North American Touring Car Championship
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The North American Touring Car Championship was a touring car racing series using the Supertouring formula that raced in North America in 1996 and 1997. The series was funded in part by IndyCar team owner Gerald Forsythe with input from British series supremo Alan Gow. He appointed his vice-president of Business Operations, Canadian Roger Elliott to run the operation headquartered in Tampa, Florida. The Dodge Stratus factory team engineered and crewed by PacWest Racing[1] and Honda Accord factory team operated by TC Kline Racing dominated the series as they were one of the only truly professional outfits to contest the championship. The series ran as a support series to CART road and street course races.[2]
Category | Super Touring |
---|---|
Country | United States Canada |
Inaugural season | 1996 |
Folded | 1997 |
Last Drivers' champion | David Donohue |
Last Makes' champion | Honda |
While popular with fans, the series struggled to attract teams, with most races in the 1996 season only having 11 or 12 entrants.[3] 1997 saw even fewer entrants with only 9 or 10 cars on track for most of the races.[4] The series was not continued for 1998.
Season | Drivers' Champion | Manufacturers' Champion | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | Randy Pobst (Honda Accord) | Honda | [3] |
1997 | David Donohue (Dodge Stratus) | Honda | [4] |
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