Wiechers-Sport

[3] O'Brien left the team after the Race of Brazil having endured a difficult start to the year, preferring to search for a drive elsewhere.

For the 2008 season, a total of six drivers drove for the team in selected rounds including Olivier Tielemans, Duncan Huisman and Matthew Marsh.

French GT Championship driver Laurent Cazenave joined Wiechers-Sport for the Race of France alongside D'Aste.

The team scored their first points of the season at the Race of Germany when D'Aste finished seventh,[7] this later became sixth when Nicola Larini was given 30–second penalty.

[10] D'Aste stopped on track during the first part of qualifying and on the narrow street circuit, Lada Sport driver James Thompson crashed into the stationary BMW.

[15] The team added an extra car for the Race of Japan to run local driver Masataka Yanagida.

Wiechers switched to the BMW 320 TC for the 2011 season, using the new 1.6 litre turbocharged engine with former SEAT León Eurocup racer and WTCC debutant Urs Sonderegger at the wheel.

[17] Sonderegger sustained minor injuries in the second practice session for the Race of Hungary and missed the rest of the weekend.

[19] D'Aste finished tenth in the first part of qualifying to secure the reversed grid pole position on his return to the championship.

D'Aste was unavailable for the Race of UK due to commitments in the GT4 European Cup, his replacement for the round was Scandinavian Touring Car Championship driver Colin Turkington.

[25] D'Aste finished fifth in race two of the season opener to take the independents' victory, he left the round at the top of the Yokohama Drivers' Trophy tied on points with Pepe Oriola and Alex MacDowall.

[26] Despite his podium finish, D'Aste lost the lead of the independents' trophy to Tuenti Racing Team's Oriola.

Robert Huff inherited the lead but then got a puncture at the final corner, second placed Tom Coronel tried to overtake up the inside while D'Aste pulled off a move around the outside to take the win.

D'Aste took his third reversed grid pole of the year at the Race of Japan and led from lights to flag to claim Wiechers–Sports' second win of the season.

Matthew Marsh driving for Wiechers-Sport at the 2008 Race of Macau .
Colin Turkington driving for Wiechers-Sport at the 2011 FIA WTCC Race of Japan .
Stefano D'Aste took the team's first two overall victories in 2012 .