1997 International Formula 3000 Championship

The 1997 International Formula 3000 season was the thirty-first season of the second-tier of Formula One feeder championship and also thirteenth season under the International Formula 3000 Championship moniker. The championship[1] was a ten-round series contested from 11 May to 25 October 1997. The Drivers' Championship was won by Brazilian Ricardo Zonta of Super Nova Racing, who won three races.

1997 FIA International Formula 3000 Championship
Previous: 1996 Next: 1998
Related series:
1997 Formula Nippon Championship
1997 British Formula 3000 Championship

Drivers and teams

The following teams and drivers contested the 1997 FIA Formula 3000 International Championship. The Lola T96/50 Zytek-Judd was used by all teams,[2] as was mandatory under the championship regulations.

Team No. Driver Rounds
RSM Marko 1 Craig Lowndes All
2 Juan Pablo Montoya All
Super Nova Racing 3 Ricardo Zonta All
4 Laurent Redon All
Team Astromega 5 Boris Derichebourg All
6 Soheil Ayari All
Draco Engineering 7 Cyrille Sauvage All
8 Pedro Couceiro All
Apomatox 9 Fabrizio Gollin 1-3, 9
Emmanuel Clérico 4
10 Jean-Philippe Belloc 1-4
Edenbridge Racing 11 Werner Lupberger All
12 Max Wilson All
Pacific Racing 14 Oliver Tichy 1-8
15 Marc Gené 1-2
DAMS 16 Grégoire de Galzain All
17 Jamie Davies All
Durango Formula 18 Stephen Watson All
19 Gareth Rees All
Auto Sport Racing 20 Gastón Mazzacane All
21 Tom Kristensen All
Nordic Racing 22 Thomas Biagi 1-3
Marc Gené 4-6, 10
Mario Waltner 7-8
Gianluca Paglicci 9
23 Rui Águas All
Bob Salisbury Engineering 24 Oliver Gavin 1-3
James Taylor 4-10
25 Thomas Schie All
Den Blå Avis 26 Jason Watt All
DC Cook Motorsport 27 David Cook All
28 Patrick Lemarié 9-10
Coloni Motorsport 29 Markus Friesacher All
30 Emiliano Spataro 1-9
Oliver Tichy 10
Ravarotto Racing 31 Anthony Beltoise 1-7
32 Patrick Lemarié 1-4, 6
GP Racing 33 Thomas Biagi 4-10
Elide Racing 34 Miguel Ángel de Castro 10
Arden International 35 Christian Horner All
KTR 36 Kurt Mollekens All
Redman & Bright F3000 37 Gonzalo Rodríguez 1, 3-7, 9-10
DKS Racing 38 Dino Morelli 1-4

Calendar

RoundCircuitDateLapsDistanceTimeSpeedPole PositionFastest LapWinner
1 Silverstone Circuit 11 May 40 5.140=205.600 km 1'21:15.501 151.990 km/h Ricardo Zonta Marc Gené Tom Kristensen
2 Pau Grand Prix 19 May 75 2.760=207.000 km 1'32:44.230 133.927 km/h Juan Pablo Montoya Juan Pablo Montoya Juan Pablo Montoya
3 Helsinki Thunder 25 May 65 3.180=206.700 km 1'38:32.881 125.847 km/h Juan Pablo Montoya Juan Pablo Montoya Soheil Ayari
4 Nürburgring 29 June 4 4.556=18.224 km 0'07:57.334 137.443 km/h Ricardo Zonta Ricardo Zonta Ricardo Zonta
5 Autodromo di Pergusa 20 July 41 4.950=202.950 km 1'04:48.310 187.902 km/h Jamie Davies Jamie Davies Jamie Davies
6 Hockenheimring 26 July 31 6.823=211.513 km 1'04:33.262 196.591 km/h Tom Kristensen Juan Pablo Montoya Ricardo Zonta
7 A1 Ring 3 August 48 4.319=207.312 km 1'12:39.794 171.183 km/h Juan Pablo Montoya Ricardo Zonta Juan Pablo Montoya
8 Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps 22 August 29 6.968=202.072 km 1'05:19.036 185.622 km/h Tom Kristensen Rui Águas Jason Watt
9 Mugello Circuit 29 September 40 5.245=209.800 km 1'09:03.576 182.277 km/h Ricardo Zonta Ricardo Zonta Ricardo Zonta
10 Circuito de Jerez 25 October 44 4.428=194.832 km 1'13:47.224 158.428 km/h Ricardo Zonta Ricardo Zonta Juan Pablo Montoya

Note:

  • The Silverstone round was the Autosport International Trophy [2]
  • The Pau round was the 57th Grand Prix Automobile du Pau [2]
  • The Pergusa-Enna round was the 35th Gran Premio del Mediterraneo [2]

Season summary

After finishing the season with two wins in the last three races of 1996, Brazil's Ricardo Zonta entered 1997 as the pre-season title favourite with the Super Nova team. However, he endured a frustrating start with no points from the first three races. The early pace in the championship battle was set by Denmark's Tom Kristensen, who inherited the race victory at a damp Silverstone from the disqualified Zonta, and then finished behind Juan Pablo Montoya on the street circuit at Pau. After an attritional race in Helsinki won by Soheil Ayari, where most of the major title contenders failed to finish and just nine drivers made it to the chequered flag, the field endured another wet race at the Nurburgring. It was marred by a serious accident involving British drivers Dino Morelli and Gareth Rees, in which Morelli suffered severe leg injuries which would keep him out of racing for the rest of the season.[3] With the race abandoned after just four laps, Zonta was declared the winner, but with only half-points awarded.

