The following teams and drivers were under contract to compete in the 2001
International Formula 3000 Championship. As the championship was a
spec series, all competitors raced with a
Lola B99/50 chassis with a
V8 engine developed by
Zytek. Teams competed with tyres supplied by
Avon. (Arden Team Russia) at the Silverstone round in July 2001
Team changes A total of 30 entries spread across 13 teams were initially entered into the championship with the publication of a drivers' list on 2 December 2000.
MySap.com withdrew from the championship after its team principal David Brown left its parent company
McLaren and moved to the
Jordan team in
Formula One. Car owner and former sports car driver Gabriele Rafanelli withdrew the
World Racing Team (WRT) from the series to focus on the
American Le Mans Series operation, tired of F3000 due to a lack of financing and driver stability.
European Formula Racing ended its partnership with the
Arrows Formula One team, causing team owner
Paul Stoddart to re-brand the team European Minardi F3000.
Fortec Motorsport were included on the initial entry list before the team withdrew from the championship because they could not locate any suitable drivers to sign and they wanted to focus on other junior series.
Prost Grand Prix changed the name of its team from
Gauloises Formula to F3000 Prost Junior Team after they lost sponsorship backing from the tobacco company
Gauloises.
Driver changes The 2001 season saw several driver changes. Defending series champion
Bruno Junqueira left the
Petrobras Junior Team and moved to
Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) to drive for
Chip Ganassi Racing (CGR). His teammate
Jaime Melo left the team to join
Durango on a one-year contract with the option to extend by another season afterwards, partnering series debutant
Gabriele Lancieri, who progressed from the
Italian Formula 3000 Championship. Italian series champion
Ricardo Sperafico drove the second Petrobras car; his twin brother
Rodrigo Sperafico moved from the same championship to join
Coloni and partnered
Fabrizio Gollin.
Fabrice Walfisch, who drove for Coloni and later Astromega, joined the
European Touring Car Championship in
2001, Nordic Racing employed
Tomáš Enge from MySap.com to replace the outgoing
Kevin McGarrity.
(pictured in 2007) joined the championship with the
DAMS team
Team Astromega changed their entire line-up. They signed the
German Formula Three (GF3) champion
Giorgio Pantano to drive his first season in the championship and the WRT driver
Ananda Mikola joined him. Driver
Fernando Alonso went to Formula One to join
Minardi, and
Marc Goossens left the team.
DAMS also had a new line-up in its team.
Franck Montagny switched to the
World Series by Nissan and
Kristian Kolby competed in the American
Indy Lights. The
1997 Barber Dodge Pro Series champion
Derek Hill and the Gauloises Formula racer
Sébastien Bourdais replaced them.
Antonio García graduated from the World Series by Nissan to join the
Red Bull Junior Team to pair with GF3 driver
Patrick Friesacher. He replaced
Enrique Bernoldi, who moved to the Arrows Formula One team.
Super Nova Racing signed
Mark Webber from European Arrows and
Mário Haberfeld from Fortec. European Minardi employed
David Saelens from Super Nova, to partner
Andrea Piccini, who left
Kid Jensen Racing (KJR) after two seasons.
Nicolas Minassian left Super Nova and the series to join CART as teammate to Junqueira at CGR. KJR released
Bas Leinders and he moved to
KTR to partner
Joël Camathias, who transferred from the World Series by Nissan. Financial concerns meant
Jeffrey van Hooydonk was unable to secure a seat in the championship and he went to drive in
Belcar; his compatriot
Yves Olivier and
Christijan Albers of European Arrows entered the
Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters. Italian F3000 competitors
Gabriele Varano and
Nicolás Filiberti joined the championship by signing for the Prost Junior Team.
Mid-season driver changes KJR replaced Yann Goudy with
Gianluca Calcagni for the
Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari round. The team later withdrew from the championship before the
Circuit de Catalunya event due to ownership problems and Calcagni driving for them in
Imola, which created tension with the series' governing body. Shortly before the
A1 Ring round, Ananda Mikola's sponsorship money did not arrive in time at Astromega and a poor performance resulted in Astromega replacing him with
Dino Morelli for the next four events.
Enrico Toccacelo later drove in Morelli's place for the rest of the season. Prost later replaced the underperforming Filiberti with
Zsolt Baumgartner for the rest of the year from the
Nürburgring round and the
French Formula Three champion and
Porsche Supercup driver
Jonathan Cochet drove Variano's car. Prost backed the initiative of one of its major sponsors to promote Latin American drivers in its team and the GF3 series winner
Norberto Fontana was drafted in place of Cochet for the season's final three rounds. Before the Monaco round, Red Bull terminated García's contract, European Minardi was represented by the
Formula Nippon racer and
Jaguar test driver
Tomas Scheckter in one of its cars for the
Hockenheimring race after Saelens sustained an injury in an accident during the
Silverstone event. Rodrigo Sperafico ended his campaign after the same event and was replaced at Coloni by Goossens for the rest of the season with new sponsorship brought to them. García replaced Melo at Durango from the
Hungaroring round on, and GF3 driver
Jaroslav Janiš drove Enge's Nordic car at the season-ending
Monza event, while Enge substituted for
Luciano Burti at the Prost Formula One team after the latter was injured at the . ==Season calendar==