race Following the demise of the
World Sportscar Championship in 1992, there were no international sports car racing series in existence, only small national series or manufacturer cup races featuring nearly identical cars. Patrick Peter and Stéphane Ratel of the
Venturi series in France along with
Jürgen Barth of the German
Porsche series entered into discussions to combine their one-make series into an international championship that would bring back endurance racing to most of
Europe as well as the rest of the world. The series began in 1994 with an eight race schedule, including visits to
Japan and
China, with races of approximately four hours in length. Fields were initially made of a variety of
Porsche and
Venturi racing cars from various racing series broken into a wide variety of classes before later being joined by a modified
Ferrari F40,
Lotus Esprits, and
Callaway Corvettes. In 1995 the series would expand to twelve rounds and the amount of manufacturer interest was increased as new supercars such as the
McLaren F1 GTR, Ferrari F40 GTE, and
Jaguar XJ220 would appear, as well as lower class competitors like the
Porsche 911 GT2 and
De Tomaso Pantera. By 1996, manufacturer involvement had driven out most of the smaller cup cars, leading to the series slimming down to a mere two classes. The manufacturer interest in the series reached a high point when Porsche launched their
911 GT1, a
homologated supercar that was intended first as a racing car. Due to the amount manufacturer involvement, the
Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) decided that the series would be best managed by themselves, leading to the series being reformed into the
FIA GT Championship, where it continued till 2009. Stéphane Ratel would remain in charge of the series commercial rights. Although the BPR series was technically dead, some of its organizers would move onto other series. In France, Patrick Peter would create a new series in association with the French FFSA motorsport organization, known as the
FFSA GT Championship. Cars would be less powerful than those seen in the other years of BPR, retaining the initial four class format, although this would be abandoned in later years. Stéphane Ratel would create the
SRO and help launch the
GTR Euroseries in 1998 for privateer teams to avoid the large manufacturer involvement now seen in FIA GT. The GTR Euroseries would also retain the four-hour race format that was no longer used by FIA GT. Unfortunately this series would fail during its initial season. SRO would go on to create various other national GT series. In 2006, the SRO announced the launch of the GT90's Revival Series, a historic racing series intended to see classic cars from the BPR series return to the track. ==Regulations==