Bearcat Motorsports Team Places in International Top 15
Once again, the University of Cincinnati was the top team from the State of Ohio and finished among the nation's top ten competitors at the 2016 Formula SAE East Competition, held at the Michigan International Speedway May 11-14, 2016.
Bearcat Motorsports is the UC Academic Intercollegiate Competition (AIC) student group that participates in Formula SAE (FSAE), a collegiate design competition sponsored by the Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE) and supported by all of the major automotive companies and suppliers.
The competition involves the design, construction, and testing of an open-wheel, Formula One style race car. The students are involved in design, cost analysis and sales/marketing presentations as well as static and driving competitions against other collegiate teams from all over the world over the four days of the competition.
The competition was won by the University of Stuttgart followed by the Technical University of Graz (Austria). The highest placing U.S. team was Oregon State University in 4th place, followed by Michigan State University and the University of Wisconsin (Madison).
Official results will be posted shortly on the
. The final event of the competition, the Endurance Event, was held last Saturday in blustery conditions with high winds, rain and hail that made finishing the event very difficult for all competitors.
This event is the first event of the U.S. Formula SAE Competition season and is the largest in the world, limited to 140 universities globally. This year, 138 teams registered with 115 teams actually competing in the event.
This year, 104 teams successfully completed the Technical Inspection and were allowed to compete in the driving events. This is the only competition that Bearcat MotorSports will compete in this year due to team members availability, limited by graduation and the academic calendar.
One more U.S. Formula SAE event will be held this June, the Formula SAE West Competition in Lincoln, Nebraska (80 universities). Currently, there are other affiliated Formula SAE or Formula Student Competitions in Canada, England, Germany, Italy, Australia, Japan and Brazil.
is partially supported by the University Funding Board, as one of several Academic Intercollegiate Competition (AIC) groups. Other funding comes from the Mechanical and Materials Engineering, the College of Engineering and Applied Science, the UC Structural Dynamics Research Lab, several large local industry partners (Toyota, General Electric, Cummins, Ford, Marathon, IBM) as well as a large number of smaller industry partners (Machine Concepts, Hahn Automation, Full Throttle Indoor Karting, Xtreme Precision, Die Craft Machining & Engineering, Performance Electronics, Cincinnati, Inc., Tomak Precision, Vivid Wraps, Foseco, Voisard Tool, LLC).
Each years team is dominated by senior mechanical mngineering students who earn class credit for participating in this activity. The team leader this year is Joshua Lynch who worked with a strong technical committee to organize the activity and get things done on a schedule that began last August (2015) with the start of classes. The technical committee involved specialty team leaders along with the graduate race team assistant and faculty advisor. The specialty team leaders are Aero Package - Sam Dignan, Drivetrain Blair Jones, Frame Oge Okoh, Electrical Anton Smith, Suspension Grant Walker, Engine Brian Wall and Business Michael Kaplan. The driving team included Sam Dignan, Grant Walker, Mike Schlasinger, Chris Gardner and Brodie Hensler. Including those mentioned above, there are a total of 25 graduating seniors who contributed many long hours and received course credit along with a number of other undergraduate students who volunteer their time when possible.
For more information, please contact team leader
, graduate race team assistant
, or faculty advisor
.
Additional Contacts
Related Stories
Materials scientist gains valuable research experience
May 20, 2026
The opportunities at the College of Engineering and Applied Science are what attracted Ananth Balasubramanian to the University of Cincinnati. He came to UC as a master's student and after two years, transitioned to a direct PhD program in materials science and engineering. Here, he works in the Digital Fabrication Laboratory and recently was named Graduate Student Engineer of the Month by CEAS.
Engineering alumnus instrumental in NASA Artemis mission
May 19, 2026
Space, rockets, and NASA have been a lifelong fascination for John McCullough '89. He was inspired after watching the moon landing as a child and learning about aerospace engineering. He graduated from the University of Cincinnati with a degree in aerospace engineering and has worked at NASA for more than 36 years. He has played key roles in many missions including Artemis I and the most recent Artemis II.
Fire Awards spotlight innovation ecosystem at UC 1819 Innovation Hub
May 18, 2026
The Cincinnati Business Courier held its Fire Awards at UC’s 1819 Innovation Hub to highlight the region’s fast-growing startups and broader innovation community.