2006–07 A1 Grand Prix season

The 2006–07 A1 Grand Prix season was the second season for the A1 Grand Prix series. It began on 1 October 2006, at Circuit Park Zandvoort, and the season ended at Brands Hatch on 29 April 2007. A1 Team Germany won it with 128 points, 35 points lead ahead Team New Zealand.

2006–07 A1 Grand Prix of Nations
Previous: 2005–06 Next: 2007–08

Teams

24 teams, each representing a different country, signed up for the second A1 Grand Prix season. All teams and drivers competed in Zytek-powered, Cooper Avon-shod and Lola chassis. The following teams competed in the 2006-07 championship:

Race Team Team Seat holder Race drivers Rounds Other drivers
Alan Docking Racing A1 Team Australia Alan Jones Ryan Briscoe 1, 4-5
Karl Reindler 2-3, 6-8
Ian Dyk 9-11
Arena Motorsport A1 Team Greece Stathis Basios Takis Kaitatzis 1-2
Nikos Zakos 2
A1 Team India Atul Gupta Armaan Ebrahim 1-5
Narain Karthikeyan 6, 8-11
Parthiva Sureshwaren 7
Carlin Motorsport A1 Team Lebanon Tameem Auchi Basil Shaaban 1, 3, 5
Graham Rahal 2
Khalil Beschir 4
Alexander Khateeb 6-7
Allam Khodair 8-11
Charouz Racing System A1 Team Brazil Emerson Fittipaldi Tuka Rocha 1-2, 5, 7 Ruben Carrapatoso
Alexandre Negrão
Luiz Razia
Raphael Matos 3-4, 6
Bruno Junqueira 8-9, 11
Vítor Meira 10
A1 Team Czech Republic Antonin Charouz Tomáš Kostka 1 Jaroslav Janiš
Tomáš Enge 2-4, 6-8
Jaroslav Janiš 5, 9
Filip Salaquarda 10
Jan Charouz 11
DAMS A1 Team France Jean Paul Driot Nicolas Lapierre 1-5
Loïc Duval 6-8, 11
Jean Karl Vernay 9-10
A1 Team South Africa Tokyo Sexwale Adrian Zaugg 1, 3-4, 8-9, 11 Gavin Cronje
Jennifer Murray
Stephen Simpson 2
Alan van der Merwe 5-7, 10
A1 Team Great Britain A1 Team Great Britain Tony Clements
John Surtees
Darren Manning 1
Robbie Kerr 2, 4-8, 10-11
Oliver Jarvis 3
A1 Team Indonesia A1 Team Indonesia N/A Ananda Mikola 1-10
Moreno Soeprapto 11
John Village Automotive A1 Team Canada Wade Cherwayko James Hinchcliffe 1-3, 6-9
Sean McIntosh 4-5, 10-11
A1 Team Malaysia A1 Team Malaysia Alex Yoong Alex Yoong All Fairuz Fauzy
Max Motorsport A1 Team Switzerland Max Welti Sébastien Buemi 1-2, 6-7, 10-11
Neel Jani 3-5, 8
Marcel Fässler 9
Performance Racing A1 Team Pakistan Arif Hussain Nur B. Ali All
Racing for Holland A1 Team The Netherlands Jan Lammers Jeroen Bleekemolen 1-9, 11
Renger van der Zande 9-10
Status Grand Prix A1 Team Ireland Mark Kershaw Michael Devaney 1-4
Richard Lyons 5-11
Super Nova Racing A1 Team Germany Willi Weber Nico Hülkenberg 1-8, 10-11
Christian Vietoris 9
A1 Team New Zealand Colin Giltrap Matt Halliday 1, 3, 8, 11
Jonny Reid 2, 4-7, 9-10
Team Astromega A1 Team China Liu Yu Congfu Cheng 1-4, 10-11
Ho-Pin Tung 5-9
A1 Team Portugal Luis Vicente Álvaro Parente 8-9, 11
João Urbano 10
Team Ghinzani A1 Team Italy Piercarlo Ghinzani Alessandro Pier Guidi 1-2 Michele Rugolo
Enrico Toccacelo 3-11
Teamex A1 Team Mexico Juan Cortina
Julio Jáuregui
Salvador Durán 1-9
Sergio Pérez 10
Juan Pablo Garcia 11
West Surrey Racing A1 Team Singapore N.A. Christian Murchison 1, 3-4, 6-8
Denis Lian 2
A1 Team USA Rick Weidlinger Philip Giebler 1-5, 7
Ryan Hunter-Reay 6
Jonathan Summerton 8-11

3 A1GP Teams did not participate in all races.

Jennifer Murray, from South Africa was the first ever woman to enter in an A1 Grand Prix weekend. She drove in the rookie session of her home race in Durban round.[3]

Races

The second A1 Grand Prix season is scheduled to consist of 11 races, held in 10 different countries. Each race is to be run 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.

