Team Rosberg GmbH (currently competing as Rosberg X Racing) is a motor racing organisation that competes in single-seater and touring car disciplines in Europe. It was founded in 1994 by former Formula One world champion Keke Rosberg, of Finland. It is headquartered at Neustadt an der Weinstraße in Germany, and competes under a German racing license.

Germany Finland
Team Rosberg
Rosberg X Racing
Founded1994
Team principal(s)Finland Keke Rosberg
Germany Arno Zensen
Germany Nico Rosberg
Current seriesDTM
Extreme E
Former seriesSuper Tourenwagen Cup
F3 Euroseries
German Formula 3
A1 Grand Prix
Formula BMW ADAC
FIA GT3 European Championship
ADAC GT Masters
Current driversSwitzerland Nico Müller
United States Dev Gore
Sweden Johan Kristoffersson
Sweden Mikaela Åhlin-Kottulinsky
Teams'
Championships
2002 German F3
2017 DTM
2021 Extreme E
Drivers'
Championships
2002 German F3 (Gary Paffett)
2002 Formula BMW ADAC (Nico Rosberg)
2017, 2019, 2020 DTM (René Rast)

Touring cars (1995–present)

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After his retirement from Formula One in 1986, Keke Rosberg stayed involved in racing, competing with Peugeot's World Sports Car Championship operation in the early 1990s. He entered Germany's top-level touring car championship – the DTM – in 1992, driving first for Mercedes-AMG,[1] and then for Opel Team Joest.

The DTM and ITC

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It was in 1994 that he decided to begin the transition into team ownership, and the newly formed Team Rosberg became part of Opel's DTM program in 1995. In this first year, Keke Rosberg continued driving alongside reigning champion Klaus Ludwig in a pair of Calibra V6 coupes.[2] The Calibra was not as competitive as the Mercedes C-Klasse; Ludwig achieved Opel's only race win of the season on his way to 3rd in the drivers' championship, and Team Rosberg was ranked in 6th place in the teams' standings.

In 1996, Rosberg retired from driving to concentrate on team management. As the DTM evolved into the short-lived International Touring car Championship, Ludwig moved to another Opel squad Zakspeed. JJ Lehto, managed by Rosberg at the time joined the team along with Hans-Joachim Stuck. Stuck won in Helsinki and finished in 6th place in the standings.[3] Lehto achieved several podiums but failed to win a race.

Super Touring

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After the collapse of the ITC, Team Rosberg transferred to the Super Tourenwagen Cup, Germany's Supertouring series. Rosberg managed Nissan's factory program in 1997 and 1998, with a pair of Nissan Primeras for Roland Asch and Sascha Maassen.[2] Asch was the highest ranked Nissan driver, finishing eighth in the 1997 championship. 1998 was no different; Asch again finished eighth overall, and Maassen's replacement, Michael Krumm, finished ninth.[8]

When Nissan's factory participation in the STC came to an end, Rosberg took a sabbatical from touring cars in 1999 and became involved in formula racing for the first time.

The reborn DTM

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A Team Rosberg-run Audi A4 being driven by Timo Scheider during the 2006 DTM season.

Team Rosberg promptly took the opportunity to participate in the DTM again when it was recreated at the turn of the millennium. While it might have been expected to renew its association with Opel, it instead partnered with Mercedes-AMG. It was one of four[9] teams running CLK DTMs, with Darren Turner and Pedro Lamy on driving duty. It was a respectable season, in which Rosberg was classified 7th in the teams' standings, while Lamy and Turner were classified 13th and 14th overall.[10]

In 2001, with only the factory AMG team running 2001-spec CLKs, good results were harder to find. The lack of success prompted Lamy to leave to team, with David Saelens taking his place. Turner was the highest placed of the three drivers, in 15th position overall, and Rosberg was left in 8th place in the teams' standings.[11]

The next two years saw a continuation of Rosberg's position as a Mercedes team running year-old cars, with two cars for Stefan Mücke and Christijan Albers in 2002, and two cars for Mücke (later replaced by Patrick Huisman) and Gary Paffett in 2003. Albers and Paffett both graduated to the factory AMG line-up in 2003 and 2004 respectively, and Paffett became the DTM champion in 2005.[12]

