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2000 Formula One World Championship Schedule Teams and Drivers Drivers' Standings Constructors' Standings Grands Prix
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2000 Season Formula One World Championship

Drivers' Champion:
Michael Schumacher
Constructors' Champion:
Ferrari
Previous Season: 1999 Season
Next Season: 2001 Season

Other Champions:
CART Championship Series: Gil de Ferran
Indy Racing League: Buddy Lazier
Indy Lights: Scott Dixon
Atlantic Championship: Buddy Rice
Australian Drivers' Championship: Simon Wills
Formula Nippon Championship: Toranosuke Takagi
International Formula 3000: Bruno Junqueira
Italian Formula 3000: Ricardo Sperafico
Open Telefonica by Nissan: Antonio García
Russian Formula 1600 Championship: Alexander Nesterov
British Formula 3 Championship: Antônio Pizzonia
All-Japan Formula Three Championship: Sébastien Philippe
German Formula Three Championship: Giorgio Pantano
French Formula Three Championship: Jonathan Cochet
Italian Formula Three Championship: Davide Uboldi
Australian Formula 3 National Series: Paul Stephenson
Finnish Formula Three Championship: Marko Nevalainen
Formula Three Sudamericana: Vítor Meira
Russian Formula Three Championship: Alberto Pedemonte
United States Formula Three Championship: Stuart Crow
Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup: Felipe Massa
Formula Renault 2000 UK: Kimi Räikkönen
Championnat de France Formule Renault 2000: Renaud Derlot
Formula Renault BARC: Jamie Beales
Formula Renault 2000 Italia: Felipe Massa
Formula Renault 1.6 Argentina: Esteban Guerrieri
Formula BMW ADAC: Hannes Lachinger

The 2000 FIA Formula One World Championship was the 54th season of FIA Formula One motor racing. It commenced on 12 March and ended on 22 October after seventeen races. Michael Schumacher became Ferrari's first World Drivers' Champion in 21 years, having clinched the Drivers' title at the penultimate race of the season. Ferrari successfully defended its Constructors' title.

For the third year in succession, the season featured a close battle between Ferrari and McLaren. Schumacher won the first three races and dominated the first part of the season as McLaren had reliability issues. Then misfortune struck Schumacher, who retired from three consecutive races with both Mika Häkkinen and David Coulthard scoring big. Häkkinen then surged to win two races in a row, leaving him six points clear of Schumacher who faced a fifth consecutive season at Ferrari without titles since 1996. Schumacher fought back winning the final four races of the season in convincing fashion, recording pole position on all those occasions. The title was sealed in Japan on 8 October, after a classic straight fight between Schumacher and Häkkinen, with Schumacher passing Häkkinen at the final pit stop and then holding out in front.

The season held the record for the smallest number of drivers competing in a single season with only one driver change (Luciano Burti deputising for an ill Eddie Irvine in Austria) putting the total at 23. This record stood until 2008, where there were no driver changes.

Grands Prix Date Circuit Laps Winning Driver Winning Constructor
2000-03-12 58
2000-03-26 71
2000-04-09 62
2000-04-23 60
2000-05-07 65
2000-05-21 67
2000-06-04 78
2000-06-18 69
2000-07-02 72
2000-07-16 71
2000-07-30 45
2000-08-13 77
2000-08-27 44
2000-09-10 53
2000-09-24 73
2000-10-08 53
2000-10-22 56



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