Feb '23
SuperChampio '23 is off to a slippy, cold start! The season started off up at Perce-Neige with Kurt Duddy and Matthieu Toupin taking the trusty Sentra to the top Champio spot, with Margaret Sharron and Jennie Holden taking second in a Subaru. Then down in the mitten at Sno*Drift, Dan Shirley and Nathan Lybarger rode triumphant in the War Weasel despite having to self-extract from the trees of Bonfire Alley, followed closely by Scott and Gavin James in their LED-clad GTI, with Tim Michel and Cindy Krowlikowski following the weasel's lead and taking some 4-ringed bark samples with the front of the Audi on their way to third.
The overall driver standings have Kurt Duddy leading by a small margin, chased closely by Dan Shirley- interestingly, both drivers have planned suspension upgrades in the future which should increase their car values, and both are making the most of a bouncy, bendy, but ultimately less spendy setup early in the season. As far as anyone can tell, the only planned modifications for third place Scott James' car involve more blue lights.
The codriver standings this early in the year mirror the driver standings, with Matthieu Toupin leading from the passenger seat of the Sentra, Nathan Lybarger manning the awooga horn of the War Weasel, and Gavin James using equal parts reading and shoveling skills to keep the VW in third.
With many competitors yet to run their first event this year, SuperChampio '23 is still anybody's game- fast cars, cheap cars, maybe something with a grandfathered cage that hasn't seen competition in a decade planning to make 1000 stage miles this year, who knows?!
Check out the standings, sign up, or update your car info at https://sneakattackrally.com/MudWhaleSuperChampio/! New for this year, Nathan Usher has also added hp and weight stats, so if you feel like seeing how your car stacks up in those categories you can enter those right where you enter your car value.
If you want some silly merch, that's over at https://superchampio.creator-spring.com/, remember to keep scrolling because there are far too many items.