Race of Champions

The Race of Champions is an international motorsport event held at the end of each year, featuring national teams consisting of racing and rally drivers. The race was organized in 1988 by Michèle Mouton and Fredrik Johnson. Originally it was organized in memory of Henri Toivonen and Sergio Cresto.
Every year has featured an individual champion, and many have featured other contests. The top individual wins the Henri Toivonen Memorial trophy and given the title, Champion of Champions.
The Nations Cup was added in 1999. Each nation fields one rally driver and one circuit racer. The second driver often comes from the World Rally Championship, Formula 1, NASCAR, CCWS, IRL, or Grand Prix. In some instances, circuit drivers who have previous off-road or rally experience have represented their countries as rally drivers. In 2002 and 2004, the United States had NASCAR driver Jimmie Johnson as a rally driver, as Johnson's championships in auto racing have come as an off-road driver, with titles in SCORE International and CORR off-road racing.
After three years based at the Stade de France in Paris, it was announced on 2006-12-17 that the 2007 event would be held at the new Wembley Stadium in London[1] on 2007-12-16. Recently deceased rally driver Colin McRae, who was individual champion in 1998, was due to compete in the Nations Cup, representing Scotland with David Coulthard.
Overview
In the Race of Champions, the participating drivers are divided into 2 groups. The first group consists of solely racing drivers and the second one includes all kinds, racing and rally drivers included. A heat event is allowed for each driver, which runs the track for 4 times, counting the best one. In the end of the heat race, 16 drivers are selected based on the best time they have managed.
The 16 drivers are then paired up for an elimination round. The round is based on a one-on-one race around the track, with the person producing a better result advances. The remaining drivers then go through the quarter-finals, semi-finals and the super-finals, by which time only two driver remains.
The super-final consists of three runs. The driver that achieves 2 victories first wins the Race of Champions of that year.
Cars
The cars eligible for the Race of Champions are mandated by the race organization. Prior to each event, a driver can select the car he / she wants to drive in the event.
As of 2007, there are 5 cars a driver can select. These ranges from an ROC specific dune buggy, a high power sports car, a World Rally Car, a large touring car (with 3.5 liter engine) and a Super 2000 specification saloon. The actual cars used varies, but generally fall into one of the five categories above. Created in 1988 by IMP (International Media Productions) President Fredrik Johnsson and the world’s best female rally driver, Michele Mouton, the ROC remains the only opportunity for drivers to race in exactly the same cars and on a parallel-track. The premise is simple: using identical equipment and track, drivers can prove themselves based on their talent alone.
In 2007, eighteen drivers will compete in a series of knockout heats in their own division to determine their class champion. Then, in a shootout to determine who is the master of motorsport, the winners from the two divisions will go head-to-head in a super final.
The winner is rewarded with the title “The Champion of Champions”.
2007

The 2007 Race Of Champions took place on 16th December at Wembley Stadium in London, England.
The Nations' Cup was competed first and the event was won by Germany over Finland.
The individual event and the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy was won by Mattias Ekström of Sweden, beating Michael Schumacher of Germany in the final.
The confirmed lineup was:
2006
The 2006 Race of Champions took place on December 16 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.
The Nations' Cup was competed first and the event was won by Finland, with Heikki Kovalainen beating United States' Travis Pastrana on the final round. Kovalainen's team mate was the two-time World Rally Champion Marcus Grönholm, whereas Pastrana drove all the rounds for the US team, after both Jimmie Johnson and his replacement, Scott Speed, had to withdraw from competing due to injuries (Johnson had a non-racing related injury).
The individual event and the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy was won by Mattias Ekström of Sweden. He beat Heikki Kovalainen by 0.0002 seconds in the semi-finals, and then defending champion, Sébastien Loeb of France, in the finals.
The lineup was:
* - As Jimmie Johnson, and later replacement Scott Speed were both injured and a replacement could not be found. Pastrana raced all rounds for the team.
** - As Jenson Button could not race due to two cracked ribs.
2005
The 2005 event took place on December 3 again at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.
The individual event was won by Sébastien Loeb after Tom Kristensen crashed out of the final, and the Nations Cup event by Tom Kristensen and Mattias Ekström representing Scandinavia.
Changes from the past included a number of wildcard drivers, the use of the Porsche 911 GT3 instead of the Ferrari 360 and the introduction of the Renault Mégane alongside the Citroën Xsara World Rally Car and now traditional "ROC Buggy" as competition cars.
The drivers that took part were:
Country | Racing Driver | Rally Driver |
---|---|---|
France | Jean Alesi | Sébastien Loeb |
USA | Jeff Gordon | Travis Pastrana |
Great Britain | David Coulthard | Colin McRae |
Finland | Heikki Kovalainen | Marcus Grönholm |
Brazil | Felipe Massa | Nelson Piquet, Jr. |
Scandinavia | Tom Kristensen | Mattias Ekström |
Benelux | Christijan Albers | Francois Duval |
Team Playstation France | Sébastien Bourdais | Stéphane Peterhansel |
Germany | Bernd Schneider | Armin Schwarz |
Wildcard - ROC | Dan Wheldon | Daniel Sordo |
2004
The 2004 event took place on December 6 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis.
The individual event was won by Heikki Kovalainen, and the team event by Jean Alesi and Sébastien Loeb representing France.
There was also a special "World Champions Challenge" race held between 2004 Formula One World Champion Michael Schumacher and 2004 World Rally Champion Sébastien Loeb, which Schumacher won.
Drivers that took part are:
Country | Racing Driver | Rally Driver |
---|---|---|
Brazil | Felipe Massa | Tony Kanaan |
Finland | Heikki Kovalainen | Marcus Grönholm |
France | Jean Alesi | Sébastien Loeb |
France (Team PlayStation) | Sébastien Bourdais | Stéphane Sarrazin |
Germany | Michael Schumacher | Armin Schwarz |
Great Britain | David Coulthard | Colin McRae |
Sweden | Kenny Bräck | Mattias Ekström |
USA | Casey Mears* | Jimmie Johnson |
* - Casey Mears was a last-minute substitute for Jeff Gordon, who was hospitalized with the flu and told not to participate in this event by doctors while at NASCAR's awards banquet in New York City that week.