How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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mnmracer
mnmracer
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How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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As the last few seats for the 2013 Formula One season fill up, we can welcome at least three new young talents next year: GP2 driver for Marussia Max Chilton, 2011 GP3 champion and Williams test driver Valtteri Bottas and Lotus GP2 driver Esteban Gutiérrez. I thought it'd be interesting to have a look at the importance of winning a championship in a direct feeder series. What has been the best junior formula-results of today's big names in Formula One, and what became of the champions of Formula 2, Formula 3000, GP2 and Formula Renault 3.5?

Short history of the feeder series
While Formula One is the pinnacle of open-wheeled auto racing, the high-performance nature of the cars and the expense involved in the series has always meant a need for a path to reach this peak. While there are and have been many types of junior formulae, Formula 3 being the most popular, for much of the history of Formula One, Formula Two has represented the penultimate step on the motorsport ladder. In 1984, Formula Two (with their 2-liter engines) were upgraded to 3000cc engines, and the series was renamed to Formula 3000. In 2005, the new GP2 series replaced Formula 3000.

In 2005, Formula Renault ran a new, faster series from their trade-mark Formula Renault 2.0 championship. The new Formula Renault 3.5 series was almost on the same level as the GP2 series and FR3.5's first champion, Robert Kubica, became a Grand Prix winner. The World Series by Renault, as of 2012, are now actualy as fast as the GP2 series, and can really be considered one of the direct feeder series.

Formula 2, while the original series evolved into GP2, returned under that name in 2009 and is slightly slower than Formula Renault 3.5 and GP2, but still a clear step up from all the other junior formulae. Despite a relatively large field of contenders, the organisation announced that 2012 was the final season of the Formula 2 championship, due to declining entrants for 2013.