By mid-season, the competitive start to the season left the championship battle wide open, with Kristensen and Enna winner Jamie Davies leading the standings halfway through the season ahead of Montoya, Zonta and Ayari. Zonta became the first driver to win twice with a dominant drive at Hockenheim, but left Germany a point behind the consistent Davies, who had been on the podium in four of the six races so far. However, at the A1-Ring, a disastrous qualifying left the British driver down in 24th place on the grid, leaving him out of contention for points. Montoya led home Zonta, who became the new championship leader.

The race at Spa-Francorchamps was another overshadowed by a large crash, as Kristensen crashed heavily while leading at the high-speed Blanchimont corner, triggering a pile-up, though no drivers were seriously injured.[4] Denmark's Jason Watt took his first Formula 3000 race win to enter title contention, as Zonta could only manage to finish fifth, and his rivals all failed to score points. However, a month later, a controversial round at Mugello settled the championship - Kristensen was excluded from the event for running an illegal spacer, while Davies and DAMS team mate Gregoire de Galzain were also excluded for failure to attend the drivers' briefing. Zonta's race win, with Montoya only finishing third behind Watt, meant that the Brazilian was declared champion. The Auto Sport and Durango teams protested Zonta and Watt's results for allegedly having used illegal fuel and car parts, but this protest was quashed and the results stood.[5] Montoya went on to win the final round at Jerez, securing second place in the championship. Watt finished third ahead of Davies, who had failed to score any points since taking the lead of the championship with four races to go.

None of the drivers who participated in the 1997 season were able to take seats on the 1998 Formula One grid. Zonta moved to the AMG Mercedes team in the FIA GT Championship, which he won jointly with Klaus Ludwig, and went on to drive for BAR in Formula One in 1999. Kristensen, who had won the 1997 24 Hours of Le Mans, moved into sportscar racing, while the remaining major contenders would return to Formula 3000 in 1998. Having won the 1996 Australian Touring Car Championship on debut, Craig Lowndes returned to Australia the following year and won a second ATCC title in as many attempts.

Drivers' Championship

Pos Driver SIL
PAU
HEL
NÜR
PER
HOC
A1R
SPA
MUG
JER
Points
1 Ricardo Zonta DSQ Ret Ret 1 2 1 2 5 1 Ret 39
2 Juan Pablo Montoya Ret 1 Ret 4 11 5 1 DSQ 3 1 37.5
3 Jason Watt 4 12 DNS 2 Ret 4 Ret 1 2 Ret 25
4 Jamie Davies 3 3 Ret 8 1 3 9 8 EX Ret 22
5 Max Wilson Ret 7 Ret 5 3 2 8 2 4 10 21
6 Tom Kristensen 1 2 Ret 3 Ret Ret 6 Ret EX Ret 19
7 Oliver Tichy 8 8 2 9 Ret 7 5 Ret 2 14
8 Soheil Ayari Ret 6 1 19 Ret Ret 10 Ret 6 Ret 12
9 Laurent Redon Ret 4 Ret 21 6 Ret 3 14 5 11 10
10 Rui Águas Ret 9 5 7 Ret DSQ 4 9 12 5 7
11 Pedro Couceiro 2 Ret Ret 15 DNS Ret 11 7 Ret Ret 6
12 Dino Morelli 5 11 3 Ret 6
13 Cyrille Sauvage 7 5 Ret Ret 8 Ret Ret 4 9 DSQ 5
14 Gareth Rees Ret Ret Ret Ret 16 11 Ret Ret 7 3 4
15 Boris Derichebourg 12 15 8 Ret 9 DNQ 13 3 22 15 4
16 Patrick Lemarié 6 13 4 13 Ret 14 DNQ 4
17 Craig Lowndes 14 Ret Ret Ret 4 Ret Ret Ret 21 9 3
18 Werner Lupberger 11 DNQ DNQ 18 Ret 14 Ret 13 11 4 3
19 Kurt Mollekens EX 10 Ret DNQ 5 6 Ret Ret Ret Ret 3
20 Stephen Watson 15 DNQ 6 16 7 12 Ret 6 15 Ret 2
21 Christian Horner 16 DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ 16 DNQ 17 6 1
22 Gonzalo Rodríguez DNQ Ret 6 Ret 17 7 8 Ret 0.5
23 David Cook Ret DNQ 7 DNQ Ret DNQ 14 Ret Ret 7 0
24 Grégoire de Galzain DNQ DNQ DNQ 17 Ret 9 15 Ret EX 8 0
25 Marc Gené 13 DNQ DNQ Ret 8 Ret 0
26 Anthony Beltoise Ret Ret 9 14 12 13 Ret 0
27 Jean-Philippe Belloc 9 Ret Ret 20 0
28 Gastón Mazzacane 10 DNQ Ret 10 15 10 17 11 10 Ret 0
29 Thomas Schie DNQ 14 DNQ DNQ DNQ 15 DNQ 10 18 Ret 0
30 Emiliano Spataro DNQ DNQ DNQ 11 13 16 12 Ret Ret 0
31 Thomas Biagi DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ 14 18 Ret Ret 16 12 0
32 Emmanuel Clérico 12 0
33 James Taylor DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ 12 DNQ DNQ 0
34 Fabrizio Gollin Ret Ret Ret 13 0
35 Markus Friesacher DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ 17 DNQ DNQ Ret 19 DNQ 0
36 Gianluca Paglicci 20 0
  Miguel Ángel de Castro DNQ 0
  Mario Waltner DNQ DNQ 0
Oliver Gavin DNQ DNQ DNQ 0
Pos Driver SIL
PAU
HEL
NÜR
PER
HOC
A1R
SPA
MUG
JER
Points
ColourResult
GoldWinner
Silver2nd place
Bronze3rd place
GreenPoints finish
BlueNon-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
PurpleRetired (Ret)
RedDid not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
BlackDisqualified (DSQ)
WhiteDid not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not participate (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold � Pole
Italics � Fastest lap

