"We want to create the finest racing team ever for a national championship. We want to take the British Touring Car Championship by storm and be incredibly successful. We want to dominate and blow everyone's doors off – and that's what we will do."
Yes, in case you haven't noticed, Jason Plato is back in the BTCC. And he's being, well, very 'Jason Plato' about it. The two-time champion, who won a record 97 races as the overblown character fans both loved and hated (often at the same time), retired from driving at the end of 2022 and consistently made it very clear, in his preferred brand of colourful language, that he had zero interest in making the transition to team ownership.
Yet now, as another BTCC season kicks off at Donington Park this Sunday, there he will be on the pitwall, chief of bright and shiny Plato Racing. It's the big story of 2026. "I genuinely didn't want to do this," he insists, dragging deeply on a cigarette when Autocar finally pins him down in the smoking hut outside his new team's HQ in Wellingborough at the end of a chaotic, celebrity-strewn team launch (close friends Sir Chris Hoy and Ross Brawn among the guests). "But I'm doing it my way, which is different from the way most people do it."

That's a rare understatement from Plato. From a seed of an idea last summer – "we didn't even have a bank account last August" – the 58-year-old has assembled a crack team of experienced BTCC old hands to help him. It includes team manager Malcolm Swetnam and design engineer Paul Ridgway, who will run a pair of Mercedes-AMG A35 saloons built by respected British motorsport powerhouse RML – the first of many points of contention about the Plato return, given that RML is also a key supplier of parts to all the teams on the BTCC grid.
It's fair to say there's no false modesty about Plato Racing. A podium first time out at Donington this Sunday is the stated aim, and the team has detonated on impact as it lands in the paddock. So why is Plato doing it if, as he makes clear, he never really wanted to? In short, you could say because he had to. Plato has been strikingly open about his mental health struggles since retiring from the sport that defined his whole existence.






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