Formula One drivers in the 'feeder series'
  • Michael Schumacher (F1 debut in 1991) won the 1990 German Formula Three championship and won three races in the World Sportscar Championship.
  • Jenson Button (F1 debut in 2000) finished 3rd in the 1999 British F3 championship.
  • Fernando Alonso (F1 debut in 2001) finished 4th in the 2000 Formula 3000 championship, after winning Formula Nissan (class between F3 and F3000) in 1999.
  • Kimi Räikkönen (F1 debut in 2001) got his chance in F1 after impressing in the 2000 British Formula Renault 2000 championship.
  • Felipe Massa (F1 debut in 2001) won the 2001 European Formula 3000 championship.
  • Mark Webber (F1 debut in 2002) finished 3rd and 2nd in the 2000 and 2001 Formula 3000 championships.
  • Nico Rosberg (F1 debut in 2006) was the first driver to win the GP2 championship in 2005.
  • Sebastian Vettel (F1 debut in 2007) dominated Formula BMW and was promoted to F1 while leading the 2007 Formula Renault 3.5 championship.
  • Lewis Hamilton (F1 debut in 2007) convinvingly won the 2006 GP2 championship.
  • Romain Grosjean (F1 debut in 2009) debuted in F1 while being 2nd in the 2009 GP2 championship, won the 2011 GP2 championship.
  • Kamui Kobayashi (F1 debut in 2009) won the 2008-09 GP2 Asia championship.
  • Nico Hülkenberg (F1 debut in 2010) won the 2009 GP2 championship.
  • Bruno Senna (F1 debut in 2010) runner-up in the 2008 GP2 championship.
  • Sergio Pérez (F1 debut in 2011) finished 2nd in the 2010 GP2 championship.
  • Paul di Resta (F1 debut in 2011) won the 2006 Euroseries Formula 3 series and the 2010 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters championship.
  • Pastor Maldonado (F1 debut in 2011) won the 2010 GP2 championship.
Formula One drivers of old in the 'feeder series'
  • Jim Clark (F1 debut in 1960) was offered a F1 drive after some impressive drives at Le Mans and in Formula Junior.
  • Jochen Rindt (F1 debut in 1964) was very succesfull in Formula 2.
  • Jackie Stewart (F1 debut in 1965) won the 1963 British Formula 3 championship and finished 2nd in the 1964 Formula 2 season.
  • Gilles Villeneuve (F1 debut in 1977) impressed James Hunt after beating several Grand Prix stars in a Formula Atlantic race in 1976.
  • Nelson Piquet (F1 debut in 1978) dominated the 1977 British Formula 3 championship.
  • Alain Prost (F1 debut in 1980) won the 1979 French and European Formula 3 championships.
  • Ayrton Senna (F1 debut in 1984) won the 1983 British Formula 3 championship.
What became of feeder series' champions
Formula 2
  • 1967 European Formula 2 champion Jacky Ickx debuted in Formula One in 1967 and went on to win 8 Grand Prix'.
  • 1968 European Formula 2 champion Jean-Pierre Beltoise debuted in Formula One in 1966 and went on to win 1 Grand Prix.
  • 1969 European Formula 2 champion Johnny Servoz-Gavin debuted in Formula One in 1967 and finished second in 1 Grand Prix.
  • 1970 European Formula 2 champion Clay Regazzoni debuted in Formula One in 1970 and went on to win 5 Grand Prix', finishing 2nd in the championship in 1974.
  • 1971 European Formula 2 champion Ronnie Peterson debuted in Formula One in 1970 and went on to win 10 Grand Prix', finishing 2nd in the championship in 1978.
  • 1972 European Formula 2 champion Mike Hailwood debuted in Formula One in 1967 and finished second in 1 Grand Prix'.
  • 1973 European Formula 2 champion Jean-Pierre Jarier debuted in Formula One in 1971 and finished three times on the podium in F1.
  • 1974 European Formula 2 champion Jacques Laffite debuted in Formula One in 1974 and went on to win 6 Grand Prix'.
  • 1975 European Formula 2 champion Patrick Depailler debuted in Formula One in 1972 and went on to win 6 Grand Prix'.
  • 1976 European Formula 2 champion Jean-Pierre Jabouille debuted in Formula One in 1974 and went on to win 2 Grand Prix'.
  • 1977 European Formula 2 champion René Arnoux debuted in Formula One in 1978 and went on to win 7 Grand Prix'.
  • 1978 European Formula 2 champion Bruno Giacomelli debuted in Formula One in 1977 and went on to finish once on the podium in F1.
  • 1979 European Formula 2 champion Marc Surer debuted in Formula One in 1979 and went on to score a best 4th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1980 European Formula 2 champion Brian Henton debuted in Formula One in 1975 but never scored any points.
  • 1981 European Formula 2 champion Geoff Lees debuted in Formula One in 1978 but never scored any points.
  • 1982 European Formula 2 champion Corrado Fabi debuted in Formula One in 1983 but never scored any points.
  • 1983 European Formula 2 champion Jonathan Palmer debuted in Formula One in 1983 and went on to score a best 4th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1984 European Formula 2 champion Mike Thackwell debuted in Formula One in 1980 but drove only 5 Grand Prix'.
International Formula 3000
  • 1985 International Formula 3000 champion Christian Danner debuted in Formula One in 1985 and went on to score a best 4th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1986 International Formula 3000 champion Ivan Capelli debuted in Formula One in 1985 and went on to score 3 podiums in F1.
  • 1987 International Formula 3000 champion Stefano Modena debuted in Formula One in 1987 and went on to score 2 podiums in F1.
