved championships in circuit racing, rallycross and off-road racing, Johan Kristoffersson has certainly cemented himself in the history books, as one of the greatest of all time, but what makes him great, or the greatest: “It's a combination of many things, I believe my key to success is that I pay attention to details and it all comes down to the fact that I am a very, very competitive person."
“I think it also comes from a cross country skiing background, if you do a race, or compare it to a marathon. And, you’re at the start line of a marathon, you need to have done your homework. So, everyday you would wake up, and don’t want to go out running, but if you don’t do it then can’t arrive at the start line prepared. So, I think that is one part, and then of course in motorsport, it’s also an individual sport in terms of – it’s only me driving the car. So, it’s teamwork with all the mechanics and engineers, as well. It is also very, very important to have good people around you that want to win just as much as you do,” he added.
With nine years of experience, the Swede has seen the good, bad and ugly of the world championship, but in his opinion, is the sport at it’s greatest point right now, or is there room for improvement?
“I think everything that comes naturally will be better for the spectators, like if there were a little bit more cars and more drivers at the top level,” he said. “As soon as there are more drivers in the top level there will be tighter racing, more excitement and tighter at the top. So I don't think that it has really so much to do exactly with what World Rallycross is today. I think that it is more of that it is still missing some cars. In 2017 and 18, there were many teams, and many very professional teams. There are still professional teams, but it's not as many as it was at that time. It hasn't changed much since then but I think it just takes some time also in the transition from internal combustion to electric.”
Nothing is ever a given in the world of motorsport - even achieving championships does not guarantee the possibility to progress through the ranks, but in the ever evolving world of rallycross, it is rather expensive to rent cars and the equipment to compete, which is something seen in Cape Town, where 2023 FIA RX2e Champion Nils Andersson worked as the team manager of Kristoffersson Motorsport instead of racing.
Whilst Nils brings a wealth of knowledge in RX2e, Johan believes that the world championship needs to have teams with the ability to pay drivers.
“Nils [Andersson] should be in a car. But, in order to get the best drivers in the world to drive the World Championship, you need to have teams that have the possibility to pay the drivers,” Kristoffersson said. “If the drivers pay to join the championship, you will never get the best drivers in the world. That's simple! So, you have to find a way for the team to have the financial power to pay drivers to come, and then they will find a way also to find a third car or a fourth car for a driver like Nils to join the championship to prove his skills.”
Four years since manufacturers departed the world championship due to lack of clarity regarding the switch to electric power.There has been a continued push to a greener future, with manufacturers looking for new opportunities to test their technologies, and Kristoffersson believes that World Rallycross is “definitely 100%” ready for manufacturer return.
“The last time I drove it [the Polo R] was in 2018, and I reckon that it was the weekend that we raced in Cape Town or at the Gymkhana Grid event. I will always have a special feeling towards that car, as I drove it for two seasons and I also won 18 rounds with the car in World Rallycross,” he said.
“I won my first championship with that car, as well, to me it feels like an old relationship, but we've been through a lot. So, yes, that car will also remain very, very special to me. I saw it when arriving at the circuit [for set-up and media day], and the last time I saw it was in 2020, when I visited Volkswagen Motorsport in Hanover, when I then used the car that Petter [Solberg] raced in 2018 for th 2020 World Championship.”
“To give you some history, Jari-Matti Latvala won the 2014 Rally Sweden in this car [chassis], and he also won Rally Finland with the car in 2004. So yeah, it has some history,” he added.
DID YOU KNOW: Johan Kristoffersson named his 2022/23 Volkswagen Polo RX1e - "Greta".
Andreas Bakkerud, Kevin, Timmy Hansen, Klara Andersson, Guerlain Chicherit and Timo Scheider's ideal World Rallycross tracks. |
Kristoffersson was quick to note the short comings on the other track designs, saying: “they are missing a gravel corner, one corner and then a corner again in the same direction. If you only go right, left, right, left, right there's no overtaking ever. You need to have right, right and a left, left. Then you get overtaking.”
“Then if you have gravel on the inside and tarmac on the outside. The gravel on the inside will always be fast. It will just spit all the gravel onto the tarmac and it will then be slower anyway. I mean it looks cool. But these layout don’t work,” he added.
Johan Kristoffersson's ideal World Rallycross track. |
“Then you need a long straight thereafter. And, then you start braking on the gravel. It's very narrow my track. But then you need to have a left and then a left again. There will be a lot of gravel on my track as well. We then need a big jump.”
Thereafter “we need to find a way to put the joker [lap] in with a tight chicane on the inside. The joker should ideally be on gravel.”
He mentions "that there should be more banked corners, but in rallycross it is difficult to maintain them. My track should actually have a bit more gravel, because it’s a lot more difficult. I prefer gravel then sand,” he says. “The joker lap needs to be that if you take risks, you should gain time. If you want to be safe, you lose time.”
Whilst designing the track, he said that Nitrocross tracks “are cool when they go over and under [each other], but that won’t be allowed [in the world championship.]”
Enjoy the video below, where Johan briefly talks us through his track design in the video below:
VIDEO FILMED BY: Rhea Morar [The PitCrew Online]
Johan explains his track layout - “So here, the start, then you have a long right hander followed by another a long right hander. And, then you have a big jump that goes into a corner, into the hairpin. And then you go into this, and then you have a big jump again. Then you can choose if you want to stay really tight inside off-camber. Or if you jump long, and you go to the banked corner, and try to go do some overtake into here. This is not so bad."