2002 Rolex Sports Car Series
2002 Rolex Sports Car Series season | |||
Previous: | 2001 | Next: | 2003 |
The 2002 Grand American Road Racing Championship was the third season of the Rolex Sports Car Series run by the Grand American Road Racing Association. The season involved five classes: Sports Racing Prototype I and II (SRP-I and SRP-II), Grand Touring Sport (GTS), Grand Touring (GT), and American GT (AGT). 10 races were run from February 2, 2002 to November 10, 2002. Mont-Tremblant replaced Trois-Rivières. California Speedway replaced Lime Rock. Virginia International replaced Road America. The season also was marred by the death of Jeff Clinton during the Nextel 250 race.
Schedule
Rnd | Race | Length/Duration | Circuit | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Rolex 24 at Daytona | 24 Hours | Daytona International Speedway | February 2 February 3 |
2 | Nextel 250 | 250 Miles | Homestead-Miami Speedway | March 2 |
3 | Grand American 400 | 400 Miles | California Speedway | March 23 |
4 | United Auto 200 | 200 Miles | Phoenix International Raceway | April 20 |
5 | Six Hours of the Glen | 6 Hours | Watkins Glen International | June 23 |
6 | Paul Revere 250 | 250 Miles | Daytona International Speedway | July 4 |
7 | Bully Hill Vineyards 250 | 250 Miles | Watkins Glen International | August 9 |
8 | VIR 500 | 500 Miles | Virginia International Raceway | September 1 |
9 | 6 Hours of Mont-Tremblant | 6 Hours | Circuit Mont-Tremblant | September 15 |
10 | The Grand American Finale at Daytona | 3 Hours | Daytona International Speedway | November 10 |
References
External links
- The official website of Grand-Am
- Grand American Road Racing Association - 2002 season archive
- World Sports Racing Prototypes - Rolex Sports Car Series 2002 results
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