Singapore's participation in A1GP came as a result of founder Maktoum Hasher Maktoum Al Maktoum approaching the state government about hosting a round of the inaugural season in the city state. The Singaporean authorities turned down the offer on the basis that it was too risky to close the city for a street race run by an unproven championship, and instead opted to enter a team.[1]
The outfit struggled to find sponsorship to fund set-up, going so far as to advertise in The New Paper. A1 Team Singapore missed the deadline to enter the first season, but found support from lawyer Krishna Ramachandra, footballers R. Sasikumar, Luis Figo and Ronaldo, and 300 citizens who pledged SG$50 in exchange for their names to be stickered onto the rear wing ahead of their debut in the 2006–07 season. West Surrey Racing were contracted to operate the team.[2]
Lian was entered to race in the first round at Zandvoort, but was withdrawn having contracted tonsilitis between practice and qualifying. Murchison replaced his with no prior testing, qualified 20th of 23, was crashed into by Ananda Mikola of Indonesia in the sprint race and finished 16th in the feature race having stalled at the start. Lian returned to the car a week later in Brno, however qualified second-last and spun on the opening lap of the feature race. Murchison replaced Lian for the chaotic Beijing round, and finished eighth of nine classified finishers in the feature race to score three points.
Having failed to attract support from Singaporean corporations, financial difficulties beset the team ahead of the Malaysian round – resulting in the series' parent company A1 Holdings taking control of the team and the firing of Lian and Koh. Murchison finished 11th in the feature race following a race-long battle with Ireland's Michael Devaney, therefore missing out on the prize money that came with a top-10 finish. Murchison then injured his back in training ahead of the next round in Indonesia. Devoid of all sponsorship and national symbols, the team struggled through the Australasian leg of the series before making their last appearance in Durban – but Murchison spun in qualifying, crashed on his own in the sprint race and tangled with the stalled Italian car off the grid in the feature race.
The team withdrew from the final three rounds, citing Murchison's back injury. It did not return for the 2007–08 season, with any available domestic funding diverted to financing the inaugural Singapore Grand Prix.[4]