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 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.
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, as was mandatory under the championship regulations.Team | Driver | Rounds | |
![]() | 1 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 2 | ![]() | All |
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![]() | 8 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 9 | ![]() | 1-3, 9 |
![]() | 9 | ![]() | 4 |
![]() | 10 | ![]() | 1-4 |
![]() | 11 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 12 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 14 | ![]() | 1-8 |
![]() | 15 | ![]() | 1-2 |
![]() | 16 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 17 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 18 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 19 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 20 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 21 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 22 | ![]() | 1-3 |
![]() | 22 | ![]() | 4-6, 10 |
![]() | 22 | ![]() | 7-8 |
![]() | 22 | ![]() | 9 |
![]() | 23 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 24 | ![]() | 1-3 |
![]() | 24 | ![]() | 4-10 |
![]() | 25 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 26 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 27 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 28 | ![]() | 9-10 |
![]() | 29 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 30 | ![]() | 1-9 |
![]() | 30 | ![]() | 10 |
![]() | 31 | ![]() | 1-7 |
![]() | 32 | ![]() | 1-4, 6 |
![]() | 33 | ![]() | 4-10 |
![]() | 34 | ![]() | 10 |
![]() | 35 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 36 | ![]() | All |
![]() | 37 | ![]() | 1, 3-7, 9-10 |
![]() | 38 | ![]() | 1-4 |
Calendar
Round | Circuit | Date | Laps | Distance | Time | Speed | Pole Position | Fastest Lap | Winner |
1 | ![]() | 11 May | 40 | 5.140=205.600 km | 1'21:15.501 | 151.990 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
2 | ![]() | 19 May | 75 | 2.760=207.000 km | 1'32:44.230 | 133.927 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
3 | ![]() | 25 May | 65 | 3.180=206.700 km | 1'38:32.881 | 125.847 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
4 | ![]() | 29 June | 4 | 4.556=18.224 km | 0'07:57.334 | 137.443 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
5 | ![]() | 20 July | 41 | 4.950=202.950 km | 1'04:48.310 | 187.902 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
6 | ![]() | 26 July | 31 | 6.823=211.513 km | 1'04:33.262 | 196.591 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
7 | ![]() | 3 August | 48 | 4.319=207.312 km | 1'12:39.794 | 171.183 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
8 | ![]() | 22 August | 29 | 6.968=202.072 km | 1'05:19.036 | 185.622 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
9 | ![]() | 29 September | 40 | 5.245=209.800 km | 1'09:03.576 | 182.277 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
10 | ![]() | 25 October | 44 | 4.428=194.832 km | 1'13:47.224 | 158.428 km/h | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
Note:
- The Silverstone round was the Autosport International Trophy
- The Pau round was the 57th Grand Prix Automobile du Pau
- The Pergusa-Enna round was the 35th Gran Premio del Mediterraneo
Season summary
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. 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. 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.