Irishman seals his first win of 2025 season against Norwegian Kvia in final after thrilling two days.
The second day of Drift Masters Round 3 saw 32 drivers clash at PowerPark Huvivaltio in ever-changing conditions that pushed talent, timing and nerves to the absolute limit as Irishman Conor Shanahan earned his first win of the 2025 season.
- With low-hanging clouds, rain, and changing grip levels run by run, early drama struck when Diogo Correia clipped the wall during his lead run, handing Juha Rintanen a pass to the Top 16.
- Just a few runs later Duane McKeever spun in his battle against George Christoforou in another unexpected exit, the dramatic weather conditions seeing mutiple championship front-runners knocked out early.
- As rain rolled in for the Top 16, James Deane knocked out Juha Rintanen while Mika Keski-Korpi capitalised on a rare mistake from Oliver Randalu to eliminate the championship leader.
- Polish drift champion Pawel Korpulinski defeated Marco Zakouril, while Tor Arne Kvia delivered a standout chase against Naoki Nakamura that stole the show and secured his spot in the Great 8.
- The Top-16 battle between brothers Conor and Jack Shanahan echoed the 2023 Finland final with Conor edging the victory, then advancing past third-place qualifier Piotr Więcek in the Great 8.
- In the Final 4, Norwegian Kvia continued his winning streak with a clean pass over Korpulinski, while Shanahan battled through a gritty semi-final against home favourite Lauri Heinonen.
- In Saturday's final, Norway's Kvia contested his maiden Drift Masters final against Irishman Shanahan - a previous winner in Finland - and, after two razor-sharp runs, Shanahan's edge in control and consistency was enough to seal his first win of the 2025 season and his second PowerPark win.
- In the third-place playoff, Heinonen took the final step on the podium with a commanding run against Korpulinski to bring the Finnish crowd to their feet ahead of Round 4 at Mondello Park in Ireland from June 28-29 at one of the most iconic tracks in Europe.