LE MANS 24 HOURS: TEAM INFO GUIDE

by

Wolf Feather/Jamie Stafford
[email protected]




Initial Version Completed: October 6, 2002
FINAL VERSION Completed:   October 15, 2002

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CONTENTS
Spacing and Length
Permissions
Introduction
Team Information
Contact

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SPACING AND LENGTH
For optimum readability, this driving guide should be
viewed/printed using a monowidth font, such as Courier.
Check for appropriate font setting by making sure the numbers
and letters below line up:

1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZabcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz

This guide is more than 45 pages long in the Macintosh
version of Microsoft Word 98 using single-spaced Courier 12
font.

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PERMISSIONS
This guide may ONLY be posted on FeatherGuides, GameFAQs.com,
PSXCodez.com, F1Gamers, Cheatcc.com, Absolute-
PlayStation.com, InsidePS2Games.com, RedCoupe, gamesover.com,
CheatPlanet.com, The Cheat Empire, a2zweblinks.com, Gameguru,
GameReactors.com, cheatingplanet.com, vgstrategies.com,
CheatHeaven, IGN, hellzgate, Games Domain, RobsGaming.com,
ps2fantasy.com, and neoseeker.com.

Permission is granted to download and print one copy of this
game guide for personal use.

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INTRODUCTION
This guide is designed to provide readers with information
about the various racing teams included in Le Mans 24 Hours.
As a major part of the unlocking strategy of the game,
players must win or beat posted goal times in various game
modes in order to unlock most cars in the game - thus,
players cannot drive for most teams until the teams' car(s)
are unlocked.  While the information contained in this guide
is not necessarily meant to assist with gameplay, it may be
useful information to some readers.

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TEAM INFORMATION
This section will present each team alphabetically, the
car(s) for each team, and some team information.  In some
cases, teams use multiple cars of the same model; these are
differentiated by racing number in the game (but are not
listed here.

Audi Sport Team Joest
  Cars - Audi R8
  Web Site - http://www.audi.com/com/en/experience/
             motorsport/background/team_joest/team_joest.jsp
  Joest Racing was founded in 1978. Since , Reinhold Joest's
  team has won a large number of important titles and races
  - among them seven Le Mans 24 Hour triumphs in 1984, 1985,
  1996, 1997, 2000, 2001 and 2002. Since Audi races the R8,
  Joest Racing is preparing the cars.

  Based at Ingolstadt and Neckarsulm, Audi Sport is
  responsible for the ongoing development of the
  Infineon Audi R8, Joest Racing in Germany's region
  "Odenwald" for the racing. Both partners contribute
  knowledge and their experience in all areas. "We
  can only be strong together", knows Team Director
  Reinhold Joest, who has already guided his team to
  seven Le Mans victories. Prior to that Joest had
  climbed the Le Mans podium also as a driver.

  When Audi looked for a suitable team to run the Le
  Mans 24 Hour race, Joest Racing was first choice.
  Right from the start, Joest was involved in the
  project of the Infineon Audi R8. The joint successes
  at Le Mans and at the races of the American Le
  Mans Series (ALMS) are the product of perfect team
  work.

Audi Sport UK
  Cars - Audi A8C
  Web Site - http://www.audi.com/com/en/experience/
             motorsport/background/audi_sport/audi_sport.jsp
  Audi Sport can look back on a long-standing
  tradition in motorsport, with experience in almost
  every type of racing. No matter where the team
  from Ingolstadt has competed, it has been
  amongst the winners. Around 100 people are
  employed by Audi Sport in Ingolstadt and
  Neckarsulm. Here, under the leadership of Dr
  Wolfgang Ullrich, the Infineon Audi R8 was also
  developed.

  Following Audi Sport tradition, everything is
  developed in-house: from chassis to the 610 hp V8
  twin-turbo power units. Success at Audi Sport is not
  by chance, rather it is the result of immense
  experience - in cooperation with reliable partners.

BMW Motorsport
  Cars - BMW V12 LMR
  Web Site - http://www.bmw-motorsport.com/session:
             ca6p8ku1w1/ms/en/index.html
  In 1954, BMW continued its motorsport activities with as
  much enthusiasm and success as ever.

  Alex Von Falkenhausen, BMW engine chief of the time and
  friend of German motorsport legend Hans Joachim Stuck
  still competes in races. Firstly with the BMW 507 V8
  sportscar and more recently with the BMW 700. Soon
  afterwards, a whole armada of BMW 700s would be competing
  with great success in different motorsport categories.
  Even at the age of 60, Hans Stuck continued his career in
  the 700 and won the 1960 German hillclimb championship.

  Then the mid-range BMW was launched, first as the BMW 1500
  and later as the 1800 and 2000. Von Falkenhausen had
  wanted to enter touring car racing for a long time, and
  this car was perfectly suited to his plans. At this point
  there was no separate motorsport department  at BMW, so
  the racing engines were developed in the same department
  as the production engines. This allowed von Falkenhausen
  to personally push the development programme forward.

  The project proved to be another BMW motorsport success
  story. Hubert Hahne won he 1964 German Circuit
  Championship in a BMW 1800ti, while two years later Josef
  Schnitzer took his BMW 2000ti to the German Touring Car
  crown.

  "Our activities of those days were far away from the
  meticulously organised motorsport programme of today",
  explains former BMW racing engine director Paul Rosche.
  "In those days we carried out lots of experiments, working
  mainly using the principle of 'trial and error'. There was
  a motorsport budget at BMW, but we worked like real
  privateers."

  In between, engine designer Ludwig Apfelbeck is determined
  to construct a four-valve engine for BMW. Supported by
  Rosche he gained authorisation to design a 500cc single
  cylinder engine.

  "This engine already produced 57bhp," Rosche remembers.
  "This meant 114bhp per litre, while our 1800 didn't
  produce more than 90bhp per litre."

  Von Falkenhausen was convinced by the concept and
  instructed his engine specialists to build a two-litre
  version for hillclimbs and a 1.6-litre version for Formula
  2. With the BMW Brabham BT 7, he set up several world
  records with the aid of a four-valve Apfelbeck engine. The
  BMW Monti sportscar was used for hillclimbs.

  In the following decades BMW was massively successful with
  normally aspirated two and four valve engines in touring
  car racing and Formula 2. At the same time, BMW was
  entering a new era - the turbo era.

  In 1968 Dieter Quester won the European Touring Car
  Championship in a BMW 2002, but the competition was
  getting stronger and stronger. In a bid to keep BMW at\
  the top, Alex von Falkenhausen instructed his team of
  engine experts to build a turbocharged engine for the 1969
  season.

  "We had never worked on turbo engines before," Paul Rosche
  recalls. "This was a brand new experience for us. So we
  took a turbocharger and installed it on one of our
  production engines."

  Three months, many experiments and many exploded engines
  later, the first turbocharged BMW touring car made its
  debut at Snetterton in  England. This first race ended
  with an early retirement, but the turbo principle proved
  its worth during the course of the season and Quester duly
  delivered another European Touring Car title, this time in
  a BMW 2002 turbo.

  It would be 1978 before the BMW turbo concept could
  achieve more success. The German Racing Championship
  regulations were opened up to allow turbo engines, albeit
  restricted to 1.42 litres. Harald Ertl's BMW 320 Turbo
  still produced a massive 550bhp however, and took the
  championship in its very first year.

  It was this engine that made BMW first think about Formula
  1. The normally-aspirated three litre Cosworth engines
  that dominated F1 at the time produced just 500bhp. In
  1980 this idea became a serious project. A contract was
  signed with Brabham, the team supplied BMW with a test car
  and the development was intensified.

  "We were travelling week-by-week from one track to the
  next", Rosche says. "We had plenty of power right from the
  start. But the driveability and the reaction of the engine
  had to be improved."

  Again BMW would pioneer the use of new technology during
  the F1 test programme, using telemetry to improve
  motorsport performance for the first time. At this point
  electronic memory had not been created, so the reams of
  data were printed out on paper. Only when a clever
  electronic engineer developed the first electronic data
  store were mountains of paper made a thing of the past.

  Another innovation duly followed. Electronic engine
  management was designed to cure the engine of its bad
  habits and warn of impending problems. "A turbo engine
  being run on poor fuel, or with too much turbo pressure
  will soon start to struggle, and then it won't survive
  much longer," explains Rosche.

