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2006 Champ Car World Series

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The 2006 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season was the third and penultimate season of the Champ Car World Series era of American open wheel racing, and the 28th season overall dating back to the 1979 formation of Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART). It began on April 9, 2006 in Long Beach, California and ended on November 12 in Mexico City, Mexico after 14 races.

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Reigning two-time champion Sébastien Bourdais won the series championship for the third consecutive time with Newman/Haas Racing, becoming the first driver to win three American open wheel National Championships in a row since Ted Horn in 1948, and the first non-American driver in history to win three titles.

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Background and series news

The FordCosworth XFE engine continued to be the exclusive power plant for the series. Bridgestone also continued as the exclusive series tire supplier. The two companies continued the marketing agreement that branded the series Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford.

All teams ran the Lola B02/00 chassis, the final year these chassis would be run as a de-facto spec chassis in the series. A new bespoke formula for the series was announced on August 3, 2006 with the unveiling of the Panoz DP01, which would feature the same engine package. The car was slated to weigh 100 pounds less, have onboard starters and paddle shifting, as well as refined aerodynamics.[1]

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Sébastien Bourdais won his third consecutive drivers' title driving with Newman-Haas Racing
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Drivers and teams

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The following teams and drivers competed in the 2006 Champ Car season. All teams used a FordCosworth 2.65-litre turbocharged V8 engine, a Lola B02/00 chassis, and Bridgestone tires.

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Team and driver changes

Preseason

  • On November 7, 2005, Sébastien Bourdais confirmed to L'Équipe he had signed a new two-year deal to remain in Champ Car with Newman/Haas Racing, which still included an exit clause should a Formula One opportunity arise.[2] Talking to Agence France-Presse in December, Bourdais admitted he held off on a new contract because of talks with BMW Sauber to drive in Formula One, which did not come to fruition because of the reported high cost of terminating Jacques Villeneuve's deal.[36][37]
  • On December 15, 2005, Bruno Junqueira announced he would return to the No. 2 Newman/Haas Racing car in 2006, signing a one-year extension after the conclusion of his three-year deal.[3] Junqueira had missed most of the 2005 season due to an injury sustained at the Indianapolis 500 in May, with Oriol Servià finishing second in the standings as a substitute. Newman/Haas tried to secure funding to run a third car for Servià in 2006, but verbal agreements on the matter failed to materialize.[38]
  • On February 14, 2006, PKV Racing announced Katherine Legge as the first new driver of the team, making the step up from the Atlantic Championship after finishing third in the 2005 standings with three wins. Legge became the seventh woman to compete at the top level of American open-wheel car racing, the first to race in CART or Champ Car since Lyn St. James, who last drove in the series in 1995, and the first to run a full season of Champ Car racing.[15][39] She effectively replaced driver-owner Jimmy Vasser, who had been pondering the possibility of scaling back or retiring altogether for months.
  • On February 21, 2006, Forsythe Racing announced Mario Domínguez would remain with the team for the 2006 season as Paul Tracy's teammate.[4] The announcement also ratified Tracy's place in the team, despite still having a year left in his contract, as his plans for the year had been on doubt due to his intended full-time switch to NASCAR in 2007.[40] However, by April, Tracy spoke on the media about talks for an extension of his current contract with Forsythe,[41] and a new five-year deal was announced on May 11, 2006.[42]
  • On March 9, 2006, PKV Racing announced Oriol Servià as their lead driver, fresh off his runner-up finish in 2005 for Newman/Haas as an injury stand-in.[13] PKV had tested with Ryan Briscoe, Franck Montagny, Giorgio Pantano and Ryan Dalziel, but elected to go with an experienced Champ Car driver to partner rookie Katherine Legge. Servià's announcement officially left Cristiano da Matta without a seat despite having two years left in his contract, as the former CART champion's relationship with the team had fallen off following a difficult 2005 season.[43]
  • On March 15, 2006, Jimmy Vasser announced he would step back from full-time competition, and confirmed his participation in the Grand Prix of Long Beach in a third car for PKV Racing.[14] While adamant it could be his final Champ Car race, Vasser stopped short of announcing a retirement. The statement indicated Vasser could take part in "selected races" during the season, but he would only make one further start two years later at the Champ Car finale, also in Long Beach.[44]
  • On March 20, 2006, CTE-HVM Racing announced Nelson Philippe as their first driver for 2006, after two seasons with Mi-Jack Conquest Racing.[9]
  • On March 21, 2006, Mi-Jack Conquest Racing announced the signing of Charles Zwolsman Jr., a former Formula 3 driver from the Netherlands who won the Atlantic Championship title on his rookie season with three wins.[35]
  • On March 28, 2006, CTE-HVM Racing completed their line-up by announcing British rookie Dan Clarke for their second seat. Clarke graduated from British Formula 3, where he finished 5th behind future IndyCar drivers Charlie Kimball and Mike Conway.[10] Clarke took the spot intended for Ronnie Bremer, who saw his 2005 deal extended to 2006 back in July when HVM demoted him due to a lack of sponsorship.[45] Bremer later claimed that HVM failed to provide the promised funding to solve the budget shortfall, which led to the deal being voided a few days before the start of the season.[46]
  • On March 29, 2006, Dale Coyne Racing announced the signing of Cristiano da Matta, who had lost his seat in PKV Racing after returning from Formula One.[29] The former series champion agreed to forfeit his salary and drive for free in order to secure the ride.[43]
  • On March 29, 2006, Andrew Ranger was announced by Mi-Jack Conquest Racing for a one-race deal at Long Beach, returning to the team after his rookie campaign.[33] Afterwards, Ranger and Conquest tried to secure additional races, as funding was already in place for the three Canadian events.[47] On May 4, the deal was extended for the rest of the season.[34]
  • On March 29, 2006, Rocketsports Racing announced it would compete at Long Beach with just one car, driven by rookie Antônio Pizzonia in a one-race deal. Pizzonia had competed partially in Formula One for three seasons, including the last five races of 2005.[16] Franck Montagny had been close to secure the second seat[48] before the team was approached with a Brazilian-backed sponsorship effort, which called for Pizzonia to team up with Enrique Bernoldi for a full season under the Team Brazil banner. Both drivers tested with the team, but a deal was not reached in time for the start of the season.[49] Negotiations continued over the season, but no agreement was made.[20]
  • On April 4, 2006, Team Australia announced Alex Tagliani would remain with the team in 2006. Previously, the team unsuccessfully tried to lure Ryan Briscoe after he failed to land a seat at PKV Racing, in order to form an all-Australian lineup alongside Will Power.[12]
  • On April 7, 2006, shortly before the start of practice for the Grand Prix of Long Beach, Dale Coyne Racing announced Jan Heylen would drive the No. 11 car full-time. Heylen was the reigning Eurocup Mégane Trophy champion, after stints in Formula 3000 and Formula Three. He beat fellow rookie Nicky Pastorelli for the seat, after both drivers took part in the pre-season test at Fontana a few days earlier.[28]

