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2006 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Bernd Schneider (left) won his fourth Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters Drivers' Championship while Bruno Spengler (right) finished second in the championship.

The 2006 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was the twentieth season of premier German touring car championship and also seventh season under the moniker of Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters since the series was resumed in 2000. The number of race weekends was reduced, from eleven in 2005, to ten for the 2006 season. Each track hosted one race, with the exception of Hockenheim, which hosted two. As in 2005, each event consisted of one race of approximately one hour, with two compulsory pit stops for each car. The Championship was won by Bernd Schneider driving an AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2006 for the HWA Team. Team Rosberg returned to the series after one-year absence and thus switched to Audi Sport machinery.

Changes for 2006

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  • Opel exited the series, leaving Audi and Mercedes as remaining manufacturers. Audi and Mercedes respectively increased their number of entries from eight to ten cars each to fill up the four empty spots left by Opel.
  • Older 2004 models became cheaper, allowing privateer teams to buy them.
  • The rounds in Belgium at Spa-Francorchamps and Turkey at Istanbul Park were dropped in favour of Le Mans in France and Barcelona in Spain.
  • The round in Czech Republic at Brno were removed from the schedule.

Teams and drivers

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The following manufacturers, teams and drivers competed in the 2006 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. All teams competed with tyres supplied by Dunlop.

Make Car Team No. Drivers Rounds
Audi Audi A4 DTM 2006 Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline 4 Germany Martin Tomczyk All
5 Sweden Mattias Ekström All
6 Germany Heinz-Harald Frentzen All
7 Denmark Tom Kristensen All
Audi A4 DTM 2005 Audi Sport Team Phoenix 12 Germany Christian Abt All
14 Germany Pierre Kaffer All
Audi Sport Team Rosberg 15 Germany Frank Stippler All
16 Germany Timo Scheider All
Audi A4 DTM 2004 Futurecom TME 19 Netherlands Olivier Tielemans 1–3*
Netherlands Jeroen Bleekemolen 4–5**
Denmark Nicolas Kiesa 6–8***
Sweden Thed Björk 9–10
20 Belgium Vanina Ickx All
Mercedes-Benz AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2006 HWA Team 2 Germany Bernd Schneider All
3 United Kingdom Jamie Green All
8 Finland Mika Häkkinen All
9 Canada Bruno Spengler All
AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2005 Persson Motorsport 10 France Jean Alesi All
11 Greece Alexandros Margaritis All
AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2004 21 Austria Mathias Lauda All
AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2005 Mücke Motorsport 17 Germany Stefan Mücke All
18 Germany Daniel la Rosa All
AMG-Mercedes C-Klasse 2004 22 United Kingdom Susie Stoddart All
Sources:[1][2]

Team changes

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Opel left the series after the 2005 season due to budget cuts at General Motors in Europe. Team Holzer would also leave after being part of Opel's squad since 2000.[3]

Team Joest left the series so they could concentrate on the development of the Audi R10 diesel sports car. They were replaced by Team Phoenix, who had run Opel's the previous season, and Team Rosberg who returned to the series after a one year absence. Both teams would run one year old cars.[4]

F1 team boss Colin Kolles would enter the championship with two two year old Audi A4s run under the Futurecom TME banner.[4]

Mercedes teams Mücke Motorsport and Persson Motorsport expanded to three cars each  with each running two one year old cars and one two year old cars each.

Driver changes

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Reigning champion Gary Paffett left the DTM to focus on his F1 test driver role at McLaren Mercedes with hopes of a race seat in 2007.[5]

Bruno Spengler and Jamie Green were promoted from Persson Motorsport to HWA Team while Jean Alesi was demoted from HWA Team to Persson Motorsport.[5]

Heinz-Harald Frentzen switched from Opel to Audi to replace Allan McNish who left the series to focus on Endurance racing.[6]

Laurent Aïello and Manuel Reuter retired from motorsport after Opel left the series.

Marcel Fässler left the DTM to join Swiss Spirit in the Le Mans Series.

Rinaldo Capello left the DTM to focus on Endurance racing.