  The first analogue control unit was an instant improvement
  over the existing technology, but the real breakthrough
  came when electronics company Bosch supplied BMW with a
  digital unit in 1981.

  The turbocharged BMW F1 engine was finally ready to race
  at the start of 1982. There were still plenty of problems
  hampering the project however, and its future was put into
  question when reigning champion Nelson Piquet's Brabham
  BMW failed to qualify for the US Grand Prix in Detroit.

  At the next grand prix in Montreal, Brabham designer
  Gordon Murray wanted to abandon the turbo project. A
  compromise was found: Piquet would continue with the BMW
  turbo but his team-mate Riccardo Patrese would use the
  normally-aspirated Cosworth. But the BMW was plagued by a
  misfire throughout Friday and Saturday. Bernie Ecclestone,
  then the boss of Brabham, demanded that Piquet's car was
  also fitted with the Cosworth. BMW race director Dieter St
  appert reacted in uncompromising style, threatening to
  cancel the whole project if Ecclestone carried out his
  threat. Ecclestone gave in, but during the Sunday warm-up
  Piquet's engine continued to misfire. "So we checked the
  engine, changed the complete electronics, and won the
  race," recalls Rosche. "But we never really found out what
  had gone wrong before and why it worked during the race."

  At the end of the turbo era, there was a group at BMW that
  wanted to keep on racing in Formula 1. The group was
  headed by Paul Rosche and a member of the board, Dr
  Wolfgang Reitzle. The F1 department was reduced, but a
  group of 20 men called the 'E-90-Team' got the permission
  to design a V12 engine conforming to the new 3.5-litre
  regulations. Although it gave permission for the group to
  carry out the work, the board still did not show great
  interest, and the engine was used as a test-bed for new
  developments.

  The next major racing engine project was the BMW M3, which
  was to race in series such as the German Touring Car
  Championship (DTM). This project proved to be a huge
  success. The car won championships around the world and
  collected more than 50 titles. At the end of 1992 BMW
  developed the BMW 320i for the new class two Super Touring
  regulations. The car won 29 championship titles around the
  world.

  The 12-cylinder engine for the McLaren F1 sportscar was
  also developed under the supervision of Paul Rosche. This
  engine proved extraordinarily successful. It had such
  reliability that most of the McLaren F1 GTRs entered in
  the FIA GT Championship only needed a single engine change
  during a complete season.

  "At the beginning, we had planned to use our production
  V12 with a four valve head," said Rosche. "But during the
  course of the development it became a complete new engine,
  only the distance of the cylinders stayed the same. This
  engine wasn't supposed to be a race engine, that's why it
  had to stand tough reliability tests in the development
  phase. The power of the engine was heavily reduced by an
  air restrictor. Without the air restrictor, the engine
  would have produced some 800bhp for sure. But then it
  wouldn't have been able to survive so long."

  At the same time the Motorsport GmbH became the M GmbH,
  which did not do much with the motorsport activities of
  BMW. M GmbH was occupied with developing the sports
  production models of BMW.

  Then in 1995, a new motorsport company was founded -
  Motorsport Limited. Paul Rosche, then the managing
  director of the M GmbH, got the task of running the new
  company. Two years later, a new BMW Formula 1 project was
  launched.

  "This meant that I had to solve three different tasks at
  the same time," said Rosche. "The formation of Motorsport
  Ltd, the design of a new F1 engine and the employment of
  the new personnel that we needed."

  Rosche did almost all the interviews himself and nearly
  all the staff he employed were signed from other BMW
  departments. Only 20 of the new Motorsport Ltd employees
  were from outside the marque, and these newcomers all
  brought with them fresh F1 experience and knowledge.

  Rather than entering a full works team and designing both
  the car and engine in-house, BMW opted to become an engine
  partner with the WilliamsF1 team. The new engine first hit
  the track in 1999 and made its race debut at the start of
  2000.

  The goal for the first year was simply to finish races and
  gather information. Despite these cautious objectives, the
  new BMW WilliamsF1 Team finished on the podium in its
  first race - one of the most successful debuts made by a
  manufacturer in grand prix history. By the end of the
  season, the team had clinched third place in the
  constructors' championship.

Bonnet Didier
  Cars - Debora LMP2000-BMW
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Carsport Holland
  Cars - Chrysler Viper GTS-R
  Web Site - http://www.hezemans.nl/GT2001/NL/index.htm
  Unfortunately, this site is entirely in Dutch... a
  language I cannot read :-(

Chamberlain Engineering
  Cars - Chrysler Viper GTS-R
  Web Site - http://www.chamberlain.cc/history.htm
  Hugh Chamberlain, a former policeman in the UK, spent six
  years working for the Radial motor component manufacturing
  company before forming Chamberlain Engineering in 1972.
  The company concentrated on repairing and servicing
  commercial engines and raced a Jaguar XK120 for fun.
  Later Hugh bought a Cooper-Jaguar, then a Mallock U2 Mk6,
  which he raced until 1982.

  As a result of the Clubman's racing, Chamberlain
  Engineering, as the team was known until 1999, initially
  began preparing racecars for young men in the UK like Will
  Hoy, Creighton Brown and Nick Adams each of whom went on
  to successful careers in motorsport.

  But Hugh found it increasingly difficult to both compete
  and run a race team and so concentrated his efforts on
  running the team.

  Since 1985 the team has competed in a number of endurance
  formulas, winning 2 World Championships, the C2 class Le
  Mans 24 hour race and nine National Championships.

  Since 1999, Jack Cunningham has been Chief Executive, and
  with the Team under new ownership and with a new
  management team in place Hugh Chamberlain subsequently
  left the company.

  The Team's management and technical expertise has been
  strengthened considerably with new appointments being made
  at all levels.  The Team has prospered as a result,
  participating successfully in major international
  endurance events around the world.

  The Team were runners-up in the 1999 FIA GT Championship,
  the first non-manufacturer Team at Daytona in 2000 and, in
  2001, were selected to test and race the MG EX257 cars at
  Le Mans and other events on behalf of the manufacturer for
  two seasons.

  With the organisation now having been involved in motor
  racing for over 25 years, it is acknowledged as one of the
  world's most experienced sports car and GT racing teams.

Corvette Racing
  Cars - Chevrolet Corvette C5-R
  Web Site - http://www.corvetteracing.net/race_history/
             race_history_set.htm
  Corvette Racing's latest addition to its stable, the
  Corvette C5-R, continues a decade long tradition of
  exciting Corvette road racers. Under the guiding hand of
  engineering genius Zora Arkus-Duntov, Chevrolet first
  thrust its sports car into competition in 1956.

  In 1960 a trio of Corvettes was brought to Le Mans by team
  owner Brigs Cunningham. With a remarkable demonstration of
  endurance and speed, the #3 car, driven by John Fitch and
  Bob Grossman, finished eighth overall, well ahead of many
  of the finest sports and all-out racing cars of the era.

  The third-generation Corvette, introduced in 1968,
  continued the winning ways of its predecessors. In fact,
  Corvettes were totally dominant in the late 60's and 70's,
  winning sixteen SCCA national A-and B-Production titles
  and finishing as high as third overall at both Daytona and
  Sebring.

  In the Late 70's and early 80's Corvettes went Trans-Am
  racing and though the competition was formidable,
  Corvettes continued to finish in front. In addition to
  racing in production classes as it had done for decades, a
  more exotic Corvette-based car took to the track in the
  late 80's. The incredible IMSA GTP Corvettes reached
  speeds well in excess of 200 mph by virtue of their 1200
  horsepower, turbocharged Chevrolet engines and thrilled
  fans from coast to coast.

  In the early 90's Corvettes were again provided an
  opportunity to race against and defeat some of the world's
  most sophisticated and most expensive cars in the
  Bridgestone Potenza Super Car Series. Corvette once again
  set new marks for speed and durability.

  For 2001 Chevrolet introduced the new ZO6, a production
  vehicle with 385-hp and 385-ft.lbs. of torque that's ready
  for the racetrack. Based on the former hardtop model
  already the lightest, stiffest and quickest corvette- it
  is a car aimed directly at the diehard performance
  enthusiasts at the upper end of the high-performance
  market.