When the relationship between Rosberg and Mercedes ended after the 2004 season, it spent 2005 away from touring cars, while considering alternative programs. One such option, which did not come to fruition, was the possibility of running the Prodrive-built Aston Martin DBR9 GT1 car in the FIA GT Championship.[13]

The hiatus was ended with the opportunity to return to the DTM, not as a Mercedes customer, but as an Audi customer in 2006. Rosberg ran a brace of 2005-spec A4 saloons for Frank Stippler and Timo Scheider, which resulted in 4th position in the teams' standings and 10th in the drivers' championship for Scheider.[14]

In 2007, Team Rosberg ran Mike Rockenfeller and Lucas Luhr to 12th and 17th in the Drivers' Championship. Luhr's lack of results (he scored only one point) resulted in him returning to the American Le Mans Series, where he was considerably more successful, becoming 2008 LMP1 champion with the Audi R10.

Team Rosberg has continued to race Audi cars in DTM, with 2019 as its most successful recent season. René Rast won 7 races throughout the nine race weekends, Jamie Green won 1 race, helping the team to first in that year's championship.

Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters results[15]
Year Car Drivers Wins Poles Fast laps Points D.C. T.C.
2000 AMG-Mercedes CLK-DTM   Pedro Lamy 0 0 0 39 13th 6th
  Darren Turner 0 0 0 19 14th
2001 AMG-Mercedes CLK-DTM   Pedro Lamy 0 0 0 12 16th 8th
  Darren Turner 0 0 0 15 15th
2002 AMG-Mercedes CLK-DTM   Christijan Albers 0 0 0 5 12th 6th
  Stefan Mücke 0 0 0 0 NC
2003 AMG-Mercedes CLK-DTM   Gary Paffett 0 0 0 4 11th 5th
  Stefan Mücke 0 0 0 0 NC
  Patrick Huisman 0 0 0 0 NC
2004 AMG-Mercedes CLK-DTM   Jarek Janis 0 0 0 0 NC NC
  Bernd Mayländer 0 0 0 0 NC
2006 Audi A4 DTM 2005   Timo Scheider 0 0 0 12 10th 4th
  Frank Stippler 0 0 0 3 14th
2007 Audi A4 DTM 2005   Mike Rockenfeller 0 0 0 11 12th 6th
  Lucas Luhr 0 0 0 1 17th
2008 Audi A4 DTM 2007   Mike Rockenfeller 0 0 0 6 11th 7th
  Markus Winkelhock 0 0 0 6 12th
2009 Audi A4 DTM 2008   Mike Rockenfeller 0 0 0 4 14th 7th
  Markus Winkelhock 0 0 0 11 10th
2010 Audi A4 DTM 2008   Markus Winkelhock 0 0 0 7 12th 8th
  Katherine Legge 0 0 0 0 NC
2011 Audi A4 DTM 2008   Filipe Albuquerque 0 0 0 9 12th 6th
  Edoardo Mortara 1 0 0 21 9th
2012 Audi A5 DTM   Edoardo Mortara 2 1 0 82 5th 4th
  Filipe Albuquerque 0 0 0 26 11th
2013 Audi RS5 DTM   Edoardo Mortara 0 0 0 3 21st 11th
  Filipe Albuquerque 0 0 0 16 18th
2014 Audi RS5 DTM   Jamie Green 0 0 0 43 10th 7th
  Nico Müller 0 0 1 10 19th
2015 Audi RS5 DTM   Nico Müller 0 0 0 26 21st 5th
  Jamie Green 4 2 3 150 2nd
2016 Audi RS5 DTM   Adrien Tambay 0 0 0 40 18th 4th
  Jamie Green 1 2 3 145 3rd
  René Rast 0 0 0 8 23rd
2017 Audi RS5 DTM   René Rast 2 3 4 179 1st 1st
  Jamie Green 3 2 5 173 3rd
2018 Audi RS5 DTM   René Rast 7 2 1 251 2nd 3rd
  Jamie Green 0 0 1 27 18th
2019 Audi RS5 Turbo DTM 2019   Pietro Fittipaldi 0 0 2 22 15th 1st
  René Rast 7 8 2 322 1st
  Jamie Green 1 2 0 115 8th
2020 Audi RS5 Turbo DTM 2020   René Rast 7 7 7 353 1st 2nd
  Jamie Green 0 0 1 98 8th
2021 Audi R8 LMS GT3 Evo   Nico Müller 0 0 2 56 10th 8th
  Dev Gore 0 0 0 0 22nd
  Christopher Haase 0 0 0 1 21st
2022 Audi R8 LMS GT3 Evo II   Dev Gore 0 0 0 30 17th 5th
  Nico Müller 1 1 0 105 7th