There are some changes in weekend program for second season:

  • Gap between races will be increased to almost three and half hours.
  • Sprint race will be about 20 minutes and Feature race about 70 minutes.
  • Only top six nations score points in sprint race.
Round Date Country Circuit Pole Position Fastest Lap Winner Report
1 S 1 October 2006 Netherlands Circuit Park Zandvoort Adrian Zaugg Adrian Zaugg Adrian Zaugg Report
F Alex Yoong Nico Hülkenberg
2 S 8 October 2006 Czech Republic Auto Motodrom Brno Jonny Reid Alex Yoong Alex Yoong Report
F Philip Giebler Alex Yoong
3 S 12 November 2006 China Jingkai Street Circuit, Beijing Jeroen Bleekemolen Salvador Durán Jeroen Bleekemolen Report
F James Hinchcliffe Enrico Toccacelo
4 S 26 November 2006 Malaysia Sepang International Circuit Neel Jani Jonny Reid Neel Jani Report
F Enrico Toccacelo Nico Hülkenberg
5 S 10 December 2006 Indonesia Sentul International Circuit Jonny Reid Robbie Kerr Jonny Reid Report
F Jonny Reid Jonny Reid
6 S 21 January 2007 New Zealand Taupo Motorsport Park Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Report
F Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg
7 S 4 February 2007 Australia Eastern Creek Raceway Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Report
F Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg
8 S 25 February 2007 South Africa Durban street circuit Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Nico Hülkenberg Report
F Adrian Zaugg Nico Hülkenberg
9 S 25 March 2007 Mexico Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez Alex Yoong Salvador Durán Alex Yoong Report
F Jonathan Summerton Oliver Jarvis
10 S 15 April 2007 China Shanghai International Circuit Robbie Kerr Jonny Reid Robbie Kerr Report
F Jonny Reid Jonny Reid
11 S 29 April 2007 United Kingdom Brands Hatch Robbie Kerr Robbie Kerr Robbie Kerr Report
F Sébastien Buemi Nico Hülkenberg

A 12th race had been scheduled to have been held in Brazil; however, on 17 January 2007 the A1GP organisation announced that as a result of a delay in obtaining a local terrestrial television agreement then the event would be cancelled.[4]

Standings

Pos Team Drivers NLD CZE BEI MYS IDN NZL AUS RSA MEX SHA GBR Pts
spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea
1 Germany Nico Hülkenberg 4 1 Ret 4 5 Ret 2 1 5 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 3 3 2 1 128
Christian Vietoris Ret 9
2 New Zealand Matt Halliday 6 11 10 9 3 3 16 8 93
Jonny Reid Ret 7 3 8 1 1 3 3 2 2 16 6 2 1
3 Great Britain Darren Manning 5 7 92
Robbie Kerr 9 6 5 2 3 Ret 8 Ret 19 10 9 2 1 2 1 2
Oliver Jarvis 7 2 2 1
4 France Nicolas Lapierre 3 Ret 3 Ret 17 4 6 3 7 3 67
Loïc Duval 2 2 3 9 2 Ret 4 7
Jean Karl Vernay Ret 20 Ret 8
5 Netherlands Jeroen Bleekemolen 9 4 11 9 1 Ret 7 9 13 DSQ 4 5 5 4 4 6 17 6 5 57
Renger van der Zande 9 9 4
6 Malaysia Alex Yoong 12 17 1 1 14 12 4 7 12 5 19 11 7 6 Ret 8 1 5 6 11 5 9 55
7 Italy Alessandro Pier Guidi Ret 6 14 20 52
Enrico Toccacelo 3 1 Ret 13 11 4 9 8 15 12 12 Ret 7 4 10 7 3 3
8 Switzerland Sébastien Buemi 10 8 8 10 5 4 4 7 4 9 Ret DSQ 50
Neel Jani 9 Ret 1 4 10 8 5 4
Marcel Fässler 10 14
9 USA Philip Giebler 7 2 6 17 11 Ret 9 6 4 9 8 8 42
Ryan Hunter-Reay 11 10
Jonathan Summerton Ret Ret 5 2 5 Ret 9 6
10 Mexico Salvador Durán 2 5 7 3 2 Ret 11 Ret 2 6 12 Ret 11 15 Ret Ret 17 Ret 35
Sergio Pérez 15 Ret
Juan Pablo Garcia 18 14
11 Canada James Hinchcliffe 8 13 2 5 4 10 6 6 13 Ret 13 Ret 13 15 33
Sean McIntosh 8 5 8 Ret Ret 6 10 12
12 Czech Republic Tomáš Kostka 17 Ret 27
Tomáš Enge 5 2 8 6 Ret 14 17 12 9 5 11 Ret
Jaroslav Janiš 16 7 12 12
Filip Salaquarda 17 10
Jan Charouz 13 15
13 Australia Ryan Briscoe 13 3 12 17 6 10 25
Karl Reindler 15 16 12 3 14 13 14 14 16 Ret
Ian Dyk 3 8 16 Ret 14 Ret
14 South Africa Adrian Zaugg 1 Ret Ret 5 13 12 7 Ret 4 3 15 Ret 24
Stephen Simpson Ret 11
Alan van der Merwe 9 Ret 7 16 16 Ret 8 12
15 China Congfu Cheng 11 9 4 8 13 Ret 10 16 11 15 Ret 10 22
Ho-Pin Tung Ret 13 13 9 6 3 14 Ret 6 10
16 India Armaan Ebrahim Ret Ret 17 18 18 11 16 19 18 Ret 13
Narain Karthikeyan 10 7 15 9 11 18 7 17 7 4
Parthiva Sureshwaren 18 16
17 Portugal Álvaro Parente 8 5 14 7 11 11 10
João Urbano 19 13
18 Brazil Tuka Rocha 14 12 10 14 15 14 Ret 11 9
Raphael Matos 6 7 19 18 16 14
Bruno Junqueira 17 7 Ret 13 12 Ret
Vítor Meira 14 19
19 Ireland Michael Devaney 15 14 13 13 20 Ret 14 10 8
Richard Lyons 17 12 Ret 19 10 Ret 6 Ret Ret 16 12 5 8 DSQ
20 Singapore Christian Murchison Ret 16 16 8 15 11 Ret 15 12 Ret Ret Ret 3
Denis Lian 18 19
21 Indonesia Ananda Mikola 19 10 16 15 15 Ret Ret 15 14 11 15 Ret 17 13 10 Ret 8 11 13 16 1
Moreno Soeprapto 17 16
22 Pakistan Nur B. Ali 20 Ret 20 Ret 21 Ret 18 21 20 15 18 18 20 Ret 18 10 15 21 20 18 Ret 17 1
23 Lebanon Basil Shaaban 16 Ret 19 13 19 Ret 0
Graham Rahal 12 12
Khalil Beschir 17 20
Alexander Khateeb Ret 17 Ret 17
Allam Khodair 19 Ret 18 19 18 14 Ret 13
24 Greece Takis Kaitatzis 18 15 Ret 0
Nikos Zakos 19
Pos Team Drivers spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea spr fea Pts
NLD CZE BEI MYS IDN NZL AUS RSA MEX SHA GBR
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenFinished, in points
GreenRetired, in points
BlueFinished, no points
PurpleDid not finish (Ret)
Not classified (NC)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Blank Did not participate
Injured (INJ)
Excluded (EX)
Bold Pole position
* Fastest lap
spr Sprint Race
fea Feature Race