Courage Competition
  Cars - Courage C 52
  Web Site - http://www.sportscarchampionship.com/cgi-bin
             entrantsdetails.cgi?category=teams&ID
             Courage+Competition
  Between 1982 et 2001, Courage has left his mark on the
     history of the Le Mans 24 Hours, with notably :
  - The record number of entries by a French car maker (47)
  - Two winner stands: 3rd in 1987, 2nd in 1995.
  His cars have crossed the finish line twenty-two times,
     thirteen times ranked in the top ten. An overview of
     the team's racing highlights:
  1982 The first Courage-Ford Cosworth entered in Le Mans.
  1985 First year with a Porsche engine.
  1987 First winner's stand in Le Mans (3rd place of C 20
       Porsche).
  1989 Le Mans : win in the C2 category, after 20 years of
       British supremacy. Entry in the Protoype Sport
       Championship
  1990 Entry in the Protoype Sport Championship
  1991 Entry in the Protoype Sport Championship
  1992 Entry in the Daytona 24 Hours. Le Mans : 6th place.
  1994 Le Mans : pole position and 7th place.
  1995 Courage officially represents Porsche in Le Mans, and
       registers his best result to date : 2nd (1er in
       prototype).
  1996 Entry in the Daytona 24 Hours. Le Mans : 7th
       Start of customer program.
  1997 Entry in the ISRS championship. 2 pole positions and
       1 win.Le Mans : 4th (2nd prototype).
  1998 Nissan partnership (engines)
  1999 Le Mans : 3 Courage chassis on the starting line and
       3 at the finish : 6th
       8th (only Nissan mechanics to finish), and 9th .
  2000 Le Mans : 4th place of a Courage Peugeot (Pescarolo
       Sport)
  2001 3 Courage chassis entered in Le Mans (2 Pescarolo
       Sport, 1 SMG).
       Pescarolo-Sport wins at Estoril and Magny-Cours, 2nd
       place in Nürburgring ( FIA championship).
  2002 FIA Sportscar Championship and Le Mans 24 Hours.

Freisinger Motorsport
  Cars - Porsche 911 GT2
  Web Site - http://www.superracingweekends.com/
             fiagtmg2002/Teams/FreisingerMotorsport.htm
  1993 2nd in the Nürburgring 24 Hours
  1994 BPR GT Series; 2nd at Paul Ricard
  1995 Le Mans with Porsche 993 biturbo, 19th
  1996 BPR GT Series
  1997 FIA GT Championship
  1998 GTR series, 2 wins. GT2 class winner at Petit Le
       Mans.
  1999 2nd at 12 Hours of Sebring; winner of the Suzuka
       1000km; 3rd and 1st Porsche in FIA GT Championships,
       including 3rd at Monza
  2000 4th in FIA GT Championship Teams Classification:
       winner at the Lausitzring, 2nd at Monza. 2nd in ELMS
       at Silverstone and 1000km Suzuka
  2001 3rd overall at Rolex 24 Daytona. 2nd, 24 Hours of Le
       Mans, LM GT; 3rd, FIA GT Championship, N-GT
       Classification - second at Spa, Austria, Nürburgring
       and Zolder

GTC Competition
  Cars - LMGTP
  Web Site - http://www.gtc-mirage.com/NewFiles/intro.html
  Upon the request of the Ferrari Factory, Grand Touring
  Cars, Inc. (GTC, Inc.) was first incorporated in Chicago,
  Illinois in 1972, by Harley E. Cluxton III, who became the
  youngest exclusive Authorized Ferrari Dealer in the United
  States. It relocated to Phoenix, Arizona in 1973, and the
  dealership has been in Scottsdale, Arizona ever since.
  GTC, Inc. was awarded the Lamborghini importership for the
  Western United States from 1973 through 1977.

  In late 1975 John Wyer, the guru of LeMans (with World
  Championships for Aston Martin, Porsche, Ford, and Mirage)
  approached Mr. Cluxton as to whether he would be
  interested in purchasing his Mirage Team from the Gulf Oil
  Corporation in Pittsburgh. Mr. Cluxton had competed
  against John while he was racing for Ferrari and had
  struck up a close friendship with both John and his
  drivers. Mr. Cluxton purchased the Mirage Team from Gulf
  in early 1976. By June of 1976, he had become a team
  owner, hired John as a consultant, retired from driving,
  hired drivers, found the sponsorship and achieved team
  finishes of 2nd and 5th behind the factory 936 Porsche!

  Mr. Cluxton directed the extremely successful GTC-Mirage
  two-car team from 1976-1982 in the F.I.A. World Sportscar
  Championship. In 1982, Mario and Michael Andretti, sixth
  on the grid out of 58 cars, the only American owned,
  American manufactured and American driven Group C car was
  excluded 20 minutes before the start of the race for a 2
  centimeter infraction. The Mirage team has not been back
  to Le Mans since. But that is not to say GTC has been
  dormant in the world racing arena. Quite the opposite.

  GTC developed and manufactured 2.65 c.i. turbo charged
  Indy motors for Renault. We continue to represent,
  unabated from 1978, Formula 1 drivers, CART drivers and
  selected Sportscar drivers in sponsorship, legal and
  management matters. We have and continue to provide these
  services to major Formula 1 teams, CART teams,
  manufactures and Fortune 500 corporations.

Jaguar
  Cars - Jaguar XJR9 LM
  Web Site - http://www.jaguar-racing.com/
  Jaguar Racing extends a long and distinguished motorsport
  tradition with its entry into the 2002 Formula One World
  Championship. The company has been involved in motorsport
  since it was founded in 1922. Seven times it has won the
  world's toughest endurance race at Le Mans, been World
  Sports Car Champions three times and in 1956 won both Le
  Mans and the Monte Carlo Rally in the same year.

  The roll call of drivers who have raced Jaguars during the
  past 50 years reads like a Who's Who of motorsport. In the
  Fifties, Mike Hawthorn, Paul Frere, Duncan Hamilton and
  Stirling Moss were regulars with the Jaguar team. Jackie
  Stewart (and brother Jimmy), Sir Jack Brabham, Briggs
  Cuningham and Graham Hill all drove Jaguars during
  successful racing careers. In more recent times, Martin
  Brundle, Tom Walkinshaw, Derek Warwick, Patrick Tambay,
  John Watson, Eddie Cheever and Jan Lammers all drove for
  Jaguar.

  The lessons learned on the race tracks will benefit the
  Company's customers around the world as Jaguar prepares to
  expand its model range. This will extend the appeal of the
  marque to new sectors of the premium car market.

JMB Competition
  Cars - LMP
  Web Site - http://www.superracingweekends.com/
             FIAGTmg/Teams/JMBCompetition.htm
   1997 FIAGT Championship and 24 Hours of Le Mans with a
        Porsche 911 GT1
   1998 winner of the Sports Racing World Cup with Emmanuel
        Collard and Vincenzo Sospiri, in a Ferrari 333 SP,
        and the 24 Hours of Le Mans
   1999 winner of the Sports Racing World Cup with Emmanuel
        Collard and Vincenzo Sospiri, in a Ferrari 333 SP,
        and the 24 Hours of Le Mans
   2000 Winner of the Sports Racing World Cup with David
        Terrien and Christian Pescatori, in a Ferrari 333
        SP; selected rounds of the FIA GT Championship with
        two Ferrari Modena 360s; 2nd in the N-GT category of
        the 6 Hours of Vallelunga with a Ferrari Modena 360
   2001 FIA N-GT Champions, 5 wins; Champion of the FFSA
        category in the FFSA French GT Championship; winner
        of the N-GT category of the Vallelunga 6 Hours with
        a Ferrari Modena 360

Joest Racing
  Cars - LMP
  Web Site - http://www.joest-racing.de/
  Reinhold Joest's eyes are gleaming when he reports from
  the 24 hours of Le Mans. "For me, Le Mans is the biggest
  challenge existing in motorsports." He knows what he is
  talking about: Scarcely anybody knows the perfidies of the
  French classic long-distance race as well as him. Joest
  has experienced the race as driver and as a team owner.

  The numerous victories are the results of meticulous
  preparations. "Everyone asks for the mystery of Joest
  Racing", says Reinhold Joest. "But there is no mystery.
  Everything that counts are perfect preparations, ideal
  manpower planning and the right strategy. The basic
  requirement is a steady car. The team has to work
  perfectly, the drivers must not make mistakes."

