About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 38. Chapters: D1 Grand Prix drivers, D1 Grand Prix seasons, 2006 D1 Grand Prix season, 2007 D1 Grand Prix season, 2009 D1 Grand Prix season, 2008 D1 Grand Prix season, Keiichi Tsuchiya, 2010 D1 Grand Prix season, Tiff Needell, D1NZ, Nobushige Kumakubo, Nobuteru Taniguchi, 2005 D1 Grand Prix season, Ryuji Miki, Rod Millen, Ken Nomura, Atsushi Kuroi, Masao Suenaga, Rhys Millen, Tsuyoshi Tezuka, Masato Kawabata, Youichi Imamura, Yasuyuki Kazama, Chris Forsberg, Kazuhiro Tanaka, Option, Daigo Saito, Katsuhiro Ueo, Hideo Hiraoka, Takahiro Ueno, Yoshinori Koguchi, Tetsuya Hibino, Tanner Foust, Vaughn Gittin, Toshiki Yoshioka, Tatsuya Sakuma, Ryan Tuerck, Daijiro Yoshihara, 2004 D1 Grand Prix season, Ernie Fixmer, Samuel Hubinette, 2002 D1 Grand Prix season, 2003 D1 Grand Prix season, Seigo Yamamoto, Mark Luney, 8-Ball, Ken Gushi, Manabu Orido, Video Option, 2001 D1 Grand Prix season, Tarzan Yamada, Tony Angelo, Manabu Suzuki, Tengku Djan Ley, Takayuki Aoki, Niall Gunn, Declan Hicks, Darren McNamara, Kouichi Yamashita, DriftBox, Maciej Polody, Phil Morrison. Excerpt: The D1 Grand Prix D1 guranpuri), abbreviated as D1GP and subtitled Professional Drift, is a production car drifting series from Japan. After several years of hosting amateur drifting contests, Option magazine & Tokyo Auto Salon founder Daijiro Inada, and drifting legend Keiichi Tsuchiya hosted a professional level drifting contest in 1999 and 2000 to feed on the ever increasing skills of drifting drivers who were dominating drifting contests in various parts of Japan. In October 2000 Inada and Tsuchiya reformed the contest as a five round series. At the following year for the following round, it was the introduction of the two car tsuiou battle, run in a single-elimination tournament format, a common tradition for t ge races which would become popular with car enthusiasts. ...