The 'European Le Mans Series (ELMS)' was a sportscar endurance series based around the
24 Hours of Le Mans that was created in
2000 and ran its only season in
2001 before being cancelled. It was created by
Don Panoz as an expansion on his successful
American Le Mans Series run by
IMSA. The failure of the ELMS eventually led the way to the creation of the
Le Mans Endurance Series a few years later.
Rules
The series was run almost identical to the rules used in the
American Le Mans Series. Four classes competed, based on
Le Mans prototypes and
Grand Touring cars, being known as LMP900, LMP675, GTS, and GT. Races were usually 2 Hours and 45 Minutes in length, with the exception of the 1000km of Estoril. Points were awarded for finishers in each race as part of a championship. Championships included drivers, teams, manufacturers, engine suppliers, and tire suppliers.
Winners of the teams championship in their class earned automatic entry to the
24 Hours of Le Mans.
History
:''See also
2001 European Le Mans Series season''
With the
Automobile Club de l'Ouest (ACO) allowing
Don Panoz to bring the rules and racing formulas of the
24 Hours of Le Mans to America with the creation of the
Petit Le Mans in 1998, Don Panoz attempted to built up a series to be based around Petit Le Mans. The aged
IMSA sportscar series was taken over and became the new
American Le Mans Series, and met with much success in
1999. Following this success, Panoz attempting to bring sportscar racing back to Europe, which had lacked a major sportscar series since the demise of the
World Sportscar Championship in 1992. This led to the
2000 American Le Mans Series season, which included two races in Europe as the
Nürburgring and
Silverstone Circuit, as well as a round in Australia. These races would serve as a precursor to what would become the separate European Le Mans Series in 2001.
The European Le Mans Series was launched for 2001 with 5 races, including a premier 1000km race at
Estoril, which would be the European equivalent of the 1000 mile
Petit Le Mans and earn automatic entries to the
24 Hours of Le Mans for each class winner.
To aid in the development of the ELMS, the 2001 season shared some races between both ALMS and ELMS. The
12 Hours of Sebring and
Petit Le Mans, normally ALMS races, were considered optional races for ELMS teams. At the same time, the ELMS races at
Donington Park and
Jarama were considered optional for ALMS teams. This allowed for the possibility of boosting the draw from international teams to either series.
Unfortunately the series was unable to earn much attention from European sportscar teams, especially since the final
FIA Sportscar Championship and
FIA GT Championship series used similar cars, but different rules which would require teams to modify their cars or buy new cars to comply with ELMS rules. This means that the car count for the 2001 season was small. For the ELMS events that included ALMS teams, very few teams actually bothered to make the trip across the Atlantic to participate in races that appeared to have very few serious competitors. Of the ALMS teams that did race, nearly all were factory backed squads that had the money to spend on transporting their equipment to Europe. Thus the entry lists for each race fell from 25 at the beginning of the season to a mere 14 at season's end, with some classes only having one or two competitors.
With a lack of involvement from teams, and less interest from the media due to the lack of teams, the European Le Mans Series was forced to fold following the 2001 season.
The demise of the European Le Mans Series would not be the end of sportscar racing in Europe. In
2003, the
Automobile Club de l'Ouest announced their intentions to create their own European-based series, named the
Le Mans Endurance Series, which would be similar to the European Le Mans Series, but feature only 1000km races instead of the shorter, 2 Hour 45 Minute races used by ELMS. This series would be far more successful, with a large number of participants from the very beginning.
APLMS
At the same time in the development of the European Le Mans Series,
Don Panoz also proposed the idea of yet another series. Originally named the Asian Le Mans Series, it was later known as the Asian-Pacific Le Mans Series (APLMS). Like the European Le Mans Series, this APLMS would bring an ACO-backed sportscar series to Asia and the Pacific. This could be seen as a resurrection of the
All Japan Sports Prototype Championship (JSPC) which had ended in 1992. The ACO had previous backed a single Japanese event, the
1999 Le Mans Fuji 1000km which combined Le Mans cars with
JGTC machines for automatic entries to the
2000 24 Hours of Le Mans. This idea was followed by the American Le Mans Series in 2000 with a race at the
Adelaide Street Circuit in
Australia. These two events served as a precursor to the planned APLMS series, and at the time of the creation of ELMS, Don Panoz announced his intention to hold an exhibition APLMS race at
Sepang International Circuit in
Malaysia in late 2001.
Unfortunately, as the ELMS season went on, it became apparent that there was a lack of interest in the series, and Don Panoz decided that the APLMS would likely have even less interest. Thus the APLMS exhibition race and all plans for a series were scrapped.
The death of APLMS would also not be in vain, as in
2005 the SECO sanctioning body in
Japan announced their own endurance sportscar series, known as the
Japan Le Mans Challenge (JLMC) with full ACO backing.
External Links
★
IMSA European Le Mans Series webpage