  In the years 1996 and 1997 everything worked right in the
  Joest Racing team: With an open Porsche sports car
  prototype, the Joest team managed to take the checkered
  flag twice in a row. Thus being the second 1-2 victory
  after the years 1984 and 1985 - at this time with the
  Porsche 956.

  The team's strength is based on a long-lasting experience.
  The bulk of the crew, which attended the group C-Porsche
  cars in the 80ies, is still on board. "The core crew is
  the same", proudly says Reinhold Joest, who is looking
  back on over 20 years as a race driver. "For this reason
  the important know-how and many rules of thumb get stuck
  in the team.

Johansson Matthews Racing
  Cars - Reynard 2KQ-Judd
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Konrad Motorsport
  Cars - GT2
         Lola B2K10-Ford
         Porsche 911 GT2
  Web Site - http://www.konradmotorsport.com/
  Konrad Motorsport was founded by Franz Konrad in 1976
  and is now based in Verl, Germany, where Konrad and his
  engineers, mechanics, and administrative staffs oversee
  the production of high-class racecars, including Porsche,
  Lamborghini, Lola, and Saleen which are prepared for
  numerous racing series.

Kremer Racing
  Cars - LMP
  Web Site - http://www.kremer-racing.net/
  2000 - Participant at the European Le Mans Series and the
         Sportsracing Worldcup with the Lola B98/K2000 ,
         Winner of the last World-Cup-Race in Kyalami with
         Gary Formato and Ralf Kelleners
  1999 - Participant at the International Sports Racing
         Series (ISRS), 30 years Le Mans with the Lola
         B98/10 with Roush-Ford-Power
  1998 - 2nd Sportsprototype in Le Mans (12.th overall)
         Participant at the ISRS with the K8 Sypder
  1997 - Overall-Winner of the 1000km Monza with the Kremer
         Spyder K8. Participant at the FIA-GT-Championship
         with Porsche GT1 and GT2
  1996 - Participant at the 24h Le Mans & the BPR-Series,
         Winner of the 4h of Le Mans, international GT-Race
         of Shah Alam & the Oldtimer Grand Prix at the
         Nürburgring
  1995 - Winner of the 24h of Daytona with the Kreme
         Porsche Spyder K8 (Jürgen Lässig, Christophe
         Bouchut, Giovanni Lavaggi & Marco Werner), Porsche-
         Works supported participation at the 24h  Le Mans
         (K8) : 6th overall. Participant at the BPR
         Championship  with Porsche 911 GT2
  1994 - Kremer Racing is Honda-Worksteam, Vice-Champion in
         the ADAC-GT-Cup, 25 years of Kremer Racing in Le
         Mans: 3 Honda NSX GT in the team & at the finish
         line! Additional 6.th overall with Kremer Porsche
         Spyder K8
  1993 - Interserie-Champion with Giovanni Lavaggi,
         Interserie Vice Champion with Thomas Saldana, both
         on Kremer Porsche K7
  1992 - Interserie-Champion with Manuel Reuter on Kremer
         Porsche Spider K7, Vice-Champion in the Porsche Cup
  1991 - Best Porsche-team in the Group C Sportscar
         Championship
  1990 - Winner of Porsche-Cup & Interserie Champion with
         Bernd Schneider, 6.th in the Group C Championship\
  1989 - 2.nd in Porsche-Cup and  in Interserie, 3.rd in
         Japanese Endurance-championship, 8.th in the Group
         C Championship
  1988 - 3.rd in Porsche-Cup and Interserie, 3.rd in
         Japanese Endurance-championship,  8.th in the Group
         C Championship, Mario and Michael Andretti are
         Kremer-Racing Team-pilots
  1987 - Winner of Porsche Cup with Volker Weidler, 6.th in
         the Group C Championship, 5th. in Super-Cup, 4.th
         in Interserie, 7th in All Japan Sportscar
         Championship
  1986 - Participation at the Group C Sportscar World
         Championship, Supercup & Interserie
  1985 - Winner of 1000km in Monza (Group C) and 200 Meiles
         of Norisring
  1984 - Winner of the 200 Meiles of Norisring with Manfred
         Winkelhock
  1983 - With Alan Jones, Mario Andretti and Keke Rosberg 3
         former F1-Champions as Kremer-Team-drivers.  Mario
         and Mike Andretti, & Phillipe Alliot gain a 3rd
         overall at Le Mans
  1982 - Vice-Champion in the german Racecar-Championship
  1981 - Winner of Porsche-Cup with Bob Wollek, Vice
         Champion and best Porsche in the german Racecar
         Championship
  1980 - A customer- Kremer Porsche 935 K3 winns IMSA
         championship and Porsche Cup
  1979 - Overall-Winner of the 24 hours of Le Mans with
         Kremer Porsche K3 and  Klaus Ludwig, Bill & Don
         Whittington, Winner of the german Racecar
         Championship and Porsche-Cup with Klaus Ludwig
  1978 - Winner of Porsche-Cup with Bob Wollek, Krremer
         helps Porsche to win World Championship for makes,
         Group 5 -class winner in Le Mans with Porsche 935
         and the drivers Jim Busby, Rick Knoop and Chris
         Cord.
  1977 - Winner of Porsche-Cups with Bob Wollek, Vice
         Champion of german Racesportchampionship, Group 4
         class-win in Le Mans with Porsche 934 and  Bob
         Wollek, Phillipe Gurdjian and "Steve"
  1976 - Winner of Porsche Cup with Bob Wollek, best
         Porsche-team of german Racesportchampionship
  1975 - Best Porsche-team of german Racesportchampionship
  1974 - Winner of Porsche-Cup and GT-Europe-championship
         with John Fitzpatrick
  1973 - Winner of Porsche-Cup and GT-Europe-championship
         with Clemens Schickendanz
  1972 - Winner of Porsche-Cup and GT-Europe-championship
         with John Fitzpatrick
  1971 - Winner of Porsche-Cup with Erwin Kremer, winner in
         5. International 1000km-Races
  1970 - GT-Winner in the  3000ccm-class with Erwin Kremer
         and Nicolas Koob on Porsche 911S at the 24h of Le
         Mans
  1969 - Helped to win the GT-Worldcup for Porsche
  1968 - Winner of Europe-Touringcar-championship with Erwin
         Kremer on Porsche

La Filiere ELF
  Cars - Courage C 36
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Lancia
  Car: Lancia LC2
  Web Site - http://www.lancia.com/
  History section not currently online

Larbre Competition
  Cars - GT2
  Web Site - http://www.larbre-competition.com/
  Founded in 1998 by Jack Leconte, Leconte was able to
  create and develop the Larbre Competition team even while
  overseeing his own transport and logistic company.  In
  2000, Leconte decided to devote himself full-time to auto
  racing to secure the position of the team as a major
  player in motorsport.

Mopar Team Oreca
  Cars - Reynard 2KQ-Mopar
  Web Site - http://www.orecaracing.com/
  No history available on this French-language site

Multimatic Motorsports
  Cars - Lola B2K40-Nissan
  Web Site - http://www.multimatic.com/
  Multimatic Motorsports has enjoyed significant success
  since its inception in 1992. Two Canadian national
  championships, strong debuts in all new endeavours and a
  continuous string of podium finishes has established
  Multimatic Motorsports as a leading North American racing
  organization.

  Scott Maxwell is the team's lead driver and brings a
  wealth of motor racing experience, in a wide range of
  classes and formulae, to the organization. Scott was part
  of the group that conceived Multimatic Motorsports and he
  continues to play a prominent role in the planning and
  organization of the team. He is also a key member of
  Multimatic's ride and handling development organization
  that offers services to the global automotive industry.

Newcastle Lister Storm
  Cars - Lister Storm GTL
  Web Site - http://www.listerstorm.com/
  The first Lister sports racer was designed in 1954 by
  Brian Lister,and the cars competed against Jaguar D-types
  and Aston Martins throughout the 1950's. The '54 season
  initially featured a Lister MG, which scored five wins and
  eight second places in the hands of Archie Scott-Brown.
  This was followed in June of that year by the Lister
  Bristol, which won its class in the supporting race to the
  British Grand Prix ahead of the works Jaguars and Aston
  Martins. A further 13 victories were recorded that year.

