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JAF Grand Prix
The JAF Grand Prix is an auto race held in Japan by the Japan Automobile Federation.
History
The original JAF Grand Prix was set up in year 1969 as to promoting Formula Car events in Japan, which was the highest ranked race other than the Japanese Grand Prix. The first race in 1969 was a Formula Libre event and was won by Australian driver Leo Geoghegan driving an ex-Jim Clark Lotus 39-Repco V8. The 1970 race was won by reigning Formula One World Champion Jackie Stewart driving a Brabham-Ford.
Then, after a brief suspension from 1971 to 1973 due to a scandal, it was held as a points-scoring round in Formula 2000, Formula Two, and Formula Pacific series until 1986. From 1988 to 1990, the JAF Grand Prix was a round of the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship. The JAF Grand Prix then went on hiatus for two decades.
In 2010, the JAF Grand Prix was revived by the JAF and named after its venue, Fuji Speedway, as the JAF Grand Prix and Fuji Sprint Cup. It served as a non-title season-ending race for the Formula Nippon and Super GT series. Teams which participated in five rounds in either series were eligible for their respective JAF Grand Prix events. The ruleset used in the Grand Prix differed from those used in regular-season Formula Nippon and Super GT events.
- The JAF GP consisted of six separate races in 2010 and five races from 2011 to 2013; two each for Super GT's GT500 and GT300 classes, and one (two in 2010) for Formula Nippon. The race distance was about 100 km, less than half of the typical regular-season race distance. There were no mandated pit stops.
- In 2010, qualifying results for the second Formula Nippon race were decided by top speed (measured at the end of the straight) rather than lap time. In 2011, grid positions were determined by a score based on top speed and lap time. Qualifying results for the 2012 and 2013 races were decided by lap times, as in the regular season.
- In the Super GT races, the two drivers in every team drove in two separate races, instead of sharing a car in a single race as in the regular season.
- As in the final round in the regular Super GT season, success ballast was not applied to Super GT participants. However, a standing start, instead of a rolling start, was used in JAF GP races.
- Titles were awarded separately to Formula Nippon, GT500, and GT300 participants, depending on their overall results in their respective races.
In 2014, the non-championship Fuji Sprint Cup was discontinued. The JAF Grand Prix title now applies to the season-ending round of the Super Formula Championship held at Suzuka.
Winners of the JAF Grand Prix
Fuji Sprint Cup (2010–2013)
| Year | Category | Driver | Vehicle | 2013 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | |||||||
| 2011 | |||||||
| 2010 | |||||||
| Super Formula | JPN Yuji Kunimoto | SF13-Toyota RV8K | |||||
| GT500 | JPN Toshihiro Kaneishi | ||||||
| JPN Koudai Tsukakoshi | Honda HSV-010 GT | ||||||
| GT300 | JPN Katsuyuki Hiranaka | ||||||
| SWE Björn Wirdheim | Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG GT3 | ||||||
| Formula Nippon | JPN Takuya Izawa | FN09-Honda HR12E | |||||
| GT500 | JPN Yuji Tachikawa | ||||||
| JPN Kohei Hirate | Lexus SC430 | ||||||
| GT300 | JPN Masami Kageyama | ||||||
| JPN Tomonobu Fujii | Porsche 911 GT3-R | ||||||
| Formula Nippon | BRA João Paulo de Oliveira | FN09-Toyota RV8K | |||||
| GT500 | JPN Masataka Yanagida | ||||||
| ITA Ronnie Quintarelli | Nissan GT-R | ||||||
| GT300 | JPN Nobuteru Taniguchi | ||||||
| JPN Taku Bamba | BMW Z4 GT3 | ||||||
| Formula Nippon | GER André Lotterer | FN09-Toyota RV8K | |||||
| GT500 | JPN Daisuke Ito | ||||||
| SWE Björn Wirdheim | Lexus SC430 | ||||||
| GT300 | JPN Katsuyuki Hiranaka | ||||||
| JPN Tetsuya Tanaka | Ferrari F430 GT2 |
Group C events (1988–1990)
| Year | Driver | Constructor | Class | Location | 1990 | 1989 | 1988 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| JPN Masanori Sekiya | |||||||
| JPN Hitoshi Ogawa | Toyota | Group C | Fuji | ||||
| AUS Vern Schuppan | |||||||
| SWE Eje Elgh | |||||||
| JPN Keiji Matsumoto | Porsche | Group C | Fuji | ||||
| JPN Hideki Okada | |||||||
| SWE Stanley Dickens | Porsche | Group C | Fuji |
Formula events (1969–1990, 2014–2016)
| Year | Driver | Constructor | Class | Location | 2016 | 2015 | 2014 | 1986 | 1985 | 1984 | 1983 | 1982 | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1981 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1980 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1979 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1978 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1977 | 1976 | 1975 | 1974 | 1973 | |||||||||||||||||||
| – | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| 1971 | 1970 | 1969 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Yuji Kunimoto | Dallara-Toyota | Super Formula | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Naoki Yamamoto | Dallara-Honda | Super Formula | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuki Nakajima | Dallara-Toyota | Super Formula | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Satoru Nakajima | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Satoru Nakajima | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| GBR Geoff Lees | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Satoru Nakajima | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | Ralt-Nissan | Formula Pacific | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Satoru Nakajima | March-Honda | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Masahiro Hasemi | March-Nissan | Formula Pacific | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | March-BMW | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Masahiro Hasemi | March-Nissan | Formula Pacific | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | March-BMW | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kenji Takahashi | Nova-Nissan | Formula Pacific | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Keiji Matsumoto | March-BMW | Formula Two | Fuji | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Takao Wada | March-Nissan | Formula Pacific | |||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kunimitsu Takahashi | Kojima-BMW | Formula Two | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kenji Takahashi | Nova-BMW | Formula Two | Fuji | ||||||||||||||||||||
| ITA Riccardo Patrese | Chevron-BMW | Formula 2000 | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | Nova-BMW | Formula 2000 | Fuji | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Noritake Takahara | Nova-BMW | Formula 2000 | Fuji | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Kazuyoshi Hoshino | March-BMW | Formula 2000 | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| JPN Noritake Takahara | March-BMW | Formula 2000 | Suzuka | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Not held | |||||||||||||||||||||||
| GBR Jackie Stewart | Brabham-Ford | Formula Libre | Fuji | ||||||||||||||||||||
| AUS Leo Geoghegan | Lotus-Repco | Formula Libre | Fuji |
Notes: :1. – The Grand Prix had been awarded for winners of two classes (Formula Two and Formula Pacific) per event from 1979 to 1982. :2. – Two events each were held in years 1978 and 1979.
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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