Race of Champions

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Template:Short description Template:About Template:Distinguish Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox motorsport championship

File:Race of Champions 2007 panorama.jpg
2007 Race of Champions at Wembley Stadium

The Race of Champions (ROC) is an international motorsport event held at the start or end of each year, featuring some of the world's best racing and rally drivers from Formula One, World Rally Championship, IndyCar, NASCAR, sports car racing, touring car racing, and motorcycle racing, who compete against each other in identical cars.

The race was first organised in 1988 by former rally driver Michèle Mouton and Fredrik Johnsson, IMP (International Media Productions) President. Originally the event was a competition between the world's best rally drivers, but has since expanded to include top competitors from most other motorsport disciplines. The top individual overall in the Race of Champions is given the title "Champion of Champions" and receives the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy. The ROC Nations' Cup was added in 1999 and now features teams of two drivers who compete for their country.

The event has taken place in several venues, including 12 years on Gran Canaria from 1992 to 2003. From 2004 to 2019, the event was held in major sporting stadiums, including the Stade de France in Paris, Wembley Stadium in London, the Beijing National Stadium, Düsseldorf's ESPRIT arena, the Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok, Olympic Stadium, the Marlins Park in Miami, the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh, and the Foro Sol in Mexico City. However in 2014, the event was held at the Bushy Park circuit in Barbados, and the 2022 edition was held on a frozen Baltic Sea in northern Sweden.

Overview

File:Grönholm and P. Solberg - 2007 Race of Champions.jpg
Marcus Grönholm and Henning Solberg driving Ford Focus RS WRC 07 cars at the 2007 Nations' Cup.

In the Race of Champions, the individual drivers compete head-to-head in one race around the track. The drivers are gradually eliminated using a round-robin format, with the best eight entering a knockout tournament. Prior to the Race of Champions, eight teams of two drivers compete in the ROC Nations' Cup using a similar format.

File:Sebastian Vettel - 2007 Race of Champions.jpg
Sebastian Vettel driving the ROC buggy.

In both the ROC Nations' Cup and the Race of Champions, the final consists of three runs, with the team or driver that achieves two victories first crowned champion.

Cars

The cars used in the Race Of Champions vary from year to year. Prior to each run, a type of car is assigned to both of the drivers, with each machine being mechanically identical. Over the course of the event, each driver will get to drive several different cars.

In 2012, the cars selected for the Race Of Champions included a ROC Car buggy, the KTM X-Bow, the Audi R8 LMS, the Lamborghini Gallardo SuperTrofeo, the VW Scirocco R-Cup and the NASCAR European Stock Car.

