The following
teams and
drivers were competitors in the 2005
FIA Formula One World Championship. • † All engines were 3.0-litre,
V10 configuration. 2005 was the final year of this engine formula. • No Michelin-shod cars participated in the
United States Grand Prix for safety reasons, leaving just six cars on the grid at the start of the race.
Free practice drivers Five constructors entered free practice only drivers over the course of the season. Sauber Petronas were also eligible to enter a free practice driver, but elected not to do so. •
Enrico Toccacelo, Minardi's third driver was not present in
Brazil as he competed for the
Italian team in the opening round of the
A1 Grand Prix series at
Brands Hatch. •
Robert Kubica was due to drive Minardi's third car at the
Japanese or
Chinese GPs, but he did not get the
FIA Super License required to drive.
Team changes . . . . •
Red Bull Racing, which took over the
Jaguar team, ran with
Cosworth engines. Red Bull's lead driver was veteran
Scotsman David Coulthard who switched from
McLaren, paired with Austrian
Christian Klien, the 2004 Jaguar driver. • Toyota-powered
Jordan Grand Prix was purchased by
Midland Group, although the team continued as Jordan until 2006. • Sauber switched from
Bridgestone to
Michelin tyres over the winter, further severing their ties with the
Ferrari team. • The
BAR team was banned from the Grands Prix in
Spain and
Monaco, after both their cars were found to be underweight at the
San Marino Grand Prix. • At the
Hungarian Grand Prix,
West McLaren Mercedes became Team McLaren Mercedes. • Shortly after the
United States Grand Prix,
Peter Sauber announced that
Credit Suisse had sold
BMW their majority share in his
Sauber team, which announced its intention to run as BMW's factory team in 2006.
Driver changes •
Renault partnered
Fernando Alonso with the 2004
Sauber driver
Giancarlo Fisichella, in a straight swap with
Jacques Villeneuve (who had taken over from
Jarno Trulli at Renault for the last three races of the season). •
Williams employed an all-new driver line-up in 2005, having signed
Jaguar's
Mark Webber and
Jordan's
Nick Heidfeld to replace
Juan Pablo Montoya and
Ralf Schumacher. Montoya moved to
McLaren, in place of the
Red Bull-bound
David Coulthard (who took Webber's vacated seat), while Ralf Schumacher signed for
Toyota. This meant that
Ricardo Zonta, who had raced for Toyota in five of the final six races of 2004, returned to a third driver role in 2005.
Olivier Panis, who had driven in seventeen out of eighteen races for Toyota in 2004, was retained by the team in the dual capacity of advisor and test driver.
Cristiano da Matta, who had started the 2004 season with Toyota, returned to
Champ Car in 2005.
Jarno Trulli joined as Toyota's second driver. • Jordan's other driver from the end of 2004,
Timo Glock, also switched to Champ Car for 2005, leaving Jordan with two vacant seats. They were taken by
Tiago Monteiro (a test driver for
Minardi in 2004) and
Narain Karthikeyan, both Formula One debutants, who had both competed in
the previous year's World Series by Nissan season.
Giorgio Pantano, who raced for Jordan for the majority of 2004, left Formula One altogether, joining the
Super Nova Racing team for the
inaugural GP2 Series season. • Minardi also ran an all-new line-up in 2005, with their 2004 drivers—
Gianmaria Bruni (who switched to GP2 in 2005) and
Zsolt Baumgartner—being replaced by a pair of debutants:
Patrick Friesacher and
Christijan Albers, who had competed in
International Formula 3000 and
DTM, respectively, during the previous season.
Mid-season changes •
BAR test driver
Anthony Davidson raced in
Malaysia in place of an ill
Takuma Sato. Sato returned to the seat for the next race. • Following a shoulder injury to Juan Pablo Montoya, McLaren reserve driver
Pedro de la Rosa raced for the team in
Bahrain, with
Alexander Wurz taking on third driver duties in place of de la Rosa. For the
San Marino Grand Prix, de la Rosa and Wurz swapped roles. Montoya returned for the following race. •
Vitantonio Liuzzi and
Christian Klien were both contracted to Red Bull Racing to participate in at least three races, and agreed to share their race seat for the season. While Klien, who had raced for the team's forerunners Jaguar in 2004, drove in the first three races, Liuzzi replaced him for the San Marino,
Spanish,
Monaco, and
European Grands Prix. Klien returned for the
Canadian Grand Prix, and completed the remainder of the season. •
Robert Doornbos was Jordan's third driver for nine of the first eleven races of the season.
Franck Montagny replaced him at the European Grand Prix, while Jordan were banned from using a third car at the Canadian Grand Prix after using too many tyres at the previous race.
Nicolas Kiesa replaced Doornbos for the
German Grand Prix onwards, when the Dutchman replaced Patrick Friesacher at Minardi due to sponsorship issues. •
Chanoch Nissany became Minardi's third driver for the
Hungarian Grand Prix. He was replaced by
Enrico Toccacelo for the
Turkish Grand Prix and
Italian Grand Prix. Nissany was the first Israeli to participate in a Formula One weekend. •
Antônio Pizzonia replaced Nick Heidfeld at Williams for the Italian Grand Prix, when Heidfeld decided to withdraw after complaining of a severe headache. Earlier in the week, he had crashed heavily during a test session at Monza. Heidfeld had been due to return for the
Brazilian Grand Prix, but after having a motorcycle accident he was forced to sit out the remainder of the season, with Pizzonia continuing to race for Williams in Heidfeld's absence. • Ricardo Zonta filled in for Ralf Schumacher who suffered a concussion after hitting the wall in practice at the
2005 United States Grand Prix. Zonta drove Schumacher's car in qualifying; however, due to concerns over the Michelin tyres, Zonta along with the other 13 Michelin-shod cars withdrew from the race. ==Calendar==