Skip to content

Keiichi Nakazato's R32 GT-R: The Mid Night Club Legend

Keiichi Nakazato founded the Mid Night Club and raced his R32 GT-R at 300+ km/h on Tokyo's Wangan C1 loop. The legend behind Japan's most disciplined street racing crew.

1 min read
Keiichi Nakazato's R32 GT-R: The Mid Night Club Legend

Keiichi Nakazato's R32 GT-R: The Mid Night Club Legend

Keiichi Nakazato is the founder of the Mid Night Club — the legendary Japanese street racing organization that operated the Wangan (Tokyo C1 Expressway) in the 1980s and 1990s. His Nissan Skyline R32 GT-R is one of the most famous street-racing cars in JDM history. Known for his disciplined approach to high-speed highway racing and his strict membership rules, Nakazato elevated street racing from gang territorialism to something resembling a gentleman's club. His R32 is a cult object in JDM culture.

The Mid Night Club Rules

The Mid Night Club had strict membership requirements:

  • Speed minimum: Members had to prove their cars could sustain 300 km/h
  • Respectful conduct: No dangerous behavior, no aggression
  • Private membership: Invitation only, ~30 members maximum
  • Dissolution upon fatality: The club disbanded in 1998 after a member was killed in an accident

Nakazato's leadership established these rules. He was known as an exceptionally skilled driver who prioritized skill and commitment over showmanship.

The R32 GT-R

Nakazato's R32 GT-R was tuned for sustained high-speed running on the Shuto Expressway C1 loop. Modifications included:

  • Engine: Heavily tuned RB26DETT producing 500+ hp
  • Aerodynamics: Downforce-focused splitter and rear wing
  • Interior: Stripped for weight, racing seats, roll cage
  • Cooling: Upgraded intercooler and oil cooler for sustained high-RPM use
  • Tires: Street-legal competition tires

The car was featured in numerous Japanese car magazines and Best Motoring videos during the 1990s. It represented the peak of street-focused R32 tuning.

The Club Dissolution

After the Mid Night Club dissolved in 1998 following the fatal accident, Nakazato largely disappeared from the public racing scene. His R32 remained a private vehicle and rarely appeared at public events.

Cultural Legacy

The Mid Night Club's influence extends far beyond their driving. They appear in:

  • Wangan Midnight manga: Heavily inspired by the club's reputation
  • Tokyo Drift: Referenced as the spiritual predecessor
  • Japanese automotive magazines: Featured in 1990s retrospectives

For Japanese street racing enthusiasts, Nakazato's name is synonymous with the "high-speed highway racing as discipline" philosophy. His R32 GT-R represents the peak of that philosophy.

Related Articles