1990 International Formula 3000 Season - Teams and Drivers

Teams and Drivers

Team Chassis Engine Car # Driver Race weekends
Eddie Jordan Racing Reynard Mugen Honda 1 Emanuele Naspetti 1-3, 5-10
Vincenzo Sospiri 4, 11
2 Eddie Irvine All
3 Heinz-Harald Frentzen All
First Racing Reynard Mugen Honda 4 Fabrizio Giovanardi All
5 Marco Apicella All
6 Jean-Denis Délétraz 1-5
Marco Greco 10-11
GA Motorsport Reynard Ford Cosworth 8 Eric van de Poele All
9 Giovanni Aloi 1-4
Otto Rensing 5
Marco Greco 6-8
Vittorio Zoboli 10-11
44 Thierry Delubac 10-11
Paul Stewart Racing Lola Mugen Honda 10 John Jones All
11 Andrea Chiesa All
Leyton House Racing Leyton House Ford Cosworth 12 Andrew Gilbert-Scott 1-7
Paul Warwick 8-11
13 Philippe Favre 8-11
Galaxy Racing Lola Ford Cosworth 14 Thierry Delubac 1-5
15 Franck Fréon 1-5
Philippe Gache 10-11
Madgwick International Reynard Mugen Honda 16 Andrea Montermini All
17 Jean-Marc Gounon All
Ford Cosworth 43 Pedro Chaves 8-11
CoBRa Motorsports Reynard Mugen Honda 18 Michael Bartels All
19 Richard Dean 1-5
Giovanna Amati 6-10
Alain Menu 11
Pacific Racing Lola Mugen Honda 24 Stéphane Proulx All
25 Marco Greco 1-2
Claude Bourbonnais 10-11
DAMS Lola Mugen Honda 26 Érik Comas All
33 Allan McNish All
Middlebridge Racing Lola Ford Cosworth 27 Gary Brabham 2-11
28 Damon Hill All
Roni Motorsport Reynard Ford Cosworth 31 Antonio Tamburini All
32 Giovanna Amati 1-5
Becsport Lola Mugen Honda 32 Paolo Delle Piane 6-11
34 Giovanni Bonnano 1-4
Domenico Gitto 6-11
Superpower Reynard Mugen Honda 35 Phil Andrews All
36 Paul Belmondo All
Crypton Engineering Leyton House Ford Cosworth 37 Fabrizio Barbazza All
RSM Marko Lola Ford Cosworth 39 Karl Wendlinger 1-2, 4-9, 11
Ellen Lohr 10
Apomatox Reynard Ford Cosworth 40 Philippe Gache 1-7
Andrew Gilbert-Scott 8-11
41 Didier Artzet 1-7, 9
Franck Fréon 10-11
Forti Corse Lola Ford Cosworth 42 Gianni Morbidelli All

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    A sturdy lad from New Hampshire or Vermont who in turn tries all the professions, who teams it, farms it, peddles, keeps a school, preaches, edits a newspaper, goes to Congress, buys a township, and so forth, in successive years, and always like a cat falls on his feet, is worth a hundred of these city dolls. He walks abreast with his days and feels no shame in not “studying a profession,” for he does not postpone his life, but lives already.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)