In 2022, the cars selected included the FIA RX2e, the Porsche 718 Cayman GT4 Clubsport and the off-road Polaris RZR PRO XP. SuperCar Lites were also used and powered by 100% fossil-free biofuel.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Manufacturer Model Years Used Image
Abarth Grande Punto S2000 2007 File:Jimmie Johnson - 2007 Race of Champions 2.jpg
500 Assetto Corse 2008 File:2008 ROC Edwards.jpg
Ariel Atom 2014–2015 File:IMGP6008 (23310858329).jpg
Aston Martin V8 Vantage Rally GT 2006
Vantage N24 2007 File:Sebastian Vettel - 2007 Race of Champions 3.jpg
Audi R8 LMS 2010–2012, 2014 File:Blancpain Endurance Series - Audi R8 LMS - 001.jpg
Chevrolet Camaro EuroNASCAR 2010–2012, 2014–2015 File:IMGP5170 (23679152415).jpg
Citroën Xsara WRC 2004–2006 File:FrancoisDuvalXsaraAdac07.jpg
Ferrari 360 Modena 2004
Ford Focus RS WRC 2007–2009 File:Andy Priaulx - 2007 Race of Champions 2.jpg
KTM X-Bow 2008–2012, 2014–2015 File:2008 ROC KTM X-BOW.jpg
X-Bow Comp R 2025
Lamborghini Gallardo Super Trofeo 2012 File:American Le Mans Series Oak Tree Grand Prix at VIR October 2013 (10295566816).jpg
Mercedes-AMG GT 2015 File:IMGP6143 (23570025912).jpg
Olsbergs MSE Supercar Lites 2022, 2025 File:2019 ARX of COTA-18 (48811967203).jpg
RX2e 2022
FC1-X 2022
FC2 2025
Peugeot 307 WRC 2004–2005
Polaris RZR 2022
RZR Pro R 2025
Porsche 911 GT3 2005
911 GT3 RSR 2006
911 GT3 Cup 2010
718 Cayman GT4 Clubsport 2022
Radical SR3 RSX 2015 File:IMGP6092 (23652505576).jpg
Renault Megane Trophy 2005–2006 File:2005-03-04 Motorshow Geneva 056.JPG
RGM Stadium Super Truck 2014 File:7DM23240-1.jpg
ROC ROC Car 2004–2012, 2014–2015 File:Sebastian Vettel - 2007 Race of Champions.jpg
Solution F Prototype 2007–2010 File:Heikki Kovalainen - 2007 Race of Champions.jpg
RX Racing RX150 2008–2010, 2015 File:2008 ROC RX 150.jpg
2-Seater 2010
Skoda Fabia S2000 2011
SRC Rage Comet 2015
Subaru BRZ tS 2025
Toyota GT-86 2012
GR86 2025
Volkswagen Scirocco 2009–2012
Polo WRX 2014
VUHL 05 ROC 2017-2021
File:2017 Race of Champions - Ryan Hunter-Reay (7).jpg

History

File:Stig Blomqvist - 2007 Race of Champions 3.jpg
Two-time winner Stig Blomqvist driving an Audi Quattro S1.

Early events (1988–1991)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The first-ever Race of Champions was held in 1988 at the Autodrome de Linas-Montlhéry near Paris, in memory of Henri Toivonen, who died while leading the 1986 Tour de Corse, and to celebrate the tenth anniversary of the world championship for rally drivers.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The inaugural cast included all the eight world rally champions from 1979 to 1988; Björn Waldegård, Walter Röhrl, Ari Vatanen, Hannu Mikkola, Stig Blomqvist, Timo Salonen, Juha Kankkunen and Miki Biasion. The final was a battle between two "Flying Finns", in which Kankkunen beat Salonen to become the first "Champion of Champions". The cars used at the first event were Audi Quattro S1, BMW M3, Ford Sierra RS Cosworth, Lancia Delta Integrale, Opel Manta 400 and Peugeot 205 Turbo 16.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The following years saw new events in addition to the main race. The International Rally Masters, started in 1990, was designed to offer the season's best drivers, who were yet to win a championship title, the chance to win a spot in the main Race of Champions. The Classic Rally Masters, first contested in 1994, was a "historic" Race of Champions competed with pre-1965 Porsche 911s. These two events have since been discontinued.

From 1989 until 1991, there were one-off appearances at the Nürburgring, Barcelona and Madrid.

Gran Canaria (1992–2003)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The event found a permanent home for the next 12 years at the Ciudad Deportiva Islas Canarias venue on Gran Canaria starting from 1992. It was during this period that the emphasis on rally champions faded. The Nations' Cup was introduced in 1999, bringing in circuit racing drivers and motorcyclists to the event for the first time, with 2001 marking the first time that non-rally drivers were eligible to compete for the main title.

2003 was the last time the event would be held on Gran Canaria, the event switching to stadium-based tracks from 2004. The change from gravel to tarmac circuits saw rally drivers lose their dominance, and by 2007 only a handful of rally drivers were present, with the majority made up of circuit racing drivers from F1, touring cars and sportscars.

Saint-Denis (2004–2006)

File:Heikki Kovalainen - 2007 Race of Champions.jpg
2004 surprise winner Heikki Kovalainen driving a Solution F Prototype at the 2007 event.

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The 2004 Race of Champions took place on December 6 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis. The individual event was won by Heikki Kovalainen, the first non-rally driver to win the crown, and the Nations' Cup by Jean Alesi and Sébastien Loeb representing France. There was also a special "World Champions Challenge" race held between 2004 Formula One world champion Michael Schumacher and 2004 World Rally champion Sébastien Loeb, which Schumacher won.