Formula racing (1999–2005)

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When Team Rosberg left the Super Tourenwagen Cup, it made the jump to formula racing. In 1999, it began a dual program at national level in Germany, with entry into Formula Three and the first iteration of Formula BMW. In the German F3 Championship, it ran future DTM and prototype driver Pierre Kaffer to 8th place in the standings, while its three-car Formula BMW line-up resulted in 2nd and 3rd in the championship for Giorgio Mecataff and Hannu Wiinikainen.[2]

During its touring car return in 2000, Rosberg maintained its presence in formula racing. Hannu Wiinikainen graduated to the two-car F3 team, and the FBMW team was expanded to four cars. It again took the runner-up position in the drivers' championship, this time with Kimmo Liimatainen. It also ran future Formula One driver Christian Klien. Klien led the FBMW line-up in 2001, and finished 3rd in the championship.[16]

 
Nico Rosberg, 2002 FBMW ADAC champion

That year also saw the debut in the German F3 Championship of future DTM champion Gary Paffett. He stayed with Rosberg in 2002 and won the drivers' championship. Rosberg also secured the teams' title in what became its most successful season.[17] In Formula BMW ADAC, Nico Rosberg won the championship in his rookie season, driving for his father's team under the banner of VIVA Racing. When Rosberg's Formula 3 team moved to the new Euroseries in its inaugural year, Nico graduated with it, and stayed for two years before moving on to GP2 in 2005.

Team Rosberg took on Austria's A1 Grand Prix franchise in 2005, but Austria ended its involvement after one season, due to a lack of results. Rosberg's entry finished 19th in the standings.[18] At the same time, Rosberg ended its participation in Formula BMW ADAC and the F3 Euroseries at the end of 2005, concentrating instead on its DTM association with Audi.

  • D.C. = Drivers' Championship position, T.C. = Teams' Championship position.

Timeline

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1990s 2000s 2010s
95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
Sports car DTM STW DTM
ADAC GT Masters
FIA GT3
Formulas German F3 F3 Euro Series
Formula BMW ADAC
A1 GP

References

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  1. ^ History of AMG Worldcarfans.com. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  2. ^ a b c Team History Archived 2007-03-15 at the Wayback Machine Rosberg.de. Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  3. ^ Hans Stuck - Official website Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  4. ^ a b Ludwig career results driverdb.com
  5. ^ a b K.Rosberg career results driverdb.com
  6. ^ Järvilehto career results driverdb.com
  7. ^ Stuck career results driverdb.com
  8. ^ Driver Database Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  9. ^ AMG ran its four cars under two different banners, according to title sponsorship.
  10. ^ 2000 DTM season Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  11. ^ 2001 DTM season Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  12. ^ 2005 DTM standings Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  13. ^ Rosberg in frame for Aston Martin Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  14. ^ 2006 DTM standings Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  15. ^ DTM complete results Archived 2008-01-02 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
  16. ^ Driver Database Retrieved on January 28, 2007.
  17. ^ 2002 German F3 season Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  18. ^ 2005 A1 GP season Speedsportmag.com. Retrieved on June 19, 2007.
  19. ^ A1GP complete results Archived 2007-12-26 at the Wayback Machine results.a1gp.com
  20. ^ Formula 3 Euroseries complete results Archived 2007-11-18 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
  21. ^ a b Zuber career results driverdb.com
  22. ^ a b c N.Rosberg career results driverdb.com
  23. ^ a b Hirate career results driverdb.com
  24. ^ van der Garde career results driverdb.com
  25. ^ German Formula 3 complete results Archived 2007-11-18 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
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