  • 1988 International Formula 3000 champion Roberto Moreno debuted in Formula One in 1982 and went on to score 1 podium in F1.
  • 1989 International Formula 3000 champion Jean Alesi debuted in Formula One in 1989 and went on to win 1 Grand Prix.
  • 1990 International Formula 3000 champion Érik Comas debuted in Formula One in 1991 and went on to score a best 5th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1991 International Formula 3000 champion Christian Fittipaldi debuted in Formula One in 1992 and went on to score a best 4th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1992 International Formula 3000 champion Luca Badoer debuted in Formula One in 1993 and went on to went on to become a faillure test driver for Ferrari in Formula One.
  • 1993 International Formula 3000 champion Olivier Panis debuted in Formula One in 1994 and went on to win 1 Grand Prix.
  • 1994 International Formula 3000 champion Jean-Christophe Boullion debuted in Formula One in 1995 and went on to score a best 5th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1995 International Formula 3000 champion Vincenzo Sospiri debuted in Formula One in 1997 for one race in the failed Lola F1 team, after which he scored 2 podiums in Indycar/CART.
  • 1996 International Formula 3000 champion Jörg Müller never debuted in Formula One, although he did become test driver for Williams and had some succes in AMLS and WTCC.
  • 1997 International Formula 3000 champion Ricardo Zonta debuted in Formula One in 1999 and went on to score a best 6th place finish in Formula One.
  • 1998 International Formula 3000 champion Juan Pablo Montoya debuted in Formula One in 2001 and went on to win 7 Grand Prix'.
  • 1999 International Formula 3000 champion Nick Heidfeld debuted in Formula One in 2000 and went on to score 13 podiums in F1.
  • 2000 International Formula 3000 champion Bruno Junqueira never debuted in Formula One after losing a Williams seat to Jenson Button, but finished runner up 3 times in the CART series.
  • 2001 International Formula 3000 champion Justin Wilson debuted in Formula One in 2003 and went on to score a best 6th place finish in Formula One.
  • 2002 International Formula 3000 champion Sébastien Bourdais debuted in Formula One in 2008 and went on to score a best 7th place finish in Formula One.
  • 2003 International Formula 3000 champion Björn Wirdheim never debuted in Formula One but drove two seasons as a test driver for Jordan and Jaguar.
  • 2004 International Formula 3000 champion Vitantonio Liuzzi debuted in Formula One in 2005 and went on to score a best 6th place finish in Formula One.
GP2 series
  • 2005 GP2 series' champion Nico Rosberg debuted in Formula One in 2006 and went on to win 1 Grand Prix.
  • 2006 GP2 series' champion Lewis Hamilton debuted in Formula One in 2007 and went on to win the 2008 Formula One championship.
  • 2007 GP2 series' champion Timo Glock debuted in Formula One in 2004 and went on to score 3 podiums in F1.
  • 2008 GP2 series' champion Giorgio Pantano raced in Formula One before in 2004, but has not been very succesful in America since his GP2 win.
  • 2009 GP2 series' champion Nico Hülkenberg debuted in Formula One in 2010 and went on to score a best 4th place finish in Formula One.
  • 2010 GP2 series' champion Pastor Maldonado debuted in Formula One in 2011 and went on to win
    1 Grand Prix.
  • 2011 GP2 series' champion Romain Grosjean debuted in Formula One in 2009 and returned this year with Lotus. He scored 3 podiums since.
  • 2012 GP2 series' champion Davide Valsecchi has tested a HRT in 2010, but has not yet debuted in Formula One.
Formula Renault 3.5
  • 2005 FR3.5 champion Robert Kubica debuted in Formula One in 2006 and went on to win 1 Grand Prix.
  • 2006 FR3.5 champion Alx Danielsson has not debuted in Formula One and has moved to touring cars since.
  • 2007 FR3.5 champion Álvaro Parente has not debuted in Formula One and has moved to touring cars since.
  • 2008 FR3.5 champion Giedo van der Garde has not debuted in Formula One, but is test driver for Caterham.
  • 2009 FR3.5 champion Bertrand Baguette has not debuted in Formula One and has moved to Indycar and Le Mans since.
  • 2010 FR3.5 champion Mikhail Aleshin has not debuted in Formula One but stayed in FR3.5.
  • 2011 FR3.5 champion Robert Wickens has not debuted in Formula One and has moved to DTM since.
  • 2012 FR3.5 champion Robin Frijns has been signed as test driver for Sauber in 2013.
Formula 2 (revived)
  • 2009 FIA Formula 2 champion Andy Soucek did some Formula One tests but now drives Endurance Races.
  • 2010 FIA Formula 2 champion Dean Stoneman earned a young driver test with Williams before having to put his racing to a halt because of cancer.
  • 2011 FIA Formula 2 champion Mirko Bortolotti earned a young driver test with Williams and has disappeared off the radar since.
  • 2012 FIA Formula 2 champion Luciano Bacheta tested for Williams on Silverstone on October 19th. No word yet on his future.
Conclusion
Of the 58 'feeder series champions' listed here, only 15 went on to win a Grand Prix, only 8 won more than one Grand Prix and Lewis Hamilton is the only one who actually became a champion in Formula One.