File:Sebastien loeb spafrancorchamps2014.JPG
Sébastien Loeb won his second title in 2005.

The 2005 event took place on December 3. The individual event was won by Sébastien Loeb after Tom Kristensen crashed out of the final, and the Nations' Cup event was won by Tom Kristensen and Mattias Ekström representing Scandinavia.

File:Mattias Ekström - 2007 Race of Champions 3.jpg
2006 winner Mattias Ekström demonstrating his DTM car at the 2007 event.

The 2006 event took place on December 16. The Nations' Cup was competed first and the event was won by Finland, with Heikki Kovalainen beating United States' Travis Pastrana on the final round. Kovalainen's teammate was the two-time World Rally Champion Marcus Grönholm, whereas Pastrana drove all the rounds for the US team, after both Jimmie Johnson and his replacement, Scott Speed, had to withdraw from competing due to injuries.

The individual event and the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy was won by Mattias Ekström of Sweden. He beat Kovalainen by 0.0002 seconds in the semi-finals, and then defending champion, Sébastien Loeb of France, in the finals.

London (2007–2008)

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File:Race of Champions 2007 competitors.jpg
The 16 competitors line up before the start of the event.

The 2007 Race of Champions took place on December 16 at Wembley Stadium in London, England. The Nations' Cup took place at the start of the afternoon and was won by Germany over Finland. The individual event followed and the Henri Toivonen Memorial Trophy was won by Mattias Ekström of Sweden, beating Michael Schumacher of Germany in the final.

The 2008 event took place on December 14. Germany retained their Nations' Cup title by beating the Scandinavian team in the final, while Sébastien Loeb overcame the recently retired F1 stalwart David Coulthard to win the individuals' event.

Beijing (2009)

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The 2009 Race of Champions took place in Beijing's National Stadium on November 3–4. For the first time, regional finals were held to help determine the competitors for the Nations' Cup, with Monaco earning the right to compete in the main event after beating teams from Italy, Spain and Portugal at an event held in Porto on June 6–7.

Germany beat Great Britain to win the Nations' Cup for the third successive time, with Mattias Ekström beating Michael Schumacher to claim the individual title in a re-run of the 2007 final.

Düsseldorf (2010–2011)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}}

The 2010 Race of Champions took place in Düsseldorf's Esprit Arena on November 27–28.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Germany retained their Nations' Cup crown in front of their home crowd, once again beating Great Britain, while Portugal's Filipe Albuquerque was a surprise winner of the individual event after beating newly crowned F1 champion Sebastian Vettel in the semi-final and Sébastien Loeb in the final.

The 2011 event was due to take place in Frankfurt's Commerzbank-Arena on December 3–4,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> but after Eintracht Frankfurt's relegation to German football's Second Division, the stadium could no longer host the event on those dates.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The Race of Champions was held in the Esprit Arena in Düsseldorf, just as in 2010.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Germany secured their fifth successive Nations' Cup title, beating the Nordic team in the final, while up-and-coming rally star Sébastien Ogier beat Le Mans legend Tom Kristensen in the final to clinch the individual crown.

Bangkok (2012–2013)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2012 Race of Champions took place on December 14–16 at the Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The individual Race Of Champions was won by Lotus F1 driver Romain Grosjean, who beat Tom Kristensen in the final. The Nations' Cup was won for the sixth consecutive time by Germany after overcoming France in the final.

The 2012 edition was the first to include a ROC Asia competition, with teams from host nation Thailand, India, China and Japan battling for two spots in the ROC Nations Cup and individual seats in the actual Race Of Champions.

The 2013 event was due to take place on the December 14–15 at the Rajamangala Stadium in Bangkok, Thailand, but was canceled due to political unrest in Bangkok.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Barbados (2014)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2014 Race of Champions was held in Barbados at the Bushy Park circuit on December 13–14.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> This was the first time that the event was held in North America. The individual Race Of Champions was won by 13 times F1 race winner David Coulthard, who beat Mercedes F1 test driver and youngest ever DTM race winner Pascal Wehrlein in the final. The Nations' Cup was won by Team Nordic's Tom Kristensen and Petter Solberg overcoming Team Great Britain's David Coulthard and Susie Wolff in the final.

