Post by Laury on Mar 18, 2007 19:48:22 GMT
Adrian Sutil was more likely to follow in the footsteps of his father until he discovered motor racing at the age of 14.
His father Jorge arrived in Germany from Uruguay and played violin in the Müncher Philharmonie. Adrian was born in Gräfelfing and shared his father’s musical talents and played piano, but began pursuing a career in motor sport after he started racing karts.
He stepped up to car racing in 2002 in the Swiss Formula Ford 1800 championship. It was a flawless start, with ten wins from ten pole positions in ten starts to give him the title. That year he also won five races in the Formula Masters Austria championship.
But there would be no wins for him the following year in the Formula BMW ADAC championship with HBR Motorsport, despite starting from pole position twice. He finished overall with 86 points to the 249 of champion Maximilian Götz.
Nor did he make an enormous impression in his first season in the Formula Three Euroseries in 2004. In 20 races he scored on only two occasions and switched from the Kolles team to ASM at the final double-header round.
He finished 20th in the F3 Masters race at Zandvoort with Kolles.
British talent Lewis Hamilton joined Sutil at ASM for 2005. The two won 17 of the 20 rounds but Hamilton dominated Sutil by 15 wins to 2. Sutil also came second to Hamilton at the F3 Masters.
Nonetheless Sutil claimed second in the championship, despite missing the final double-header round at Hockenheim where he was replaced by Götz.
He was absent from that final race because of his commitments to appear for the German team in the inaugural A1 Grand Prix championship. In all he started six races in the 2005-06 season, retiring on four occasions and finishing 12th on the other two.
Then a move to the Japanese Formula Three championship with the Toyota-powered TOM’s team brought him success in 2006. In a consistent campaign he won five of 18 rounds but took another seven podium finishes to win the title with 212 points.
Sutil also made his first appearance in the blue riband F3 Macau Grand Prix and finished third behind Mike Conway and Richard Antinucci. He also made one appearance in the Super GT Japan championship in a Lexus SC430 entered by TOM’s.
He made three testing appearance with the Midland F1-Toyota team at the European, French and Japanese Grands Prix (the team having been re-named Spyker at the time of the latter) thanks to his connections with team boss Colin Kolles from his F3 days.
Sutil said of Kolles: “When I met him the first time (in F3) he really believed in me, and he knew he did not have the best team in F3 but he said always: ‘I know you are a good driver.’ I am really, really happy to work with him again. He does everything in a very professional manner.”
For 2007 he was promoted to the race team alongside Christijan Albers in place of Tiago Monteiro in a multi-year deal.
His father Jorge arrived in Germany from Uruguay and played violin in the Müncher Philharmonie. Adrian was born in Gräfelfing and shared his father’s musical talents and played piano, but began pursuing a career in motor sport after he started racing karts.
He stepped up to car racing in 2002 in the Swiss Formula Ford 1800 championship. It was a flawless start, with ten wins from ten pole positions in ten starts to give him the title. That year he also won five races in the Formula Masters Austria championship.
But there would be no wins for him the following year in the Formula BMW ADAC championship with HBR Motorsport, despite starting from pole position twice. He finished overall with 86 points to the 249 of champion Maximilian Götz.
Nor did he make an enormous impression in his first season in the Formula Three Euroseries in 2004. In 20 races he scored on only two occasions and switched from the Kolles team to ASM at the final double-header round.
He finished 20th in the F3 Masters race at Zandvoort with Kolles.
British talent Lewis Hamilton joined Sutil at ASM for 2005. The two won 17 of the 20 rounds but Hamilton dominated Sutil by 15 wins to 2. Sutil also came second to Hamilton at the F3 Masters.
Nonetheless Sutil claimed second in the championship, despite missing the final double-header round at Hockenheim where he was replaced by Götz.
He was absent from that final race because of his commitments to appear for the German team in the inaugural A1 Grand Prix championship. In all he started six races in the 2005-06 season, retiring on four occasions and finishing 12th on the other two.
Then a move to the Japanese Formula Three championship with the Toyota-powered TOM’s team brought him success in 2006. In a consistent campaign he won five of 18 rounds but took another seven podium finishes to win the title with 212 points.
Sutil also made his first appearance in the blue riband F3 Macau Grand Prix and finished third behind Mike Conway and Richard Antinucci. He also made one appearance in the Super GT Japan championship in a Lexus SC430 entered by TOM’s.
He made three testing appearance with the Midland F1-Toyota team at the European, French and Japanese Grands Prix (the team having been re-named Spyker at the time of the latter) thanks to his connections with team boss Colin Kolles from his F3 days.
Sutil said of Kolles: “When I met him the first time (in F3) he really believed in me, and he knew he did not have the best team in F3 but he said always: ‘I know you are a good driver.’ I am really, really happy to work with him again. He does everything in a very professional manner.”
For 2007 he was promoted to the race team alongside Christijan Albers in place of Tiago Monteiro in a multi-year deal.