Of all the 32 Formula One champions, only Denny Hulme (1967), Jochen Rindt (1970), Keke Rosberg (1982) and Damon Hill (1996) spent more than one season in a feeder series, and of those, only Hulme and Rindt really impressed there.

Making this list, it was interesting to see that of all the current world champions, only Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton have spent a full season in a direct feeder series. Michael Schumacher, Jenson Button and Kimi Räikkönen were picked up after the junior series, while Sebastian Vettel earned his first test based on his Formula BMW results and was only half-way through his WSR season before Formula One called him. Even looking at the big names of back when, most champions were picked up by a Formula one team after impressive results in Formula 3.

The career path to Formula One, more so success in Formula One, is very short and very shallow. It is sometimes lamented that Formula One is only for the rich kids, but aside from champions present and past showing otherwise, it seems the biggest talents will make it before the need for the big money (in the feeder series) kicks in. Might we have lost out on some talents because of the monetary requirements of auto racing? I'm sure we have, but the biggest talents have always found a way to impress very early on in their career.

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raymondu999
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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What an absolutely fascinating topic. You've clearly put quite some effort into the piece. +1
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dren
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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raymondu999 wrote:What an absolutely fascinating topic. You've clearly put quite some effort into the piece. +1
Agreed there. A really interesting and good read. I always was curious of this.

Where are the 2013 rookies coming from?
Honda!

Absolutelee
Absolutelee
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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Very interesting read, both for history and for data

mnmracer
mnmracer
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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dren wrote:
raymondu999 wrote:What an absolutely fascinating topic. You've clearly put quite some effort into the piece. +1
Agreed there. A really interesting and good read. I always was curious of this.

Where are the 2013 rookies coming from?
Max Chilton (Marussia) finished 4th with 2 wins in 2012 GP2.
Valtteri Bottas (Williams) was test driver for Williams last year, after winning the GP3 championship in 2011.
Esteban Gutiérrez (Sauber) finished 3rd with 3 wins in 2012 GP2.

wesley123
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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Great topic!

The results you showed there imo shows that money is much more important than actual results.
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Juzh
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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mnmracer wrote:
dren wrote:
raymondu999 wrote:What an absolutely fascinating topic. You've clearly put quite some effort into the piece. +1
Agreed there. A really interesting and good read. I always was curious of this.

Where are the 2013 rookies coming from?
Max Chilton (Marussia) finished 4th with 2 wins in 2012 GP2.
Valtteri Bottas (Williams) was test driver for Williams last year, after winning the GP3 championship in 2011.
Esteban Gutiérrez (Sauber) finished 3rd with 3 wins in 2012 GP2.
I heard somewhere max chilton is like maldonado with no speed, but with loads of money. Unimpressive rich kid were the words used to describe him.

mnmracer
mnmracer
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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wesley123 wrote:The results you showed there imo shows that money is much more important than actual results.
Well, it depends.
(sub-)top drivers like Schumacher, Button, Räikkönen and Vettel were picked up before the need for big money in GP2/F3000. Of course you still need some basic funds to get started, but if you look at Alonso and Vettel, who came from very simple backgrounds, I think it shows the greats will find a way to make it. Perhaps you'll miss out on Formula One if you're midfield material, but I think if you're really good, you'll find a way to make it.
Juzh wrote:I heard somewhere max chilton is like maldonado with no speed, but with loads of money. Unimpressive rich kid were the words used to describe him.
Admittedly, I haven't really followed him much, but looking over his career, you might have heard correctly; just 3 wins in 5 years of racing formula cars. I wouldn't say no speed, but he certainly doesn't seem like (sub-) top material.

maatriks
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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Juzh wrote:I heard somewhere max chilton is like maldonado with no speed, but with loads of money. Unimpressive rich kid were the words used to describe him.
I am not particularly fond of Maldonado's way of driving but saying he has no speed is just flamewaring in my opinion. Go back to 2012 Formula One results and compare his qualification/race positions and fastest laps to his teammate - not that bad.

