All-Japan Sports Prototype Championship

The All Japan Sports Prototype Championship (全日本スポーツプロトタイプ選手権), abbreviated as JSPC, formed by the Japan Automobile Federation, was a domestic championship which took place in Japan for Group C and IMSA GTP prototype cars and also featured cars that were eligible for touring car racing in its earlier years. Class A and Class B for production cars which were defined by the FIA (Group A and Group B) and the lead category, Class C would be for cars that are similar to IMSA's Camel Lights and the WEC's C2, whereas Class D was for C1/GTP cars.

All-Japan Sports Prototype Championship
CategorySportscar
CountryJapan Japan
Inaugural season1983
Folded1992

The series began in 1983 as All Japan Endurance Championship, an endurance championship with an intention to replace its domestic touring car championship and started out as a three-round event, including one which as it was part of the WEC round which meant drivers competing in the national series was counted into the world championship. In 1987, the championship would be broken up into two as production cars from the lower categories would be moved into the All Japan Touring Car Championship (now Super GT) formed two years earlier to become a dedicated championship and was renamed the All Japan Sports Prototype Car Endurance Championship.

The series was noted throughout its ten-year run for battles between the various Porsche 956/962C and Japanese manufacturers presented by works teams of Toyota, Nissan and Mazda. Due to waning popularity and seeking to prevent the spiraling budgets and the disappearance of Gr. C and IMSA GTP, the JAF would dissolve the series at the end of 1992 and for the following year replace the series with the All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship, using GT cars such as those in secondary classes as major international sportscar series worldwide favoured the grand tourers (similar to IMSA's lower GTS and GTU classes). This was not to be the end for Group C cars as they would be allowed to compete in the newly formed series for two more years before being banished altogether.

Major sportscar racing in Japan would return again in 2006 with the short-lived Japan Le Mans Challenge.

Champions

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The Yokohama Advan Porsche 962C which won the championship three times.
  Winning Driver(s)
Winning Manufacturer
1983   Vern Schuppan
  Porsche
1984   Naoki Nagasaka
  Lotec-BMW
1985   Kunimitsu Takahashi
  Porsche
1986   Kunimitsu Takahashi
  Porsche
1987   Kunimitsu Takahashi
  Porsche
1988   Hideki Okada
  Porsche
1989   Kunimitsu Takahashi
  Porsche
1990   Masahiro Hasemi
  Nissan
1991   Kazuyoshi Hoshino
  Nissan
1992 C Class C1 Class
  Geoff Lees   Kazuyoshi Hoshino
  Toyota   Nissan

References

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