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United States Road Racing Championship

(Redirected from USRRC)

The United States Road Racing Championship (USRRC) was a Sports Car Club of America series for professional racing drivers. SCCA Executive Director John Bishop helped to create the series in 1962 to recover races that had been taken by rival USAC Road Racing Championship, a championship that folded after the 1962 season.[1] For its first three seasons, the series featured both open-topped sports cars and GT cars. Ford and Porsche dominated the Over- and Under-2 Liter classes, respectively. The USRRC ran from 1963 until 1968 when it was abandoned in favor of the more successful Can-Am series, which was also run by the SCCA.

In 1998 the USRRC name was revived by the SCCA as an alternative to the IMSA GT Championship, and revived the Can-Am name for its top class. For 1999 the series reached an agreement with the International Sports Racing Series in Europe, in which the two series would share the same rules for prototypes. Entries for the series were sparse, and the final two rounds were cancelled. At the end of 1999, the series was taken over by the new Grand American Road Racing Association (GARRA) and the championship was reborn as the Grand American Road Racing Championship (Grand-Am), also known as the Rolex Sports Car Series. In 2014, Grand-Am and the American Le Mans Series merged to form the WeatherTech SportsCar Championship.

Champions

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Season Driver GT Makes
1963 United States  Bob Holbert United States  AC Cobra
1964 United States  Jim Hall United States  Shelby American
1965 United States  George Follmer
1966 United States  Chuck Parsons
1967 United States  Mark Donohue
1968

USRRC champions

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Season Can-Am GT1 GT2 GT3
1998 United Kingdom  James Weaver Belgium  Thierry Boutsen United States  Scott Sansone
United States  Cameron Worth
Canada  Ross Bentley
1999 United States  Elliott Forbes-Robinson
United States  Butch Leitzinger
no title United States  Larry Schumacher
United States  John O'Steen
United States  Cort Wagner

References

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  1. ^ Gousseau, Alexis (23 April 2006). "A tribute to John Bishop". IMSAblog. Retrieved 29 May 2010.
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