Alexandros Margaritis moved from Mücke Motorsport to Persson Motorsport.[5]

GP2 driver Mathias Lauda joined the DTM with Persson Motorsport.[5]

Daniel la Rosa and Susie Stoddart joined the DTM with Mücke Motorsport after spending the previous year in Formula Renault 3.5 Series and British Formula 3 respectively.[5]

Vanina Ickx and Olivier Tielemans joined the DTM with Futurecom TME after spending the previous year in BELCAR and 3000 Pro Series respectively.

Mid season changes

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Olivier Tielemans was replaced by Jeroen Bleekemolen after the second round of the season.

Jeroen Bleekemolen was replaced by Nicolas Kiesa after sponsorship troubles after the fifth round.

Nicolas Kiesa was replaced by Thed Björk for the final two races after Kiesa was injured in a motocross accident.

Race calendar and winners

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Round Circuit Date Pole position Fastest Lap Winning driver Winning team Winning manufacturer TV
Germany Präsentation Düsseldorf 26 March
1 Germany Hockenheimring 9 April United Kingdom Jamie Green Canada Bruno Spengler Germany Bernd Schneider Vodafone AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
2 Germany EuroSpeedway 30 April United Kingdom Jamie Green Canada Bruno Spengler Germany Bernd Schneider Vodafone AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
3 Germany Oschersleben 21 May Denmark Tom Kristensen Denmark Tom Kristensen Denmark Tom Kristensen Audi Sport Team Abt Audi ARD
4 United Kingdom Brands Hatch 2 July Denmark Tom Kristensen Germany Bernd Schneider Sweden Mattias Ekström Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline Audi ARD
5 Germany Norisring 23 July United Kingdom Jamie Green Canada Bruno Spengler Canada Bruno Spengler DaimlerChrysler Bank AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
6 Germany Nürburgring 20 August Canada Bruno Spengler Canada Bruno Spengler Canada Bruno Spengler DaimlerChrysler Bank AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
7 Netherlands Zandvoort 3 September United Kingdom Jamie Green Finland Mika Häkkinen Denmark Tom Kristensen Audi Sport Team Abt Audi ARD
8 Spain Barcelona 24 September Germany Martin Tomczyk Germany Bernd Schneider Germany Martin Tomczyk Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline Audi ARD
9 France Le Mans 15 October Canada Bruno Spengler Finland Mika Häkkinen Canada Bruno Spengler DaimlerChrysler Bank AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
10 Germany Hockenheimring 29 October Germany Heinz-Harald Frentzen United Kingdom Jamie Green Canada Bruno Spengler DaimlerChrysler Bank AMG Mercedes Mercedes ARD
Source:[7]

Championship standings

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Scoring system

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Points are awarded to the top 8 classified finishers.[8]

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th 
Points 10 8 6 5 4 3 2 1

Drivers' championship

[edit]
Pos Driver HOC
Germany
LAU
Germany
OSC
Germany
BRH
United Kingdom
NOR
Germany
NÜR
Germany
ZAN
Netherlands
CAT
Spain
BUG
France
HOC
Germany
Pts
1 Germany Bernd Schneider 1 1 5 3 2 2 2 2 5 4 71
2 Canada Bruno Spengler 9 5 2 7 1 1 4 5 1 1 63
3 Denmark Tom Kristensen 2 2 1 18 5 5 1 9 3 3 56
4 Germany Martin Tomczyk 7 8 6 4 16† 3 3 1 4 5 42
5 United Kingdom Jamie Green Ret 4 3 2 Ret 9 8 Ret 6 2 31
6 Finland Mika Häkkinen 4 3 9 11 3 12 11 11 2 Ret 25
7 Germany Heinz-Harald Frentzen 3 13 4 17† 11 6 5 3 10 14 24
8 Sweden Mattias Ekström Ret DSQ 7 1 6 8 13 4 Ret 12† 21
9 France Jean Alesi 6 7 8 6 Ret 4 Ret 14 11 8 15
10 Germany Timo Scheider 8 9 14 10 7 7 6 Ret 8 6 12
11 Greece Alexandros Margaritis 5 6 20† 8 Ret 15 Ret 8 7 13† 11
12 Germany Stefan Mücke Ret 12 12 13 4 11 7 12 15 Ret 7
13 Germany Christian Abt Ret Ret 17 5 10 10 Ret 10 9 7 6
14 Germany Frank Stippler 12 11 13 Ret 9 Ret 14 6 Ret Ret 3
15 Germany Daniel la Rosa 14 Ret 11 12 15† 16 10 7 Ret Ret 2
16 Germany Pierre Kaffer Ret 10 10 9 8 14 9 Ret 12 NC 1
17 United Kingdom Susie Stoddart 10 15 15 16 14† Ret 12 15 13 9 0
18 Austria Mathias Lauda 11 14 16 15 Ret 13 15 13 Ret 10 0
19 Belgium Vanina Ickx 15 16 18 Ret 13 18 Ret Ret 16 11 0
20 Netherlands Jeroen Bleekemolen 14 12 0
21 Netherlands Olivier Tielemans 13 17 19 0
22 Sweden Thed Björk 14 15† 0
23 Denmark Nicolas Kiesa 17 16 Ret 0
Pos Driver HOC
Germany
LAU
Germany
OSC
Germany
BRH
United Kingdom
NOR
Germany
NÜR
Germany
ZAN
Netherlands
CAT
Spain
BUG
France
HOC
Germany
Pts
Sources:[9][10]
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver Second place
Bronze Third place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Retired (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Withdrew (WD)
Race cancelled (C)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Excluded (EX)

