2006 Champ Car season


The 2006 Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford season was the 28th overall and the third and penultimate season of the Champ Car World Series era of American open wheel racing. It began on April 9, 2006 in Long Beach, California and ended on November 12 in Mexico City, Mexico after 14 races. The Bridgestone Presents the Champ Car World Series Powered by Ford Drivers' Champion was Sébastien Bourdais, his third consecutive championship. He was the first driver to win three American open wheel National Championships in a row since Ted Horn in 1948. The Rookie of the Year was Will Power.

Drivers and teams

The 2.65 liter turbo V8 Ford-Cosworth 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 B03/00 chassis, the final year these chassis would be run in the series.
The following teams and drivers competed in the 2006 Champ Car season.

Team and driver changes

Schedule

RndDateRace NameCircuitCity/Location
1April 9 Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach Streets of Long BeachLong Beach, California
2May 13 Grand Prix of Houston Streets of HoustonHouston, Texas
3May 21 Tecate Grand Prix of Monterrey Presented by Roshfrans Fundidora ParkMonterrey, Mexico
4June 4 Time Warner Cable Road Runner 225 Milwaukee MileWest Allis, Wisconsin
5June 18 Grand Prix of Portland Presented by G. I. Joe's Portland International RacewayPortland, Oregon
6June 25 Champ Car Grand Prix of Cleveland Presented by U. S. Bank Cleveland Burke Lakefront AirportCleveland, Ohio
7July 9 Molson Grand Prix of Toronto Exhibition PlaceToronto, Canada
8July 23 West Edmonton Mall Grand Prix Presented by The Brick JAGflo SpeedwayEdmonton, Canada
9July 30 Canary Foundation Grand Prix of San José Presented by Taylor Woodrow Streets of San JoseSan Jose, California
10August 13 Grand Prix of Denver Streets of DenverDenver, Colorado
11August 27 Champ Car Grand Prix de Montréal Circuit Gilles VilleneuveMontreal, Canada
12September 24 Grand Prix of Road America Road AmericaElkhart Lake, Wisconsin
13October 22 Lexmark Indy 300 Surfers Paradise Street CircuitSurfers Paradise, Australia
14November 12 Gran Premio Telmex Presented by Banamex Autódromo Hermanos RodríguezMexico City, Mexico

Oval/Speedway
Dedicated road course
Temporary street circuit
The initial 2006 schedule announced by Champ Car on August 13, 2005 contained 15 races. The 15th race was scheduled to take place on a new permanent road course in Ansan, South Korea. The scheduled 2005 race at the track was canceled in September 2005 when the circuit was determined to be unready to host the event. A return to the Las Vegas Motor Speedway was also on the initial schedule, but on November 29, 2005 it was announced that the Champ Cars would be returning to Road America after a one-year hiatus instead of returning to the banked oval in Vegas. The race schedule shrank back to 14 races in July 2006 when it was announced that the event in Ansan had been canceled yet again. It was the third year in a row a Champ Car event in South Korea failed to materialize.

Race results

RndRace NamePole positionFastest lapLead most lapsWinning driverWinning teamReport
1 Toyota Grand Prix of Long BeachReport
2 Grand Prix of Houston Mario Domínguez Sébastien Bourdais Mario Domínguez Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport
3 Tecate Grand Prix of Monterrey Presented by Roshfrans Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport
4 Time Warner Cable Road Runner 225 Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport
5 Grand Prix of Portland Presented by G. I. Joe's Bruno Junqueira Will Power ' A. J. Allmendinger A. J. AllmendingerForsythe RacingReport
6 Champ Car Grand Prix of Cleveland Presented by U. S. Bank A. J. Allmendinger Nelson Philippe A. J. Allmendinger A. J. AllmendingerForsythe RacingReport
7 Molson Grand Prix of Toronto Justin Wilson Alex Tagliani A. J. Allmendinger A. J. AllmendingerForsythe RacingReport
8 West Edmonton Mall Grand Prix Presented by The Brick Sébastien Bourdais Justin Wilson Sébastien Bourdais Justin WilsonRuSPORTReport
9 Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport
10 Grand Prix of Denver Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais A. J. Allmendinger A. J. AllmendingerForsythe RacingReport
11 Champ Car Grand Prix de Montréal Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport
12 Grand Prix of Road America Dan Clarke ' Sébastien Bourdais Sébastien Bourdais A. J. AllmendingerForsythe RacingReport
13 Lexmark Indy 300 Will Power ' Paul Tracy Nelson Philippe
Will Power '
Nelson PhilippeCTE Racing-HVMReport
14 Gran Premio Telmex Presented by Banamex Justin Wilson Sébastien Bourdais Justin Wilson Sébastien BourdaisNewman/Haas RacingReport

Final driver standings


Notes:
  • Alex Tagliani withdrew from the race in Milwaukee after his car was heavily damaged in a crash during practice
  • Mario Domínguez was docked 7 points for causing an avoidable crash in Milwaukee
  • Paul Tracy was docked 7 points for causing an avoidable crash in San Jose
  • Paul Tracy was once again docked 3 points for causing an avoidable crash in Denver
  • Justin Wilson withdrew from the race in Surfers Paradise after breaking his wrist in a crash during practice

    Nation's Cup

  • Top result per race counts towards the Nation's Cup
PosCountryLBH HOU MTY MIL POR CLE TOR EDM SJO DEN MTL ROA SRF MXC Pts
1 France111131032151311397
2 United Kingdom252227413345152331
3 United States148341113711711610292
3 Canada324774251362835292
5 Brazil59913425152211264266
6 Mexico43614146118513101229209
7 Australia9711111897664513113209
8 Spain181285103124815164136192
9 Netherlands1215129121591091067711163
10 Belgium713161215516161111991413137
11 Estonia161215111734
12 Germany91519
12 Uruguay156
PosCountryLBH HOU MTY MIL POR CLE TOR EDM SJO DEN MTL ROA SRF MXC Pts

Driver Breakdown

Round 2

  • Jimmy Vasser did not compete in Round 2.
  • Nicky Pastorelli replaces Antônio Pizzonia in the Rocketsports Racing #8 car from Round 2 onwards.

    Round 4

  • Mario Domínguez was penalized 7 points for causing avoidable contact in the race at the Milwaukee Mile.

    Round 9

  • The first all-American Champ Car Panoz DP01 is launched on the weekend of the San Jose Grand Prix. Every team in the Champ Car World Series will be using the chassis next year.
  • In San Jose, it was announced that Atlantic Series team Gelles Racing would run a two-car operation in next years Champ Car World Series.
  • Paul Tracy was penalized 7 points and fined an undisclosed amount for causing avoidable contact and bringing the sport into disrepute for his part in the accident and shoving match with Alex Tagliani. He was also placed on probation for 3 races. Tagliani was also fined an undisclosed amount.

    Round 10

  • Cristiano da Matta was in a medically induced coma after a testing accident at Road America between San Jose & Denver in which he hit a deer on track. As a result, RuSPORT only run the car of Justin Wilson for the Denver round.
  • Paul Tracy was penalised 3 points and fined US$25,000 for causing avoidable contact for his part in the accident with Sébastien Bourdais. His probation was also extended to include Surfer's Paradise. Bourdais was not assessed a penalty.
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