Alfa Corse

Summary

Alfa Corse is Alfa Romeo's factory racing team. Throughout the years, Alfa Corse has competed in various forms of motorsport, from Grand Prix motor racing to touring car racing.

Italy Alfa Corse
Founded1938
BaseMilan, Lombardy, Italy
Arese, Lombardy, Italy
Former seriesAIACR European Championship
Formula One
World Sportscar Championship
European Touring Car Championship
World Touring Car Championship
Italian Superturismo Championship
Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft
British Touring Car Championship
Teams'
Championships
Drivers'
Championships

Alfa Corse was officially formed in the beginning of 1938,[1] after the racing department was moved back from unofficial factory team Scuderia Ferrari to "il Portello".[2] Enzo Ferrari was still in charge of department, but left one year later to build his own cars under the name Auto-Avio Costruzioni. From 1961 Alfa Romeo factory racing team was run by Autodelta.[1]

Alfa Romeo was purchased by the Fiat Group in 1986, and in 1987, Giorgio Pianta was moved from the management of Abarth to restart Alfa Corse.[3] After aborted attempts at producing the 164 Procar with Brabham and moving into the World Sports Prototype Championship, Alfa Corse settled on a return to touring car racing, starting with the Italian CIVT series, in 1992, with the 155 GTA. In 1993, Alfa Corse entered the DTM with the AWD V6-powered 155 TI, and created a Supertouring model, that would go on to win the Italian Superturismo, the BTCC and the Spanish Touring Car Championship.

Alfa Romeo withdrew from the DTM (renamed "International Touring Car Championship") at the end of 1996, and Pianta was replaced by Francesco Galletto.[3] When the 156 replaced the 155, it was developed for Supertouring and Superproduction classes, racing in the European Touring Car Championship. In 2001, Alfa Corse merged with Mauro Sipsz's independent firm, Nordauto Engineering, to form N.Technology.[3]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b "Alfa Corse/Autodelta History". velocissima.com. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2009-01-11.
  2. ^ "The Unknown History of the 308 in Argentina". ddavid.com. Archived from the original on 2007-04-07. Retrieved 2007-06-03.
  3. ^ a b c "The Abarth projects after Carlo Abarth". Retrieved 2011-08-28.