The following
teams and
drivers competed in the 2006
FIA Formula One World Championship.
Free practice drivers Seven constructors entered free practice only drivers over the course of the season.
Manufacturer and team changes • Three prominent names in the sport disappeared for this season, with
Minardi,
BAR and
Jordan changing names under new ownership, while
Sauber changed ownership, and one new team,
Super Aguri, entered at the last moment. Minardi were taken over by
Red Bull, becoming
Toro Rosso, which is
Italian for Red Bull. The Sauber name remained, although largely as a sentiment, as
BMW had purchased 80% of the team, with Peter Sauber keeping only a 20% share. A year after
Alex Shnaider had purchased the team and following a disappointing final season under the Jordan name, Jordan was renamed to
MF1 Racing after Shnaider's
Midland Group company. Late in the season, the team was bought by
Spyker. Honda, who already owned a 45% stake in the BAR team, completed their takeover of the team and changed its name to Honda Racing F1 Team at the start of the season.
Super Aguri F1 also entered their first season after having problems entering. They received limited backing from
Honda including technology and engines, due to them running Honda factory driver
Takuma Sato despite Super Aguri being a Honda customer team. As a result of
Honda's expansion of supplying engines to
Super Aguri, this marked the first season since
2002 that Honda supplied multiple teams in the sport when Honda supplied both
BAR and
Jordan respectively. •
Williams introduced numerous changes for 2006, particularly changing to
Cosworth V8 engines after they and
BMW split.
Red Bull Racing (RBR) had
Ferrari engines, replacing the Cosworth power which gained them seventh in the standings in .
Williams and
Toyota changed tyre suppliers to
Bridgestone, due to
Michelin's desire to supply fewer teams in the championship. Despite this, Toro Rosso, who under the Minardi name ran
Bridgestone tyres, switched to
Michelin in line with parent team RBR. • After
Ilmor fully sold its UK engine division to
DaimlerChrysler, Ilmor-Mercedes officially renamed to Mercedes-Benz High Performance Engines and thus effectively Mercedes-Benz became a sole in-house sport engine builder, assembler and tuner from 2006 onwards.
Driver changes •
Ferrari replaced
Michael Schumacher's longtime teammate
Rubens Barrichello with fellow Brazilian
Felipe Massa, who moved from
Sauber. Massa had previously tested with Ferrari in 2003. Massa was replaced at the newly renamed
BMW Sauber team by returnee
Nick Heidfeld, who had driven for BMW's previous partners
Williams for much of 2005 and Sauber in 2001-2003. Poland's
Robert Kubica took up the third driver's role at BMW Sauber. • Barrichello moved to
Honda, where he replaced the outgoing
Takuma Sato. The Honda-backed
Super Aguri team started the season with Sato and
Yuji Ide, an all-Japanese driver line up.
Franck Montagny moved from his
Renault testing role to become Super Aguri's third driver. His position at Renault was taken by the
GP2 runner-up Heikki Kovalainen. • Williams promoted test driver
Nico Rosberg, who had won the inaugural GP2 drivers' title, to their second seat alongside
Mark Webber.
Alexander Wurz, one of
McLaren's test drivers from 2005, joined Williams as a third driver, alongside India's
Narain Karthikeyan, who had raced for
Jordan the previous season.
Gary Paffett was promoted to a permanent testing role at McLaren alongside
Pedro de la Rosa. • Karthikeyan's seat at Jordan, now renamed as
MF1, was taken by the 2005
Minardi driver
Christijan Albers. MF1 decided to employ a rotation system for their third driver position. Minardi's other driver,
Robert Doornbos, took up a test driving role at
Red Bull.
Vitantonio Liuzzi, who had shared Red Bull's second seat with
Christian Klien in 2005, moved to Red Bull's newly acquired sister team
Toro Rosso—previously Minardi—where he partnered his fellow Red Bull-backed driver
Scott Speed. The Swiss driver
Neel Jani became Toro Rosso's third driver.
Mid-season changes • After the
San Marino Grand Prix Super Aguri's Yuji Ide had his superlicence revoked by the
FIA and could no longer race in Formula One. He was replaced by the team's reserve driver
Franck Montagny for the next race. Super Aguri hired
Sakon Yamamoto, one of Jordan's test drivers from 2005, to be their third driver from the
British Grand Prix onwards, in place of the promoted Montagny. Yamamoto and Montagny switched places from the
German Grand Prix onwards. • After the
United States Grand Prix,
Juan Pablo Montoya announced he was moving to
NASCAR for the 2007 season and leaving
McLaren. The next day, McLaren announced that Montoya would be replaced in their driver line up by test driver Pedro de la Rosa, ending Montoya's five and a half-year F1 career since 2001. • Robert Kubica was promoted to a race seat by BMW Sauber at the
Hungarian Grand Prix, replacing 1997 World Champion
Jacques Villeneuve, possibly due to Villeneuve's injuries after a heavy crash in the German Grand Prix. On the day after the Hungarian GP (7 August 2006), BMW Sauber announced that Villeneuve had left the team with immediate effect, with Kubica replacing him permanently for the remainder of the season. German Formula 3 driver
Sebastian Vettel became BMW Sauber's third driver from the
Turkish Grand Prix onwards, replacing the promoted Kubica. • On 10 September 2006,
Ferrari's seven-time world champion
Michael Schumacher announced his retirement at the end of the season (he returned to
Mercedes in
2010). Following this, Ferrari brought in
Kimi Räikkönen as their team driver for the
2007 season. • On 11 September 2006, Red Bull Racing announced that the team officially sacked
Christian Klien and thus Red Bull drafted its third/test driver,
Robert Doornbos for the final three races of the season as a result of Klien's string of poor results. For the races in China and Japan,
Michael Ammermüller replaced Doornbos as third driver. •
Spyker MF1 announced a duo of new third drivers for two of the final races of the year.
GP2 Series drivers
Alexandre Prémat and
Ernesto Viso took part in practice in
China and
Brazil respectively;
Adrian Sutil, who had previously tested in Germany and France, again tested for the team in
Japan. • During the test at the
Silverstone Circuit in September, GP2 Series drivers
Lewis Hamilton,
Nelson Piquet Jr., and
Adrián Vallés performed test duties for McLaren, Renault and MF1, respectively. Super Aguri's former race driver Franck Montagny also tested for Toyota. ==Calendar==