2005 Formula 3 Euro Series
The 2005 Formula 3 Euro Series season was the third championship year of Europe's premier Formula Three series. The championship consisted of ten rounds – each with two races – held at a variety of European circuits. Each weekend consisted of one 60-minute practice session and two 30-minute qualifying sessions, followed by one c.110 km race and one c.80 km race. Each qualifying session awarded one bonus point for pole position and each race awarded points for the top eight finishers, with ten points per win. Lewis Hamilton dominated the season, winning 15 of the 20 races and scoring nearly twice as many points as his nearest rival, team-mate Adrian Sutil. As of now, six drivers have competed in Formula One.
Summary
The 2005 calendar included events at the historic circuits of Pau, Spa-Fracorchamps, Zandvoort and Monaco. Monaco has a long tradition of Formula 3 events, but this was the first since 1997. The debut of a new street circuit in the French town of Avignon was to take place in September, but the plans fell through and its date was given to the Lausitzring.Thirteen countries were represented in the drivers' entry list, which included drivers from :Category:Argentine racing drivers|Argentina, the :Category:American racing drivers|USA and the :Category:Czech racing drivers|Czech Republic for the first time. There were teams from France, Germany, Britain, Austria, Italy, Netherlands, Luxembourg and the Czech Republic.
After a promising debut season with Manor Motorsport that ended with a win in the non-championship Bahrain F3 Superprix, and a contract with ASM for 2005, Lewis Hamilton was regarded as the championship favourite. He exceeded expectations by winning 15 races from 20 starts, securing 13 pole positions, posting ten fastest race laps, and scoring nearly twice as many points as his nearest rival, team-mate Adrian Sutil. Lucas di Grassi made a full-time return to the series and finished in 3rd place overall, with one win. The highest-placed rookie was the then-reigning Formula BMW Germany champion Sebastian Vettel, who was classified 5th overall with six podium finishes. He was beaten to 4th place by Franck Perera's more consistent points finishes.
In the Teams’ Championship, ASM Formule 3 retained the title that it had secured in 2004, with Signature in a distant second place. Third place was taken by Prema Powerteam, which had won the Euro Series' first teams' title in 2003. Manor Motorsport was classified 4th overall, as it continued to improve its form against rivals with more experience in Europe. At this time, the Spiess-Opel engine was still numerically dominant, but won on only two occasions. HWA-Mercedes had begun to gain the upper hand in 2004, and increased its development effort to win 18 races in 2005.
Teams and drivers
Driver changes
; Changed Teams- Marco Bonanomi: Team Ghinzani → Prema Powerteam
- Loïc Duval: Signature → Signature Plus
- Gregory Franchi: Signature → Prema Powerteam
- Giedo van der Garde: Signature → Team Rosberg
- Maximilian Götz: TME → HBR Motorsport
- Lewis Hamilton: Manor Motorsport → ASM Formule 3
- Kohei Hirate: Prema Powerteam → Team Rosberg
- Alejandro Núñez: Swiss Racing Team → HBR Motorsport
- Ross Zwolsman: TME – RZ Racing
- Átila Abreu: Formula BMW ADAC → Mücke Motorsport
- Richard Antinucci: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → Team Midland Euroseries
- Rob Austin: British Formula 3 Championship → Team Midland Euroseries
- Fabio Carbone: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → Signature
- Ben Clucas: Formula Renault 2.0 Italy → Team Midland Euroseries
- Lucas di Grassi: British Formula 3 Championship → Manor Motorsport
- Esteban Guerrieri: International Formula 3000 → Team Midland Euroseries
- Thomas Holzer: German Formula Three Championship → AM-Holzer Rennsport
- Stephen Jelley: British Formula 3 Championship → Team Midland Euroseries
- Julia Kuhn: Formula Volkswagen Germany → Kuhn Motorsport
- Paolo Montin: All-Japan Formula Three Championship → Ombra Racing
- Guillaume Moreau: Championnat de France Formula Renault 2.0 & Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
- Paul di Resta: Formula Renault 2.0 UK → Manor Motorsport
- James Rossiter: British Formula 3 Championship → Signature Plus
- Filip Salaquarda: German Formula Three Championship → Team I.S.R.
- Nico Verdonck: International Formula 3000 → Team Midland Euroseries
- Sebastian Vettel: Formula BMW ADAC → Mücke Motorsport
- Danny Watts: British Formula 3 Championship → HBR Motorsport
- Philipp Baron: Team Ghinzani → Ferrari Challenge Europe – Trofeo Pirelli
- Ruben Carrapatoso: Opel Team KMS → StockCar Brasil
- Peter Elkmann: Swiss Racing Team → Recaro Formel 3 Cup
- Dennis Furchheim: Swiss Racing Team → Retirement
- Jamie Green: ASM Formule 3 → Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters
- Derek Hayes: Team Ghinzani → Retirement
- Katsuyuki Hiranaka: Prema Powerteam → Formula Nippon
- Robert Kath: Opel Team KMS → Recaro Formel 3 Cup
- Tom Kimber-Smith: Team Kolles → Formula Renault 2.0 Netherlands & Formula Renault 2.0 UK
- Robert Kubica: Mücke Motorsport → World Series by Renault
- Nicolas Lapierre: Signature → GP2 Series
- Alexandros Margaritis: AB Racing Performance → Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters
- Christian Montanari: Coloni F3 → World Series by Renault
- Alexandre Prémat: ASM Formule 3 → GP2 Series
- Fernando Rees: Swiss Racing Team → World Series by Renault
- Daniel la Rosa: HBR Motorsport → World Series by Renault
- Nico Rosberg: Team Rosberg → GP2 Series
- Eric Salignon: ASM Formule 3 → World Series by Renault
- Bruno Spengler: Mücke Motorsport → Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters
- Roberto Streit: Prema Powerteam → All-Japan Formula Three Championship
- Toni Vilander: Coloni F3 → Italian Formula 3000 & GP2 Series
- Andreas Zuber: Team Rosberg → World Series by Renault
- Charles Zwolsman, Jr.: Manor Motorsport → Toyota Atlantic Championship Presented by Yokohama
Midseason changes
Calendar
Season standings
Drivers Standings
- Points are awarded as follows:
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | PP | |
Race 1 & 2 | 10 | 8 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 1 |
† — Drivers did not finish the race, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.