2003 Formula BMW ADAC season: Difference between revisions
m Replace or disable a template per TFD outcome; no change in content |
|||
Line 259: | Line 259: | ||
! {{Tooltip|R2|Race 2}} |
! {{Tooltip|R2|Race 2}} |
||
| 27 April |
| 27 April |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Maximilian Götz]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Mücke Motorsport]] |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Mücke Motorsport]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!rowspan=2| 2 |
!rowspan=2| 2 |
||
! R1 |
! R1 |
||
|rowspan=2| {{flagicon|ITA}} [[Adria International Raceway]] |
|rowspan=2 nowrap| {{flagicon|ITA}} [[Adria International Raceway]] |
||
| 10 May |
| 10 May |
||
| {{flagicon|FIN}} Aki Rask |
| {{flagicon|FIN}} Aki Rask |
||
Line 276: | Line 276: | ||
| 11 May |
| 11 May |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Sebastian Vettel]] |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Sebastian Vettel]] |
||
| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Sebastian Vettel]] |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Sebastian Vettel]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} Eifelland Racing |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} Eifelland Racing |
||
Line 316: | Line 316: | ||
|rowspan=2| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Norisring]], [[Nuremberg]] |
|rowspan=2| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Norisring]], [[Nuremberg]] |
||
| 21 June |
| 21 June |
||
| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
||
| {{flagicon|IRL}} Robby Coleman |
| {{flagicon|IRL}} Robby Coleman |
||
| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Team Rosberg]] |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Team Rosberg]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
Line 357: | Line 357: | ||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Adrian Sutil]] |
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Adrian Sutil]] |
||
| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
| {{flagicon|IRL}} [[Michael Devaney (racing driver)|Michael Devaney]] |
||
| {{flagicon|AUT}} Christopher Wassermann |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|AUT}} Christopher Wassermann |
||
| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Josef Kaufmann Racing]] |
|nowrap| {{flagicon|DEU}} [[Josef Kaufmann Racing]] |
||
|- |
|- |
||
!rowspan=2| 8 |
!rowspan=2| 8 |
Latest revision as of 22:39, 22 February 2024
The 2003 Formula BMW ADAC season was a multi-event motor racing championship for open wheel, formula racing cars held across Europe. The championship featured drivers competing in 1.2 litre Formula BMW single seat race cars. The 2003 season was the sixth Formula BMW ADAC season organized by BMW Motorsport and ADAC. The season began at Hockenheimring on 26 April and finished at the same place on 5 October, after twenty races.[1]
Maximilian Götz was crowned series champion. Götz beat future Formula One World Champion Sebastian Vettel to the championship by 43 points, winning six races.[2]
Driver lineup
[edit]
|
|
2003 Schedule
[edit]The series supported the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters at nine rounds, with additional round at the European Grand Prix on 28–29 June.
Season standings
[edit]Drivers Standings
[edit]- Points are awarded as follows:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
20 | 15 | 12 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 |
|
Bold – Pole |
References
[edit]- ^ "Endstand 2003" (PDF). adac-motorsport.de (in German). ADAC. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2010.
- ^ "Formula BMW ADAC 2003". driverdb.com. Driver Database. Retrieved 25 November 2010.
External links
[edit]