Notable 2006-07 season happenings

Beijing Incident

The first Chinese round of the 2006/07 A1GP took place on the streets of Beijing. However, the tight hairpin at the end of the backstraight was far too tight for the cars to negotiate safely, as there was literally, a 180 degree left turn. Cars were running wide and stopping mid corner, therefore the sessions were red flagged.

A shorter circuit was created, creating another less tighter hairpin halfway up the straight, bypassing most of the old straight. This corner was still not perfect as drivers still ran wide despite the corner being wider, and had to avoid the pitlane entry barrier. It had to suffice, though, because otherwise the race would have to be cancelled.

However, another problem arose in qualifying, when manhole covers on the roads were coming undone due to the racing cars' high downforce and low center of gravity. Grid positions were decided based on practice times. Some advertising banners also came loose around the circuit.

It was announced the races would start behind the safety car, as the first corner was also deemed unsafe.

Both races were uneventful, particularly the Sprint Race which took place almost entirely behind the safety car after course officials failed to remove a single spun car in a timely fashion.

April Fools' hoax

On 1 April 2006, during the penultimate round of the 2005-06 A1 Grand Prix season in Shanghai, a fake timetable of the 2006-2007 season was published.[5] This schedule included a night time race in Lapland, an A1GP USA race in Baghdad, a race in Middle-earth at 'The Ring', a Venice Street Race as well as a Tibetan hill climb. In addition, it outlined special regulations, such as requiring only the Cornettos be catered for the Venice race, that "cars will arrive flatpacked for the IKEA Cup race in Narnia, so extra time will be required for their assembly", and that for the hill climb, half the cars will start from the top, and half will start from the bottom. A race in South Los Angeles was to have drive-by penalties.

gollark: I meant from search engines or something, but sure.
gollark: What if you got images of geese in more diverse environments?
gollark: I'm pretty sure GPUs have branching.
gollark: Even lowish power laptops can have 8 cores now.
gollark: I have no idea what causes it other than possibly the black dot bits looking like normal gray things when zoomed out, something something foveation, and brain things merging different angles on it wrong.

References

  1. "Course concerns in Beijing". Archived from the original on 2006-11-12. Retrieved 2006-11-10.
  2. "A1 Team Portugal returns to A1GP World Cup of Motorsport". Retrieved 2007-02-24.
  3. Jennifer Murray Archived 2008-02-18 at the Wayback Machine results.a1gp.com
  4. "Brazilian race withdrawn from the 2006/07 calendar". Retrieved 2007-01-17.
  5. "A1 Grand Prix Series Two Calendar Announced" (Press release). A1 Grand Prix. 2006-04-01. Archived from the original on 2006-04-06. Retrieved 2006-06-18. So, remember, A1 Grand Prix takes you places you've never been before.
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