  Scott-Brown went on to dominate the British sports-racing
  car season in 1957, winning 11 out of 14 races in total
  and the prestigious British Empire Trophy Race, aboard a
  Lister Jaguar. Just to underline its place in the history
  books, Archie's Lister Jaguar also notched up many lap
  records on his successful rampage.

  As a result of this success Brian Lister attracted
  customer orders for an improved 1958 version of the car,
  which conformed to international regulations; this car was
  to be known as the 'Knobbly' Lister-Jaguar (a Centenary
  Edition of this car was built to celebrate 100 years of
  the Lister company in a joint venture between Brian and
  current Lister helmsman, Laurence Pearce, in 1990).More
  success followed with Stirling Moss winning the support
  race for the British Grand Prix and Lister Chevrolets
  dominating the American sportscar scene. This year also
  marked the debut of Lister Jaguar at Le Mans, where two
  cars competed in the French classic and one placed 15th.

  Lister Jaguar returned to Le Mans a year later, again with
  a two car squad. Glory was not to come their way, however,
  as both cars retired with engine problems. The lead car
  showed that the British racing combination had unfinished
  business at Le Mans, however, as it was running in fourth
  place at the time of its retirement.

  From 1959 until the early 1980's, Lister Cars retired from
  competitive racing. However, the name was revived
  following the involvement of engineer Laurence Pearce and
  a new car was designed to take part in a series of races
  for Jaguar sports cars known as the Lister Challenge.
  During this decade Laurence, in association with Brian
  Lister, was responsible for the rebirth of the company as
  a producer of performance road cars. This then led to the
  design in 1991 of an all-new supercar, as opposed to the
  Jaguar conversions that had previously been produced under
  the Lister name; the Storm.

  With the Storm road car being launched in 1993, Laurence
  and Lister then had the perfect machine to rekindle the
  works Lister Cars racing team of the 1950's. The emergence
  of GT racing as the world's top sportscar arena over the
  past few years had provided ideal timing for a Lister
  Storm GT1 contender to return to the international
  competition stage. Now Lister has the experience of three
  Le Mans 24 Hours, three Daytona 24 Hours, selected races
  in the 1996 BPR International GT Series where the car
  always ran in a podium position, the 1997 and 1998 BRDC
  Privilege Insurance GT Championships (finishing second in
  the GT1 Championship in 1998), the American SportsCar
  racing series and the FIA Global GT Championship.

  In 1999 the Storm won both classes of the Privilege
  Insurance GT Championships with Julian Bailey and Jamie
  Campbell-Walter in the GT1 car and David Warnock in the
  GT2 car. Julian Bailey and Jamie Campbell-Walter also won
  the Royal Automobile Club Tourist Trophy and the Oulton
  Park Gold Cup. Julian and Jamie won seven out of the
  eleven British rounds, David Warnock won all six races
  entered in the Lister Storm GT2. The Storm GT2 also
  competed in four rounds of the FIA Championship achieving
  2 pole positions and one 2nd position on the grid,
  finishing 2nd at Donington, 3rd at Zolder and 4th at
  Hockenheim. Thorkilld Thyrring won the Danish Grand Prix
  in a Lister Storm and Peter Hardman and Nicolaus Springer
  came 2nd in the final two races of the Spanish GT
  Championship.

Nissan Motorsports
  Cars - Nissan R390, Nissan R391
  Web Site - http://www.nismo.co.jp/
  Unfortunately, this site is entirely in Japanese... a
  language I cannot read :-(

Panoz Motorsports
  Cars - Panoz Esperante GTR
         Panoz LMP Spyder
         Panoz LMP-1
         Panoz LMP07
  Web Site - http://www.panozmotorsports.com/
  1997
     Formed by entrepreneurial businessman, Donald E Panoz,
     and based in Braselton, Georgia alongside the Road
     Atlanta track.

     Four Panoz GTR-1 cars were designed and developed for
     the company by Reynard Motorsport's special projects
     division, RSVP. One was run in the Professional Sports
     Car Series by Panoz, and three were represented in the
     FIA GT Championship by two teams - the French DAMS and
     British DPR teams. The front-engined cars with the
     rumbling 6.0 liter Ford V8 engines attracted a great
     deal of attention.

     Victory at Road Atlanta in the team's second ever race,
     2nd place overall in the Manufacturers' points
     standings in the US PRSCC.

     First time at the Le Mans 24 Hour race - retired due to
     mechanical failure after 17 hours while running in the
     top ten.

  1998
     Two GTR-1s entered in the two leading US sports car
     series and one in the FIA GT Championship, run by DAMS.

     Multiple class victories and winners of the Team and
     Drivers Championship titles in the Professional Sports
     Car series.

     At the pre-qualifying sessions for the Le Mans 24
     Hours, an electric-hybrid version of the GTR-1 - the
     Panoz Q9 - was entered. Unfortunately the car was not
     among those to line up on the grid for the race itself.

     First running of the 10-hour Petit Le Mans event at
     Road Atlanta. Q9 was entered with the two factory GTR
     1s and finished 2nd in the GT1 class - the first
     electric hybrid vehicle to race in an international
     event.

  1999
     The Panoz LMP-1 Roadster S, new open-cockpit cars, run
     in the American Le Mans Series - a new racing series
     founded by Don Panoz using ACO (Le Mans) regulations.

     Victories at Mosport Park, Portland and the Petit Le
     Mans races.

     Winners of the Teams and Manufacturers' Championship
     titles, David Brabham and Eric Bernard 2nd in Drivers'
     points standings.

  2000
     Using an evolution version of the LMP-1 Roadster S, the
     team continue in the American Le Mans Series powered by
     Elan Power 6L8 engines, built and prepared by Panoz's
     own engine company, Elan Power Products. Panoz chassis
     have also been sold as customer cars for entry at the
     Le Mans 24 Hour race and the Sportsracing World Cup
     Series.

     Victory at the Nurburgring in Germany, 3rd place in the
     Teams and Manufacturers Championships.

  2001
     Introduction at the beginning of the year of the all
     new Panoz LMP 07 prototype powered by the Panoz V8 4
     liter engine. After six months of technical troubles
     and unreliability, the decision was taken after the 24
     Hours of Le Mans in June to re-introduce the 2000 LMP-1
     Roadster. Since that time, the team took two victories,
     plus a 2nd and 3rd placing.

Paul Belmondo Racing
  Cars - Chrysler Viper GTS-R
  Web Site - http://www.paul-belmondo-racing.com/
  Web site currently under reconstruction

Pescarolo Sport
  Cars - Courage C 52-Peugeot
  Web Site - http://www.pescarolo.com/
  Web site does not contain historical information on the
     team

Peugeot Talbot Sport
  Cars - Peugeot 905
  Web Site - http://www.peugeot-avenue.com/
  A generalist manufacturer, Peugeot has always been
  involved in motor racing and has for the last fifteen
  years or so demonstrated the importance of high level
  sport for its image.

  Crowned World Rally Champion twice, in 1985 and 1986, with
  the 205 Turbo 16, the Lion trademark dominated long
  distance rallying from 1987 to 1990.

  Turning to the motor racing circuits, Peugeot won the Le
  Mans 24 hours in 1992 and 1993, and was crowned World
  Champion in the 1992 Sports Car championships with the
  905. Entering F1 in 1993 as an engine manufacturer,
  Peugeot partnered McLaren, Jordan then Prost Grand Prix.
  Supplying an engine considered to be one of the best in
  F1, Peugeot did not however obtain the results it had
  hoped for and withdrew from F1 in 2000, directing its
  efforts to running the totally new 206 WRC in the World
  Rally Championship, with which it scooped the dual crown
  of World Champion Constructor and Driver in 2000, its
  first full year of competition.

Pilot Racing
  Cars - LMP
  Web Site - http://www.pilotrc.ee/
  Unfortunately, this site is entirely in a Scandinavian
     language I cannot read :-(

Riley & Scott Europe
  Cars - Riley & Scott MKIII S2
  Web Site - http://www.rileyscott.com/
  Riley & Scott was founded in May 1990 with a contract for
  a single Trans-Am chassis. Today, more than seventy-five
  complete racing cars have been delivered to loyal
  customers. It began with George Robinson, a Texas-based
  businessman/driver who bought the first Mk I Trans-am
  chassis, and also bought the first Hunter (the Mk II), and
  a Mk III and a Mk III C, to earn a place in the customer
  Hall of Fame.