What a facinating topic, I am really grateful that someone had the time and will to put this together.
English is not my native language. Might make obvious mistakes.

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NathanOlder
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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Yeah, He was saying Chilton is like a slow Maldonado.

But I disagree with this, He may not be the fastest, but there is no reason to believe Max will be taking people off the track every few races. Over the last season, Chilton got better as the season went on.
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maatriks
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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Read it over, it seems I might have misread indeed, sorry for that.
English is not my native language. Might make obvious mistakes.

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Gridlock
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Very surprised that Hamilton is the only WDC with a feeder win under his belt, but then this is also a symptom of his McLaren "plan" - if he weren't already essentially guaranteed a 2007 seat I can see him not completing 2006, if you see what I mean. In general I'd say F1 teams' keenness to grab talent before their rivals is what's driving this, rather than 'you need money, not talent'.

Excellent post, very interesting.
#58

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Juzh
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SatchelCharge wrote:I read his post as, "Chilton is like Maldonado after you take away Maldonado's speed."
Yes, that's what I meant :wink:

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turbof1
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A very nice piece. It does confirm some cliché''s about paydrivers. It also says the real talented drivers get picked up before they have to enter the feeder series.
Hamilton is the exception that confirms the rule: Winning the GP2 title the first year, he outclassed at times the rest of the field by such a margin that you couldn't stop wonder why he wasn't already in F1.

I continued a bit on this trail and checked if the last 10 individual world champions had been enrolled into a young driver programme or otherwise backing from a major team or so, before getting into f1. This is what I found:

-Alain Prost: no notable support.
-Michael Schumacher: Funded by Wili Weber. Was also enrolled into the Mercedes racing programme.
-Damon Hill: No notable support.
-Jacques Villeneuve: Got a bit of support from the Canadian Automotive Federation to gain his racing license at an age otherwise too young (17y). was enrolled in several driving/racing schools.
-Mika Hakkinen: No direct support from a F1 team; got support from Keke Rosberg through sponsorship to get through the smaller formula series.
-Fernando Alonso: No notable support, became the third youngest driver to enter F1 (at Minardi)
-Kimi Raikkonen: No notable support; got his F1 seat (Sauber) after winning 13 of the 23 driven races in smaller formula series.
-Lewis Hamilton: McLaren driver development program: a contract with an optional f1 seat later on (which he got)
-Jenson Button: No notable support
-Sebastian Vettel: support from Red Bull Junior Team (spread throughout several junior formula series)

So notably, most of them really made their own succes getting into F1.
Last edited by turbof1 on 02 Jan 2013, 22:07, edited 6 times in total.
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mnmracer
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Re: How to get into F1: the value of winning feeder series

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turbof1 wrote:A very nice piece. It does confirm some cliché''s about paydrivers. It also says the real talented drivers get picked up before they have to enter the feeder series.
Hamilton is the exception that confirms the rule: Winning the GP2 title the first year, he outclassed at times the rest of the field by such a margin that you couldn't stop wonder why he wasn't already in F1.
I think Hamilton and Vettel are two clear cases of greats that were picked up early, yet had to wait for a place to open up. Had Montoya fallen out of favor during 2006, I believe Hamilton would have been given the seat right then and there, as it happened with Vettel, who was leading the Formula Renault 3.5 championship by the time he got called for F1.

*edit: just remembered Montoya DID fall out during 2006. Not sure why they didn't pick Lewis, but Pedro certainly didn't do too bad. They probably preferred his experience.