The 2014 included a ROC Caribbean competition, with teams from host nation Barbados, Jamaica, Guyana and Trinidad and Tobago battling for two spots in the ROC Nations Cup and individual seats in the actual Race Of Champions.

London (2015)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} In 2015 Race of Champions returned to London and was staged at London Stadium in Stratford. The ROC Nations Cup was held on Friday 20 November and the Race of Champions on Saturday 21 November.

Drivers included four times Formula One World Champion Sebastian Vettel, nine times 24 Hours of Le Mans winner Tom Kristensen and FIA World Rallycross Championship winner Petter Solberg. The ROC Nations Cup was won by Team England 1 consisting of Jason Plato and Andy Priaulx, while Sebastian Vettel was crowned Champion of Champions.

Miami (2017)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2017 Race of Champions was held at Marlins Park in Miami, Florida, on January 21–22. This was the Second time that the event was held in North America. Fifteen drivers from six nations competed at the 2017 ROC. Drivers included 2015 NASCAR Sprint Cup Champion Kyle Busch, and former Indy 500 Champion Juan Pablo Montoya, who each participated in their first ROC.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Juan Pablo Montoya was crowned the Champion of Champions after defeating Tom Kristensen, while Sebastian Vettel won the Nations Cup for Team Germany after teammate Pascal Wehrlein did not compete in the Nations Cup after suffering an accident during the Champion of Champions event the day prior. Team USA drivers Kurt Busch and Kyle Busch were the runners up for the Nations Cup.

Riyadh (2018)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2018 Race of Champions was held at the King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh, becoming the first international motorsports event to be held in Saudi Arabia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

This was the first edition to feature eROC, where sim racers competed against each other both virtually and on the ROC track for the chance to compete in the main Race of Champions event.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Mexico City (2019)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2019 Race of Champions was held at the Foro Sol in Mexico City, becoming the third Race of Champions to be held in North America.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Virtual (2020)

The 2020 Race of Champions was held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic at recreations of the Gran Canaria track and the Riyadh and London stadium tracks that were all recreated in Assetto Corsa.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Sweden (2022–2023)

{{#invoke:Labelled list hatnote|labelledList|Main article|Main articles|Main page|Main pages}} The 2022 Race of Champions was held at Pite Havsbad in Piteå, northern Sweden.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was the first time the event had been held on a snow and ice track. The 2023 Race of Champions was held at the same venue.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Sydney (2025)

The 2025 Race of Champions was held on 7–8 March at Stadium Australia in Sydney. This was the first time the event was hosted in the Southern Hemisphere.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Winners

Year Location Race of Champions Nations' Cup winners Other trophies
Winner Runner-up Nation Drivers
1988 Template:Flagicon Montlhéry Template:Flagicon Juha Kankkunen Template:Flagicon Timo Salonen Not held Not held
1989 Template:Flagicon Nürburgring Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist Template:Flagicon Walter Röhrl
1990 Template:Flagicon Barcelona Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist Template:Flagicon Tommi Mäkinen Template:Flagicon Kenneth Eriksson
(Rally Masters)
1991 Template:Flagicon Madrid Template:Flagicon Juha Kankkunen Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol Template:Flagicon Josep Maria Bardolet
(Rally Masters)
1992 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Andrea Aghini Template:Flagicon Colin McRae Template:Flagicon Flavio Alonso
(Rally Masters)
1993 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol Template:Flagicon Carlos Sainz Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist
(Rally Masters)
1994 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist Template:Flagicon Timo Salonen
(Rally Masters)

Template:Flagicon Jean-Louis Schlesser
(Classic Masters)

1995 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon François Delecour Template:Flagicon Colin McRae Template:Flagicon Andrea Aghini
(Rally Masters)