  General Motors began its long involvement with R&S by
  purchasing Mk I chassis nos. 2, 3 and 5. In its first
  season, the Mk I began its domination with the first of
  three successive championships. Scott Sharp won in 1991
  and 1993; Jack Baldwin won in 1992. Between 1991 and 1997,
  40 of the Mk I chassis were built and sold, and the
  company was established as a brand in major professional
  road racing.

  R&S began racing as a company in 1996. Before that, the
  company supported its customers in Trans-Am and World
  Sports Car, but did not race its own products.

  That changed when GM tapped R&S to introduce its Aurora
  4.0 L engine to World Sports Car competition. In 1995, the
  R&S MK III began a hugely successful run that continues
  today. The first customer was Dyson Racing, which used
  Ford power.

  In February 1996, R&S and Doyle Racing debuted for GM at
  the "Rolex 24 at Daytona" in spectacular fashion. Drivers
  Wayne Taylor, Jim Pace and Scott Sharp brought home Mk III
  chassis no. 004 first in the closest race ever at Daytona.
  After 24 hours, Wayne brought the car home less than one
  minute in front of a Ferrari 333 SP driven by Max Papis.

  At the 1996 Twelve Hours of Sebring a month later, the
  team steamrollered to its second straight endurance
  classic win. Wayne Taylor, Jim Pace, and endurance maestro
  Eric van de Poele combined for the win. Competing against
  the Ferraris and a number of customer Mk IIIs, the factory
  effort won again at Texas World Speedway on May 5th. After
  a third-place at Watkins Glen, the team flew to France for
  the 24 hours of Lemans with high hopes. These were brought
  to earth by a gearbox failure in the 14th hour.

  The team returned to the US and won again that year at
  Sears Point. Wayne Taylor finished 1996 as the IMSA World
  Champion sports car driver. Between the Dyson team and the
  factory effort, R&S Mk IIIs won 7 of the 10 races for the
  championship.

  In 1997, the factory effort returned as a two-car team.
  Peruvian ace Eduardo Dibos had purchased chassis no. 006,
  and R&S ran that car and the Doyle Racing entry. The
  season was a disappointment however, as the Aurora motors
  that had been so reliable the year before suddenly began
  to experience mechanical failures. At Daytona, the
  defending champion had a three-lap lead at 3 a.m. when the
  motor self destructed (the Dibos car finished third in the
  race, which was won by Dyson Racing's Mk III). In the
  eleven-round championship, the team's best finish was a
  second at Pikes Peak International Raceway in September.

  As the success of the Mk I attracted attention, other
  opportunities arose. Long-time sports car team owner Rob
  Dyson asked R&S to improve his Spice/Ferrari WSC car in
  1994. The experience gave him the confidence to order two
  of the Mk III WSC prototypes Bob Riley was ready to
  design.

  Ready because WSC was the perfect opportunity for the
  company. Created as a reaction to the collapse of the IMSA
  GTP class when manufacturers (Nissan, Toyota, Jaguar)
  determined GTP no longer met their marketing goals, WSC
  was designed to make prototype sports car competition
  affordable for "privateer" entrants like Dyson Racing.

  The car debuted in the Rolex 24 at Daytona in February
  1995. After DNFs at Daytona and Sebring, it began a string
  of successes against the Ferrari 333 SP and other rivals
  that continues even today. From round 3 of the IMSA
  championship at Road Atlanta to the season finale at New
  Orleans, a Dyson Mk III won 5 of the 8 races and finished
  on the podium in every race.

  Following the factory team's win at Daytona in 1996, the
  Dyson team won the race in 1997, and followed that with a
  second at Sebring. The Dyson team won four of the eight
  rounds of the IMSA series and the team and driver's
  championship (Butch Leitzinger) that year.

  In 1998, six Mk IIIs took the green at Daytona, but the
  Ferrari 333SP scored its first and only 24 hour win in
  that event. Jim Matthews, Intersport, Transatlantic
  Racing, Support Net Racing, and BMW Team Rafanelli all
  competed in various events in Mk IIIs that year. The BMW
  Team Rafanelli entry won its first event, at Laguna Seca
  in October.

  Despite the increased competition, the Dyson Team remained
  dominant, winning the Team and Driver's Championships
  (Butch Leitzinger, again) in the USRRC Can-Am series.

  A WSC series known as the ISRS (International Sports
  Racing Series) began in 1998, and grew into the FIA Sports
  Car Championship by 2001. Bill Riley had established Riley
  & Scott Europe in 1998 to service the growing number of
  customers in that series. As many as four R&S Mk IIIs
  started ISRS events that year, fielded by Solution F,
  Target 24, and BMW Team Rafanelli.

  After the Rafanelli car secured the Mk III's first
  European pole in the 5th of eight rounds, the Solution F
  car, piloted by Gary Formato and Jerome Pollicand, won the
  final race of the year at Kylami in South Africa.

  In August 1997, the company introduced its first IRL
  chassis, the Mk V. Two of the cars raced in the final IRL
  event of 1997 at Las Vegas, driven by owner/driver Stan
  Wattles and Mike Shank for Neinhouse Racing. The winner of
  that event was Eliseo Salazar, who even then was in
  negotiations with R&S to race the Mk V in a factory effort
  in 1998.

  That team was sponsored by Reebok. R&S brought the shoe
  giant to the IRL in the League's first non-automotive
  primary sponsorship. The season reached its zenith on the
  morning of Pole Day, May 15, 1998. After a promising week
  of practice for the Memorial Day classic, Salazar was 5th
  quickest in the morning warm-up, with a realistic chance
  for the pole later that day.

  The afternoon brought disaster. Eliseo crashed hard in
  turn one on the first lap of what should have been a four
  lap qualifying run. Not seriously injured, Salazar
  returned to the track for practice in the backup car just
  hours later. But the damage was done, and the team's
  backup qualified weakly on Bump Day. At 5:43 PM that day,
  Billy Roe bumped Salazar from the field and the season was
  effectively over.

  At Dover in July, Salazar was severely injured in a
  practice crash. He recovered well and is still a force in
  the IRL today.

  After Reebok, the team found support from Brant
  Motorsports. The Brants were West Virginia-based aviation
  and real estate entrepreneurs with a background as NASCAR
  sponsors. They bought the team cars and motors after the
  1998 season in preparation for the 1999 campaign.

  1999 was more successful, in that driver Raul Boesel
  qualified for and finished 12th in the Indy 500 that year.

  When GM ended the Aurora program in 1997, two others were
  in the works. The Corvette C-5R began testing in 1998 and
  first raced at Daytona in 1999. Those cars were built by
  and have been raced very successfully by Pratt & Miller
  Engineering. However, R&S played a role in the development
  of the car and throughout its first season on the track.
  Bill Riley managed a hand-picked crew from R&S to race one
  of the two cars at Daytona, Sebring, and Petit Lemans that
  year.

  R&S was already building the first Cadillac Northstar LMP
  prototype in 1999. That car first tested in September 1999
  and debuted at Daytona in February of 2000. After
  exhibiting typical teething issues at Daytona, the cars
  struggled for results against the dominant Audis at
  Sebring and Lemans.

  In its fifth appearance in the Rolex 24 at Daytona, the Mk
  III reached a high water mark. Eight cars, with a total of
  thirty drivers, took the green. Two new teams, TRV
  Motorsport and Hybrid R&D, entered the race. At the
  checker, Dyson Racing's chassis 002 took the win, driven
  by Andy Wallace, Elliot Forbes-Robinson, and team owner
  Rob Dyson.

  American sports car racing remained splintered that year.
  The American Lemans Series and the USRRC both staged
  championships again. For the first and only time, one
  driver, Dyson's Elliot Forbes-Robinson, won both. The
  Dyson team also won the USRRC championship.

  Sebring in 1999 also set a record for Mk III
  participation. Eleven chassis started the race, which
  marked the debut of Robinson Racing as well as new entries
  from Nygmatech, Autoexe, and the Whittington Brothers.
  After 12 hours, Dyson's chassis 002 was second to the
  winning BMW by the closest margin in the long history of
  that race.