Bold – Pole
Italics – Fastest Lap

  • † — Driver retired, but was classified as they completed 90% of the winner's race distance.

Teams' championship

[edit]
Pos. Team No. HOC
Germany
LAU
Germany
OSC
Germany
BRH
United Kingdom
NOR
Germany
NÜR
Germany
ZAN
Netherlands
CAT
Spain
BUG
France
HOC
Germany
Points
1 Vodafone / Salzgitter AMG Mercedes 2 1 1 5 3 2 2 2 2 5 4 102
3 Ret 4 3 2 Ret 9 8 Ret 6 2
2 DaimlerChrysler Bank AMG Mercedes 8 4 3 9 11 3 12 11 11 2 Ret 88
9 9 5 2 7 1 1 4 5 1 1
3 Audi Sport Team Abt 6 3 13 4 17† 11 6 5 3 10 14 80
7 2 2 1 18 5 5 1 9 3 3
4 Audi Sport Team Abt Sportsline 4 7 8 6 4 16† 3 3 1 4 5 63
5 Ret DSQ 7 1 6 8 13 4 Ret 12†
5 stern / Easy Rent AMG Mercedes 10 6 7 8 6 Ret 4 Ret 14 11 8 26
11 5 6 20† 8 Ret 15 Ret 8 7 13†
6 Audi Sport Team Rosberg 15 8 9 14 10 7 7 6 Ret 8 6 15
16 12 11 13 Ret 9 Ret 14 6 Ret Ret
7 TV-Spielfilm / TrekStor AMG Mercedes 17 Ret 12 12 13 4 11 7 12 15 Ret 9
18 14 Ret 11 12 15† 16 10 7 Ret Ret
8 Audi Sport Team Phoenix 12 Ret Ret 17 5 10 10 Ret 10 9 7 7
14 Ret 10 10 9 8 14 9 Ret 12 NC
9 AutoScout24 / Junge Gebrauchte AMG Mercedes 21 11 14 16 15 Ret 13 15 13 Ret 10 0
22 10 15 15 16 14† Ret 12 15 13 9
10 Futurecom TME 19 13 17 19 14 12 17 16 Ret 14 15† 0
20 15 16 18 Ret 13 18 Ret Ret 16 11
Pos. Team No. HOC
Germany
LAU
Germany
OSC
Germany
BRH
United Kingdom
NOR
Germany
NÜR
Germany
ZAN
Netherlands
CAT
Spain
BUG
France
HOC
Germany
Points
Sources:[8][9]

References

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  1. ^ "Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters Summary". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  2. ^ "DTM (German Touringcar Masters) – 2006: Entrylist". Speedsport Magazine. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  3. ^ "Opel to be withdrawn after 2005".
  4. ^ a b "Audi confirm 2006 teams line-up".
  5. ^ a b c d e "Mercedes confirm 2006 driver line-up".
  6. ^ "Audi confirms Frentzen switch".
  7. ^ "Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters Results 2006". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  8. ^ a b "DTM (German Touringcar Masters) – 2006: Point standings". Speedsport Magazine. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  9. ^ a b "Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters Standings 2006". Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
  10. ^ "2006 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters Drivers' Standings". TouringCars.net. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
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