Mid-season

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Schedule

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The initial 15-race schedule was released by Champ Car on August 13, 2005.[60]

Replaced event

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 O  Oval/Speedway
 R  Road course
 S  Street circuit

Schedule changes

  • On March 24, 2005, Champ Car announced an agreement with the Beijing Auto and Motor Sports Association to race in China in 2006, and a promoter for the event was signed the following month.[62] The race was to be held either in May or September 2006 at Goldenport Park.[63] However, the event was not included in the final Champ Car calendar, and the initiative would morph into the planned Zhuhai race for 2007.
  • On August 13, 2005, Champ Car released the 2006 schedule. All 14 races scheduled for 2005 were back, including the Ansan Champ Car Grand Prix, whose inaugural running would not be postponed until September. The lone addition to the schedule was the return of the Grand Prix of Houston, to be held on a 1.7 mile street course around the Reliant Park venue that differed from the course used between 1998 and 2001 adjacent to the George R. Brown Convention Center. It was scheduled for Saturday, May 13, the same day as the Indianapolis 500 Pole Day time trials, complicating matters for teams that potentially aimed to race at the Brickyard. In the end, no Champ Car teams entered the Indy 500 in 2006.[60]
  • The race at Las Vegas, one of just two oval events on the schedule, was included on a provisional basis, as a new contract had not been signed at the time of release, but both parties eventually failed to reach an agreement. On November 29, 2005, it was announced that the race would be replaced by a return to Road America, who last held a Champ Car event in 2004, using the same September weekend allocated for Las Vegas.[61]
  • On March 22, 2006, it was announced that the Mexico City finale had been moved from November 5 to November 12 at the request of the promoter, in order to avoid conflict with the Dia de Muertos week, the traditional national holiday of remembrance in Mexico.[64]
  • On July 23, 2006, Champ Car announced the cancellation of the Ansan Champ Car Grand Prix for the second year in a row due to trouble with track construction, access roads and red tape.[65][66] After three consecutive failures to race at South Korea, the venture was finally abandoned.
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Results

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Points standings

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Driver standings

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Notes:

Nations' Cup

  • Top result per race counts towards the Nations' Cup
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Notes

1 Mexico was penalized 7 points as a result of a penalty applied to Mario Domínguez in Milwaukee[68]

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References

See also

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