  Team Rafanelli also won that year, at Road Atlanta with
  drivers Eric van de Poele and Mimo Schiattarella. This
  time, the car was powered by a Judd engine.

  In Europe, four chassis competed regularly in the ISRS.
  Nicola Larini in the Target 24 Judd-powered posted the
  best finish, a second, after winning the pole at Pergusa.
  Three R&S also started at Lemans that year, but all
  retired early with motor problems.

  When GM ended the Aurora program in 1997, two others were
  in the works. The Corvette C-5R began testing in 1998 and
  first raced at Daytona in 1999. Those cars were built by
  and have been raced very successfully by Pratt & Miller
  Engineering. However, R&S played a role in the development
  of the car and throughout its first season on the track.
  Bill Riley managed a hand-picked crew from R&S to race one
  of the two cars at Daytona, Sebring, and Petit Lemans that
  year.

  R&S was already building the first Cadillac Northstar LMP
  prototype in 1999. That car first tested in September 1999
  and debuted at Daytona in February of 2000. After
  exhibiting typical teething issues at Daytona, the cars
  struggled for results against the dominant Audis at
  Sebring and Lemans. R&S and GM parted ways at the end of
  the year.

  Riley & Scott produced the Mk VIII IRL racing car in 1999
  and 2000. The first customer, Hemelgarn Racing, had
  finished 3d in the IRL championship in 1999 (the team,
  with driver Buddy Lazier, won the Indianapolis 500 in
  1996). Other Mk VII customers included Walker Racing (for
  driver Sarah Fisher) and Team Cheever (1998 Indy 500
  winner Eddie Cheever).

  At the opening race of the 2000 championship at Orlando,
  Buddy and Eddie were running 1-2 with 5 laps remaining. An
  historic debut was spoiled by backmarkers, as Robby Buhl
  expertly used traffic to pass both R&S cars.

  That misfortune was righted at the next race in Phoenix.
  After an unsatisfying qualifying effort, Hemelgarn elected
  to withdraw its primary car and start Buddy in the backup
  R&S from the very back of the grid. Buddy carved his way
  through the field to win the race, the first and only time
  an IRL driver has gone "worst to first".

  Although Buddy went on to win the championship, the R&S
  proved insufficiently developed for the Speedway. The
  teams shelved their R&S chassis, qualified for the 500 in
  other cars, and R&S was once more out of the IRL.

  The story of sports car racing in the last two years is
  simple - Audi. Audi's commitment, F1-level budgets, and
  the results that they have achieved have all been
  chronicled elsewhere.

  Among privateers, however, the Mk III has persisted and
  continued to win. 2000 brought the inaugural season of the
  Grand American Road Racing Association, founded on
  principles of lower-cost, more-equal competition.
  Dyson Racing (6) and Robinson Racing (1) each won Grand Am
  races in 2000. Dyson was team champion, and James Weaver
  was driver champion. Grand Am also established a
  manufacturer's championship, which was won by Riley &
  Scott.

  In 2001, the Mk III remained a vital part of the Grand Am
  series. Seven of the chassis were on the grid at Daytona,
  including chassis 001, an amazing six years after it first
  competed in that event. Although motor woes again dropped
  the cars from the overall podium at Daytona, they
  continued to dominate in the series.

  Dyson Racing won the team championship, and James Weaver
  and Butch Leitzinger won five races and finished first and
  second in the driver's championship. Riley & Scott won the
  manufacturer's championship over Lola and Ferrari.

  Heading into 2002, there is no doubt that Grand Am races
  will once again feature Riley & Scott Mk IIIs at the front
  of the grid and on the podium - joined this time by
  younger siblings.

  In both Grand Am and ALMS, the new Mk IIIC, which Dyson
  debuted at Sebring in 2001, will compete for race wins and
  championships. This site will chronicle the story of the
  Jim Matthews Racing/ Riley & Scott partnership as the
  factory returns to prototype racing in 2002.

  After the completion of our work with GM, longtime
  customers saw an opportunity to engage R&S in new
  projects. A new Mk III, the Series C, was designed and
  production began on cars for Dyson Racing and Robinson
  Racing. Tom Gloy, who had purchased one of the first R&S
  Mk I chassis, asked the company to design and build a new
  car for that series. The car was ready in July and
  competed in the last three rounds of the championship,
  beginning at Mid-Ohio in August.

  Bill Riley accompanied the Tom Gloy Racing team to each
  event. At Mid-Ohio, Tony Ave drove the new car as an
  "extra" TGR entry. Tony qualified third and was running
  top five when the gearbox broke.

  Defending Series champion Brian Simo drove the car for the
  first time in the next race at Laguna Seca. Brian's
  qualifying time was disallowed on a technicality, and he
  was forced to start in the rear of the grid. Brian cut
  through the field of 24 cars to finish second to Justin
  Bell. The car had proven its superiority. At the season
  closer in the streets of Houston, Brian again finished
  second to Justin Bell.

ROC
  Cars - Reynard 2KQ-Volkswagen
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Roock Racing
  Cars - GT2
  Web Site - http://www.roockusa.com/
  Founded in 1984, the ROOCK Sportsystem family business
  focuses entirely on Porsche. The Leverkusen, Germany (just
  outside of Cologne) based company specializes in racing,
  developing unique high quality products and performance
  tuning programs for several Porsche models. In 1999, ROOCK
  Sportsystem moved its operations to Braselton, Georgia
  (just outside of Atlanta) to form ROOCK North America,
  LLC.

  ROOCK Motorsport is Europe's most successful Porsche
  customer racing team, with five Championship titles in
  less than seven years and victories at 24 Hours of Le Mans
  and the Daytona 24 Hours. Our passion for racing is the
  main reason the company is conveniently located at the
  Road Atlanta race course.

  ROOCK has worldwide sales and distribution facilities in
  North America, Europe and Japan.

  It all began in 1990 when ROOCK Racing was approached by a
  customer to maintain his club racing Porsche. At the end
  of the season, the customer's car finished fifth in the
  championship and Michael and Fabian were hooked on racing.
  Not only were they passionate about the competitiveness,
  but they also has a vision for a future business
  opportunity.

  Fabian ROOCK intensified his links to motor racing. After
  each step on the ladder of success and victory, ROOCK
  Racing set out for new challenges and made it clear that
  ROOCK was a hungry new team with a great racing future
  ahead with victories at Le Mans 24 Hours, Daytona 24
  Hours, and FIA GT World Championships.

  In mid-1999, ROOCK ventured to step over to the United
  States to campaign in the  Le Mans Series.

Sauber
  Cars - Sauber C9
  Web Site - http://www.sauber.ch/
  At first sight, the small town of Hinwil in the Zurich
  Highlands is probably not the place you would expect to
  find a highly developed Formula One centre, equipped to
  the finest technical detail. But appearances are
  deceptive: It is only a few steps from the workshop, in
  which the now 58-year-old Peter Sauber started his company
  in 1970, that the high-tech cars, which have been
  competing in the Formula One World Championship since
  1993, are built.

  The development of high technologies and their function
  under race pressure within the field of motor racing has
  always fascinated Peter Sauber. While back then three of
  his current competitors were already active in Formula
  One, Peter Sauber started off quite modestly by comparison
  with the sporting variation of the legendary Volkswagen
  Beetle.

SMG
  Cars - Courage C 60-Judd
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Team Augusta Racing
  Cars - GT2
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Team Cadillac
  Cars - Cadillac N LMP
  Web Site - http://www.cadillaceurope.com/
  The new racing season is here and the Cadillac Team is
  excellently prepared for toughest competition in the ALMS
  on the race tracks of America and of course, Le Mans.
  Since the end of last season the team worked hard on the
  second generation Cadillac LMP 02. It was designed under
  the direction of GM Racing engineers by Nigel Stroud. Herb
  Fishel, executive director of GM racing comments: "Very
  seldom in racing can you talk about a program in its third
  year and say that you have an all-new race car, but that
  is exactly the case with the Cadillac LMP 02. The Cadillac
  LMP 02 marks a new beginning for Team Cadillac with a
  state-of-the-art race car."

