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The 2011 Auto GP Series was the second year of the Auto GP, and the thirteenth season of the former Euroseries 3000. The championship began on 14 May at Monza and finished on 4 September at the Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia, after seven double-header rounds.
The series became part of the World Touring Car Championship meetings and received Eurosport coverage.[1] The series also adopted the Formula One points system for the first race of the weekend, with a consequent change in the lower points-awarding second race.[2] The season champion and the top driver under 21 years of age Kevin Ceccon received a GP2 Series test.[3]
Ombra Racing driver Kevin Ceccon claimed the championship title, taking just one victory on Hungaroring with four other podium placings. Luca Filippi who missed Oshersleben's round due to GP2 Series commitments finished season as runner-up with one win at Brno. Sergey Afanasyev missed Donington Park round because of problems with British visa scored three wins at Budapest, Oshersleben and Valencia, more than any other driver in this season. He finished season on the third position in the standings.
Team | No. | Driver | Rounds |
---|---|---|---|
DAMS[4] | 1 | Sergey Afanasyev[5] | 1–3, 5–7 |
2 | Rio Haryanto[5] | 1–4, 6–7 | |
Kevin Korjus[6] | 5 | ||
3 | Adrien Tambay[5] | 1–3 | |
TP Formula[7] | 4 | Samuele Buttarelli[8] | All |
17 | Pasquale Di Sabatino[9] | 2–7 | |
Ombra Racing[10] | 5 | Kevin Ceccon[11] | All |
6 | Francesco Dracone[12] | 4–7 | |
11 | Pasquale Di Sabatino[13] | 1 | |
Stefano Bizzarri[14] | 2 | ||
71 | Michele la Rosa[15] | 7 | |
Emmebi Motorsport[16] | 6 | Francesco Dracone[16] | 1–3 |
Griffitz Durango[10] | 7 | Giovanni Venturini[17] | All |
8 | Giuseppe Cipriani[17] | All | |
Super Nova Racing[10] | 9 | Adrian Zaugg[18] | 1 |
Jon Lancaster[19] | 3–4 | ||
Luca Filippi[20] | 7 | ||
10 | 1–4, 6 | ||
Lazarus[10] | 15 | Fabrizio Crestani[21] | All |
16 | Fabio Onidi[22] | All | |
Campos Racing[23] | 22 | Bruno Méndez[20] | 1–5 |
Adam Carroll[24] | 6–7 | ||
23 | Adrian Campos, Jr.[25] | 1, 4–6 | |
Rodolfo González[26] | 2 | ||
33 | Marco Barba[27] | 1–3 | |
Adam Carroll[28] | 4 | ||
Adrien Tambay[29] | 5–7 | ||
MP Motorsport | 27 | Daniël de Jong[30] | 4–6 |
A seven-round calendar was published on 22 November 2010.[1] Six of the seven rounds will support World Touring Car Championship events, with the other event being held as a stand-alone event, with other series in support. On 8 March 2011, the round due to be held in Marrakech was dropped from the calendar, and will be replaced by the Hungaroring.[31] On 23 June 2011, the round scheduled to be held in Bucharest was dropped from the calendar due to financial and track difficulties.[32] It will be replaced by a headline event, with the Italian Formula Three Championship in support, held at Mugello.[33]
Race | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Position | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th | 6th | 7th | 8th | 9th | 10th |
Race One | 25 | 18 | 15 | 12 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
Race Two | 18 | 13 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 2 | 1 |
In addition:
|
Bold – Pole for Race One |
|
Bold – Pole for Race One |
Pos | Pilot | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Kevin Ceccon | 222 |
2 | Adrien Tambay | 159 |
3 | Samuele Buttarelli | 148 |
4 | Giovanni Venturini | 147 |
5 | Rio Haryanto | 143 |
6 | Bruno Méndez | 71 |
7 | Daniël de Jong | 59 |
8 | Kevin Korjus | 18 |
9 | Stefano Bizzarri | 10 |
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