Template:Flagicon Marc Duez
(Classic Masters)

1996 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol Template:Flagicon François Delecour Template:Flagicon Flavio Alonso
(Rally Masters)
1997 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Carlos Sainz Template:Flagicon Colin McRae Template:Flagicon Jarmo Kytölehto
(Rally Masters)

Template:Flagicon Walter Röhrl
(Classic Masters)

1998 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Colin McRae Template:Flagicon Alister McRae Template:Flagicon Alister McRae
(Rally Masters)
Template:Flagicon Miki Biasion
(Classic Masters)
1999 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol Template:Flagicon Tommi Mäkinen Template:Flag Tommi Mäkinen
JJ Lehto
Kari Tiainen
Template:Flagicon Armin Schwarz
(Rally Masters)

Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist
(ROC Legends)

2000 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Tommi Mäkinen Template:Flagicon Marcus Grönholm Template:Flag Regis Laconi
Yvan Muller
Gilles Panizzi
Template:Flagicon Armin Schwarz
(Rally Masters)

Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist
(ROC Legends)

2001 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Harri Rovanperä Template:Flagicon Armin Schwarz Template:Flag Jesús Puras
Rubén Xaus
Fernando Alonso
Template:Flagicon François Duval
(Junior Rally Masters)
Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist
(ROC Legends)
2002 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Marcus Grönholm Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flag Jimmie Johnson
Jeff Gordon
Colin Edwards
Template:Flagicon François Duval
(Junior Rally Masters)
2003 Template:Flagicon Gran Canaria Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flagicon Marcus Grönholm Template:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon All-Stars Fonsi Nieto
Cristiano da Matta
Gilles Panizzi
Template:Flagicon François Duval
(Junior Rally Masters)
2004 Template:Flagicon Saint-Denis Template:Flagicon Heikki Kovalainen Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flag Jean Alesi
Sébastien Loeb
Not held
2005 Template:Flagicon Saint-Denis Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flagicon Tom Kristensen Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Scandinavia Tom Kristensen
Mattias Ekström
2006 Template:Flagicon Saint-Denis Template:Flagicon Mattias Ekström Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flag Heikki Kovalainen
Marcus Grönholm
2007 Template:Flagicon London Template:Flagicon Mattias Ekström Template:Flagicon Michael Schumacher Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
2008 Template:Flagicon London Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flagicon David Coulthard Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
2009 Template:Flagicon Beijing Template:Flagicon Mattias Ekström Template:Flagicon Michael Schumacher Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
Template:Flagicon Ho-Pin Tung
(ROC China)
Template:Flagicon Andy Priaulx
(ROC Legends)
2010 Template:Flagicon Düsseldorf Template:Flagicon Filipe Albuquerque Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
Not held
2011 Template:Flagicon Düsseldorf Template:Flagicon Sébastien Ogier Template:Flagicon Tom Kristensen Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
Template:Flagicon Heinz-Harald Frentzen
(ROC Legends)
2012 Template:Flagicon Bangkok Template:Flagicon Romain Grosjean Template:Flagicon Tom Kristensen Template:Flag Michael Schumacher
Sebastian Vettel
Template:Flag
(ROC Asia)
Template:Flagicon Nattavude Charoensukawattana
(ROC Thailand)
2013 Template:Flagicon Bangkok Cancelled due to political unrest during the 2013-2014 Thai political crisis
2014 Template:Flagicon Bushy Park Template:Flagicon David Coulthard Template:Flagicon Pascal Wehrlein Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Nordic Tom Kristensen
Petter Solberg
Template:Flagicon Barbados
(ROC Caribbean)
Template:Flagicon Esteban Ocon
(ROC Skills Challenge)
2015 Template:Flagicon London Template:Flagicon Sebastian Vettel Template:Flagicon Tom Kristensen Template:Flagicon England 1 Jason Plato
Andy Priaulx
Template:Flagicon Chris Hoy
(ROC Celebrity Skills Challenge)
2016 No race held (event was changed from late to early year)
2017 Template:Flagicon Miami Template:Flagicon Juan Pablo Montoya Template:Flagicon Tom Kristensen Template:Flag Sebastian Vettel
Pascal Wehrlein
Template:Flagicon Petter Solberg
(ROC Skills Challenge)
2018 Template:Flagicon Riyadh Template:Flagicon David Coulthard Template:Flagicon Petter Solberg Template:Flag Timo Bernhard
René Rast
Template:Flagicon Johan Kristoffersson
(ROC Skills Challenge)
Template:Flagicon Enzo Bonito
(eROC)
2019 Template:Flagicon Mexico City Template:Flagicon Benito Guerra Template:Flagicon Loïc Duval Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Nordic Johan Kristoffersson
Tom Kristensen
Template:Flagicon James Baldwin
(eROC)
Template:Flagicon Sebastian Vettel
(ROC Skills Challenge)
Template:Flagicon Rubén Garcia Jr
(ROC Mexico Race 1)
Template:Flagicon Abraham Calderón
(ROC Mexico Race 2)
Template:Flagicon Robby Gordon
(Super Stadium Trucks Race 1)
Template:Flagicon Matthew Brabham
(Super Stadium Trucks Race 2)
2020 Online (virtual) Template:Flagicon Timmy Hansen Template:Flagicon Rubén García Jr. Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon All-Stars James Baldwin
Romain Grosjean
Template:Flagicon James Baldwin
(eROC)
2021 No race held due to COVID-19 pandemic
2022 Template:Flagicon Piteå Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flagicon Sebastian Vettel Template:Flag Petter Solberg
Oliver Solberg
Template:Flagicon Jarno Opmeer
(eROC)
Template:Flagicon Pontus Fredricsson
(Porsche ROC Snow + Ice Challenge)
Template:Flagicon Aksel Lund Svindal
(ROC Celebrity Challenge)
2023 Template:Flagicon Piteå Template:Flagicon Mattias Ekström Template:Flagicon Mick Schumacher Template:Flag Petter Solberg
Oliver Solberg
Template:Flagicon Lucas Blakeley (eROC)
2024 No race held due to uncertainties regarding the use of the land in Piteå<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation CitationClass=web