  Two teams of three international endurance racing stars,
  each with Le Mans experience, have been named to drive the
  brand-new Cadillac Northstar LMPs in 2002. Team Cadillac
  is backed for the third straight year by a distinguished
  list of supporters, including: ACDelco, Bose HiFi systems,
  Compuware, GMAC Financial Services, Michelin, Mobil 1,
  Northstar System, Tehama and On Star.

  American Wayne Taylor, Italian Max Angelelli and Frenchman
  Christophe Tinseau will drive Cadillac Northstar LMP No.
  5. Finnish JJ Lehto will join Frenchmen Eric Bernard and
  Emmanuel Collard in the No. 6 Cadillac Northstar LMP.

  As final preparation for the start of the season the team
  will run a 26-day test schedule which includes several 24
  hour endurance tests. And on March 16th, the team and all
  six drivers will give the Cadillac Northstar LMP 02 its
  race debut.

Team Dams
  Cars - Cadillac N LMP
  Web Site - http://www.dams.fr/
  The DAMS Formula 3000 and GT motor racing Team was the
  creation of Jean-Paul Driot, in 1998. Prior to this Jean
  Paul was a business partner with formula one driver Rene
  Amoux. At the start of the team very first season DAMS
  established that they were a top team with Eric Comas
  driving the DAMS Lola, equalling the points with Jean
  Alesi. With Comas and Alesi on equal points the
  Championship went to Jean Alesi because he had more wins.

  The next year the DAMS Team went on to become
  International Formula 3000 Champions with Eric Comas in
  only the teams third year.

  Today in 1998, DAMS obtained 3 World Championship Crowns
  in Formula 3000 with Comas, Olivier Panis, and Bouillon,
  and has a total of 20 wins. Also 8 of DAMS drivers have
  made the very difficult step up to the Formula One
  Championship.

  After the success of the Formula 3000 Racing Team DAMS
  commenced on a design and feasibility study to enter
  Formula One Grand Prix Racing. This project was the first
  engineering partnership between DAMS and Reynard Racing
  Cars. Unfortunately the project was stopped after two
  years because of lack of sponsorship in France.

  The next large step in the creation of DAMS was at the end
  of 1996 when Jean-Paul DRIOT signed a contract with Don
  PANOZ to run his Panoz GTI car for the next two years in
  the 171A World GTI Championship, and Le Mans. This is also
  a joint project with Reynard Racing Cars.

  After having made the big manufacturers tremble with the
  impressionable Panoz in the FIA-GT World Championships,
  DAMS Team took on a new challenge in 1999 with an open
  prototype. Having never worked on this particular kind of
  car, the technical team drew on its GT experience to give
  their drivers a very competitive LOLA T98/10 complete with
  JUDD motor. In his first run at the Monza Sport Prototype
  World Cup race, Eric BERNARD took the pole position and
  was quickly imitated by fellow team-mate, Jean-Marc
  GOUNON, one month later at Spa. The unreliability of this
  very young car eventually deprived DAMS of 2 assured
  victories at the end of races which were dominated mostly
  by DAMS. Race after race innovations and continuous
  development strengthened the reliability of the car and in
  the second half of the season DAMS took 4 victories, which
  did not go unnoticed by the world's first automobile
  constructor, General Motors, at the dawn of the 2000
  season....

  For 2 years, DAMS has joined General Motors Le Mans Sports
  Car program and runs the Cadillac LMP at Le Mans, FIA
  World Cup and American Le Mans Series.

  In 2000 the 2 Cadillac - DAMS Northstar LMP ran in 10
  races including the 24 Hours of Le Mans where the car of
  BERNARD/COLLARD/MONTAGNY held the 4th place until 3 hours
  before race finish when suspension broke.

  The Executive Management of General Motors who was
  impressed by the performances and the professionalism of
  the Team designated DAMS as the Cadillac Factory Team for
  Le Mans 2001. After making a great improvement of 5
  seconds in qualifying (compared to 2000 qualifying time),
  DAMS kept GM aim of being in the fastest Teams, inside of
  the top 5, until the last hour of the race when the clutch
  broke.

Team Den Bla
  Cars - Panoz LMP-1
  Web Site - http://www.team.den-blaa-avis.dk/
  Team Den Blaa Avis Ltd. was established before the 1997
  season with the aim of placing Denmark on the map in the
  world of motorsports. It is Denmarks first truly
  professional racing team, and has managed to establish
  itself at the top of European motor racing in only four
  years. Together with Danish driver Jason Watt, the team
  succeded in winning two prestigius Formula 3000 races; Spa
  in 1997 and Imola in 1998, and in 1999, the team, now in
  the colours of partner Petrobras, took a fantastic 1-2 win
  at Hockenheim and finished third in the Teams Competition.
  This association continued in 2000 with even greater
  succes, as Brazilian Bruno Junqueira won the Championship
  in convincing style.

  In the year 2000 Team Den Blaa Avis also entered sportscar
  racing with two Panoz Roadsters in the classic Le Mans
  event. It was another highpoint for Team Den Blaa Avis
  Ltd., and is seen as a step in the teams efforts to
  consolidate itself in the highly-charged world of
  international motor racing The team has already proved
  that it posses the nessecery people, financial and
  techical means to succeed.

Team Goh
  Cars - Chrysler Viper GTS-R
  Web Site - http://www.teamgoh.com/
  Unfortunately, this site is entirely in Japanese... a
  language I cannot read :-(

Team Marcos
  Cars - Marcos Mantara LM600
  Web Site - http://www.marcosracingusa.com/
  Marcos Racing International brings style, speed and
  success to any racetrack. The stylish Marcos Mantis Plus
  draws a crowd in every paddock with its sleek, daring
  design. The 400 horsepower car is powered by a Ford 4.6
  litre V8 engine, making the Mantis Plus a fierce
  competitor on the track.

  The Marcos Mantis Plus is based on Marcos Cars' Mantis
  road car. With over 40 years of sports car development and
  production to support them, Marcos Racing has what it
  takes to build a successful racecar.

  The Mantis Plus is a more competitive model of the car
  that raced in Europe's Mantis Challenge. Marcos Racing has
  more than proven itself both in Europe and the United
  States, winning numerous championships and proving that
  Marcos can pose a formidable challenge to other popular
  manufacturers, including Porsche, BMW and Ferrari.

  In 2000, Marcos Racing won the British GT, Spanish GT
  championships and the Suzuka 1000K race in Japan. They
  continued their success the following season, beginning
  with a trip over to the United States to compete in one of
  the world's most famous endurance race the ROLEX 24 at
  Daytona.

  At the 2001 Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona, the two-car team of
  Marcos Racing finished fourth and fifth in the competitive
  GTS class. For the first several hours of the race, the
  team even challenged the overall race-winning Corvette
  team.

  The 2001 season was also a development year for Marcos
  Racing. A new version of the Marcos Mantara LM600 EVO was
  developed with the Marcos Mantis Plus GT in hopes of
  dominating both production classes in 2002.

  The Marcos Mantis Plus will find a new home with the
  Grand-American Road Racing Series in 2002. The car will
  compete in the challenging GT class.

  With such a successful history of racing, the Marcos
  Mantis Plus is sure to be a popular car with fans and
  racers alike in 2002. Fans in the United States will be
  delighted to see a car as exotic as the Mantis Plus at
  road courses that are famous for attracting the best
  sports cars in the world.

Team Oreca
  Cars - Chrysler Viper GTS-R
         Chrysler Viper GTS-RT
  Web Site - http://www.orecaracing.com/
  No history available on this French-language site

Team Rafanelli
  Cars - Lola B2K10-Judd
  Web Site - http://www.teamrafanelli.com/
  The team was created in 1987 as Team Bigazzi; its name
  was changed in 1998.  Major events:
  - 1992: Won 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
  - 1994: Won 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
  - 1995: Won 24 Hours of Nurburgring
  - 1996: Won 24 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
          Won BPR GT Series
  - 1997: Won Brasilia 1000 Miles Race
          Won MACAU Guja Grand Prix
  - 2000: Started on Pole Position at 24 Hours of Spa-
             Francorchamps

Thomas Bscher Promotion
  Cars - BMW V12 LM
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

TV Asahi Team Dragon
  Cars - Panoz LMP-1
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

Welter Gerard
  Cars - WR LMP-Peugeot
  Web Site - Unable to find information online

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CONTACT
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