Autosport Awards: Turkington wins National Driver prize
Colin Turkington was recognised for his record-equalling fourth British Touring Car Championship title with the National Driver of the Year prize at the Autosport Awards.

The WSR driver led the standings from the end of the third meeting of the season at Thruxton in May, though clinched the title in dramatic circumstances in the final race of the season as he completed a recovery drive from the back of the field to finish sixth, after Dan Cammish crashed out due to brake failure late on.
In contrast to his 2018 title charge, in a campaign characterised by consistency during which he claimed a single victory, Turkington claimed five victories in '19 - a tally beaten only by his teammate Andrew Jordan - as WSR's new BMW 330i M Sport immediately proved its pace.
Turkington has double his number of titles since his most recent success in the National Driver of the Year, which came in 2014, and now shares the record for the outright number of series titles with Andy Rouse.
The Award was presented to Turkington by British GT4 Pro-Am champion Kelvin Fletcher.
"I have to say thank you to the team, they did an incredible job this year and we had an incredible car in the BMW," said Turkington.
"We had 11 wins and in typical BTCC it went down to the final weekend and I only went back into the lead in the penultimate race after 30 races.
"We were relieved I was able to do it and I have to thank WSR for giving me the car."
The Award, voted for by readers, was open to drivers competing in the BTCC, British GT or at FIA Formula 3 level.
Turkington's competition included his Jordan - who finished just two points his team-mate in the BTCC standings - British GT's benchmark driver Phil Keen, and 19-year-old Dan Harper - the Porsche Carrera Cup GB's youngest-ever winner.
Last year's National Driver Award was won by double Macau Grand Prix winner and ex-Red Bull Formula 1 junior Dan Ticktum.

Previous article
BTCC grid remains at 30 cars for 2020
Next article
Autosport Awards: WSR boss honoured with Gregor Grant Award

About this article
Series | BTCC , General |
Drivers | Colin Turkington |
Author | Jack Cozens |
Autosport Awards: Turkington wins National Driver prize
Trending
Career Reflections: Jeff Allam
Career Snapshot: Jeff Allam
BTCC 1992: Jeff Allam Onboard at Oulton Park
On The Limit - Rory Butcher Silverstone Crash
BTCC: Brands Hatch Indy - Race 3 in 60 seconds
The Top 10 BTCC drivers of 2020
The 2020 British Touring Car Championship will go down as a classic in which new winners graced the top step of the podium and an unloved chassis was resurrected into a champion. But who were the year's top performers?
The Villeneuve-esque 'engineer's dream' who lit up BTCC 2020
The Infiniti Q50 was completely redesigned, redeveloped and revamped by BMR and Laser Tools Racing for 2020. And the flamboyant brilliance of the driver behind the wheel was enough to snatch the title at the last gasp…
Why the BTCC social media trolls have got it wrong
A number of drivers on this year's British Touring Car Championship grid have been called out on social media for taking other people's seats, whether they are older or drivers who are deemed to have less talent. Matt James busts the myth
How the BTCC's class of 2018 ranked each other
The BTCC keeps getting more competitive - this season produced another new record number of winners. That made picking a final top 10 an unenviable task, so we enlisted the help of those who were in the heat of the action to decide the order.
Can a champion be worthy if he only won one race?
Titles should be won by the driver who claims more victories than anyone else, so convention goes. Does the unpredictable nature of the British Touring Car Championship render that notion obsolete?
BTCC's hybrid future faces urgent hurdles
The British Touring Car Championship recently announced it is investigating how to incorporate hybrid technology into its future machines. In doing so it's following the higher echelons of motorsport, while also revealing risks for its grassroots.
Why the BTCC's best villain can't stop playing the game
Jason Plato and the British Touring Car Championship are inextricably linked. The charismatic self-styled bad boy has done well out of the series, while it also benefits from his combative star-quality.
When an F1 champion ruled the BTCC
On his days off from starring on the world stage, double Formula 1 world champion Jim Clark was a spectacular home hero in tin-tops.