}}</ref>

2025 Template:Flagicon Sydney Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb Template:Flagicon Chaz Mostert Template:Flag Sébastien Loeb
Victor Martins
Template:Flagicon Michael Romanidis (eROC)

Total wins

Template:Col-begin Template:Col-2

Champion of Champions
Driver (20) Victories
Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb 5
Template:Flagicon Didier Auriol 4
Template:Flagicon Mattias Ekström
Template:Flagicon Stig Blomqvist 2
Template:Flagicon Juha Kankkunen
Template:Flagicon David Coulthard
Template:Flagicon Juan Pablo Montoya 1
Template:Flagicon Carlos Sainz
Template:Flagicon Tommi Mäkinen
Template:Flagicon Harri Rovanperä
Template:Flagicon Marcus Grönholm
Template:Flagicon Heikki Kovalainen
Template:Flagicon François Delecour
Template:Flagicon Romain Grosjean
Template:Flagicon Sébastien Ogier
Template:Flagicon Andrea Aghini
Template:Flagicon Sebastian Vettel
Template:Flagicon Benito Guerra
Template:Flagicon Filipe Albuquerque
Template:Flagicon Timmy Hansen
Template:Flagicon Colin McRae

Template:Col-2

Nations' Cup
Country/Team (16) Victories
Template:Flagicon Germany 8
Template:Flagicon France 3
Template:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconAll-Stars 2
Template:Flagicon Finland
Template:FlagiconTemplate:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Nordic
Template:Flagicon Norway
Template:Flagicon Spain 1
Template:Flagicon United States
Template:FlagiconTemplate:Flagicon Scandinavia
Template:Flagicon England
Combined wins
Driver Victories
Template:Flagicon Sebastian Vettel 9 (1+7+1)
Template:Flagicon Sébastien Loeb 7 (5+2)
Template:Flagicon Michael Schumacher 6 (0+6)

Template:Col-end

See also

References

Template:Reflist

Template:Sister project

Template:Race of Champions years