Notes

Complete Overview

first column of every race10= grid position
second column of every race10= race result

R24=retired, but classified R=retired NS=did not start NQ=did not qualify NT=no time set in qualifying DIS(1)=disqualified after finishing as winner (13)=place after practice, but grid position not held free DIS=disqualified in practice

PlaceNameTeam SIL
PAU
HEL
NÜR
PER
HOC
OST
SPA
MUG
JER
1 Ricardo ZontaSuperNova Racing1DIS(1)8R8R1122212255111R
2 Juan Pablo MontoyaRSM Marko2R111R44611155114R2341
3 Jason WattDen Blå Avis341512(13)NS328R549R21426R
4 Jamie DaviesDAMS233432R1381163249158DIS-3R
5 Max WilsonEdenbridge Racing8R11721R5543321488234910
6 Tom KristensenAuto Sport Racing121226R2310R1R361RDIS-2R
7 Oliver TichyPacific Racing7898321799R17716521R--
Coloni Motorsport72
8 Soheil AyariTeam Astromega4R569181913R8R6103R768R
9 Laurent RédonSuperNova Racing10R3411R7211169R53914651611
10 Rui ÁguasNordic Racing5R1291851277R4R841791312105
11 Pedro CouceiroDraco Engineering2227R19R1415(12)NS24R131116717R19R
Dino MorelliDKS Racing11519117316R24------------
13 Cyrille SauvageDraco Engineering137654R15R233813R7R244995DIS(2)
14 Patrick LemariéRavarotto Racing25617131341113--16R----
D C Cook Motorsport191427NQ
Boris DerichebourgTeam Astromega201221152286R16927NQ221363112215R
Gareth ReesDurango Formula15R16R12R9R222016191118R11R57113
17 Craig LowndesRSM Marko61414R20R23R2515410R10R20R1021139
Kurt MollekensKTRDIS-13105R32NQ12526612R18R24R21R
Werner LupbergerEdenbridge Racing261128NQ30NQ191821R231415R10131411144
20 Stephen WatsonDurango Formula211525NQ1561816197181221R76181522R
21 Christian HornerArden International24R1633NQ29NQ33NQ30NQ29NQ251627NQ2217246
22 Gonzalo RodríguezRedman & Bright F300031NQ--14R1065R71747--8812R
- David CookD C Cook Motorsport14R31NQ24730NQ26R30NQ261422R16R267
- Grégoire de GalzainDAMS29NQ32NQ32NQ261723R209231523RDIS-178
- Marc GenéPacific Racing161323NQ--
Nordic Racing31NQ12R10118------20R
- Anthony BeltoiseRavarotto Racing17R18R16922142212211317R------
- Jean-Philippe BellocApomatox19922R17R2420------------
- Gastón MazzacaneAuto Sport Racing91024NQ23R20101715121011171911121018R
- Thomas SchieBSE Salisbury Engineering32NQ201426NQ28NQ28NQ221527NQ1310231825R
- Emiliano SpataroColoni Motorsport32NQ29NQ27NQ2111241325162315201215R--
- Thomas BiagiNordic Racing28NQ26NQ31NQ
GP Racing27NQ1814141819R25R20162312
- Emmanuel CléricoApomatox------2512------------
- James TaylorBSE Salisbury Engineering------34NQ29NQ31NQNT-261227NQ30NQ
- Fabrizio GollinApomatox18R10R10R----------2113--
- Markus FriesacherColoni Motorsport27NQ30NQ28NQ29NQ251728NQ28NQ14R261928NQ
- Gianluca PaglicciNordic Racing----------------2520--
- Oliver GavinBSE Salisbury Engineering30NQ27NQ33NQ--------------
- Mario WaltnerNordic Racing------------29NQ28NQ----
- Miguel Ángel de CastroElide Racing------------------29NQ

References

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