2005–06 A1 Grand Prix season

Competing countries (orange), race locations (squares)
The 2005–06 A1 Grand Prix season was the inaugural season for the A1 Grand Prix series.
It began on 25 September 2005, and finished on 2 April 2006 after eleven races.
This first season was won by A1 Team France on 12 March 2006.
Teams
25 teams, each representing a different country, signed up for the first A1 Grand Prix season. All teams used a control chassis (Lola), engine (Zytek) and tyre (Cooper Avon). The following teams competed in the 2005–06 championship:
Race Team |
Team |
Seat holder |
Race drivers |
Rounds |
Others drivers |
Akbar Ebrahim |
A1 Team India |
Atul Gupta[1] |
Karun Chandhok |
1-2 |
|
Armaan Ebrahim |
3-8 |
Alan Docking Racing[1] |
A1 Team Australia |
Alan Jones[1] |
Will Power |
1 |
Karl Reindler |
Christian Jones |
2, 9 |
Will Davison |
3-7 |
Marcus Marshall |
8 |
Ryan Briscoe |
10-11 |
Arden International[1] |
A1 Team Great Britain |
Tony Clements John Surtees[1] |
Robbie Kerr |
1-10 |
Alex Lloyd
Katherine Legge |
Darren Manning |
11 |
ASM F3[1] |
A1 Team Brazil |
Ronaldo[1] Emerson Fittipaldi[1] |
Nelson Piquet, Jr. |
1-7 |
Fabio Carbone
João Paulo de Oliveira
Tuka Rocha |
Christian Fittipaldi |
8-11 |
BCN Competicion[2] |
A1 Team South Africa |
Tokyo Sexwale[2] |
Stephen Simpson |
1, 4-11 |
Gavin Cronje |
Tomas Scheckter |
2-3 |
Carlin Motorsport[1][1][3] |
A1 Team Japan |
conglomerate[1] |
Ryo Fukuda |
1 |
|
Hideki Noda |
2 |
Hayanari Shimoda |
4-6, 8-9 |
A1 Team Lebanon |
Tameem Auchi[1] |
Kalil Beschir |
1-2, 5 |
|
Basil Shaaban |
3-4, 6-8 |
Graham Rahal |
9-11 |
A1 Team Portugal |
Luís Figo[1] Carlos Queiroz[1] |
Álvaro Parente |
1-10 |
João Urbano
João Barbosa |
César Campaniço |
11 |
Charouz Racing System |
A1 Team Czech Republic |
Antonin Charouz[1] |
Jan Charouz |
1 |
Jaroslav Janiš |
Tomáš Enge |
2-11 |
DAMS[4][5] |
A1 Team France |
Jean Paul Driot[1] |
Alexandre Prémat |
1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11 |
|
Nicolas Lapierre |
2, 4, 6, 8, 10-11 |
A1 Team Mexico |
Juan Cortina[1] Julio Jáuregui[6] |
Salvador Durán |
1, 3-4, 6, 8-11 |
|
David Martínez |
2, 7 |
Luis Diaz |
5 |
A1 Team Switzerland |
Max Welti[1] |
Neel Jani |
1-9 |
|
Giorgio Mondini |
10-11 |
David Price Racing[7] |
A1 Team USA |
Rick Weidlinger[7] |
Scott Speed |
1-3 |
|
Bryan Herta |
4-5, 9-10 |
Philip Giebler |
6-8, 11 |
A1 Team Indonesia |
A1 Team Indonesia |
N/A |
Ananda Mikola |
1-3, 5-11 |
|
John Village Automotive[1] |
A1 Team Canada |
Wade Cherwayko[1] |
Sean McIntosh |
1-8 |
|
Patrick Carpentier |
9-11 |
A1 Team Malaysia |
A1 Team Malaysia |
Alex Yoong[1] |
Fairuz Fauzy |
1, 3, 5 |
|
Alex Yoong |
1-2, 4-11 |
Racing for Holland[8] |
A1 Team The Netherlands |
Jan Lammers[8] |
Jos Verstappen |
All |
Jeroen Bleekemolen |
Russian Age Racing[9] |
A1 Team Russia |
Svetlana Strelnikova[1] Frederic Dor |
Alexey Vasilyev |
1 |
Nikolai Fomenko
Alexander Tyuryumin |
Mikhail Aleshin |
3 |
Roman Rusinov |
4 |
Status Grand Prix |
A1 Team Ireland |
Mark Kershaw[10] |
Michael Devaney |
1, 4, 11 |
|
Ralph Firman |
2-3, 5-10 |
Super Nova Racing[1][11] |
A1 Team Germany |
Willi Weber[1] |
Timo Scheider |
1-2, 5, 7-10 |
Sebastian Vettel |
Adrian Sutil |
3-4, 6 |
Sebastian Stahl |
11 |
A1 Team Pakistan |
Arif Hussain (racing)[1] |
Adam Khan |
1-6, 11 |
|
Enrico Toccacelo(1) |
7 |
Team Astromega[12] |
A1 Team China |
Liu Yu[1] |
Tengyi Jiang |
1-10 |
|
Qinghua Ma |
11 |
Team Ghinzani[1] |
A1 Team Italy |
Piercarlo Ghinzani[1] |
Enrico Toccacelo |
1-6, 9, 11 |
Nino Piccoli
Richard Antinucci
Matteo Cressoni
Andrea Montermini
Raffaele Giammaria |
Max Busnelli |
7-8 |
Max Papis |
10 |
Team Rosberg |
A1 Team Austria |
Niki Lauda[13] with Lauda Motorsport Management |
Mathias Lauda |
1-8, 10-11 |
|
Patrick Friesacher |
9 |
West Surrey Racing[14] |
A1 Team New Zealand |
Colin Giltrap[1] |
Matt Halliday |
1, 3, 5-11 |
Scott Dixon |
Jonny Reid |
2, 4 |
Races
The first A1 Grand Prix season consisted of 11 races, all held in different countries. Each race ran over a three day weekend, including a practice session on each of Friday and Saturday before a qualifying session on Saturday, and then two races on Sunday.
The Indonesian Round had originally been scheduled to be held on 15 January 2006, but was postponed due to the death of Sheikh Maktoum bin Rashid Al Maktoum. The replacement date was set as 12 February 2006 (originally scheduled for the cancelled Curitiba race), resulting in effectively switching order with the South African round.
Standings
|
Colour | Result |
Gold | Winner |
Silver | 2nd place |
Bronze | 3rd place |
Green | Finished, in points |
Green | Retired, in points |
Blue | Finished, no points |
Purple | Did not finish (Ret) |
Not classified (NC) |
Red | Did not qualify (DNQ) |
Black | Disqualified (DSQ) |
White | Did not start (DNS) |
Withdrew (WD) |
Blank |
Did not participate |
Injured (INJ) |
Excluded (EX) |
Bold |
Pole position |
* |
Fastest lap |
spr |
Sprint Race |
fea |
Feature Race |
|
References
External links