Esteban Tuero

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Esteban Tuero
Formula One Career
Nationality Argentina Argentine
Active years 1998
Team(s) Minardi
Grands Prix 16
Championships 0
Wins 0
Podium finishes    0
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 0
First Grand Prix 1998 Australian Grand Prix
Last Grand Prix 1998 Japanese Grand Prix

Esteban Tuero (b. April 22, 1978) is an Argentinian car racing driver who raced for the Minardi Formula One team in 1998.

Tuero became the third youngest ever F1 driver when he landed his seat alongside Shinji Nakano, and he was tipped for a bright future in the sport, only to shock the paddock by announcing his retirement from the sport at the end of the season following an injury to his neck.

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[edit] Early life

Esteban Tuero was born in the Argentinian capital of Buenos Aires at a time when the likes of Nelson Piquet and Alain Prost were just beginning their careers. The Argentine Grand Prix was based near to his home, at the Oscar Gálvez race circuit. This meant that Formula One was popular where he grew up and, though the grand prix was discontinued in 1981, the sport was one of the biggest in the country.

Tuero was born to a family who had a huge interest in motor racing, his father being a minor race car driver, and so Esteban was groomed for the big time from an early age by beginning karts at the age of seven. He would drive karts until 1992, moving up to the Formula series the following year.

[edit] Minor formulas career

Tuero moved up to car racing in 1993, spending a season with the Crespi team in Formula Renault. In 1994, he switched to Formula Honda with the Kissling team, becoming champion. All of his career so far had been in his native Argentina, so despite the pressures of racing in a Formula series whilst only 14, he was given his first taste of traveling the continent with a few races in South American Formula Three, driving a Ralt/Opel with the INI team.

In 1995, he moved to Europe, his father knowing his career would need to go there in order to gain momentum. He won the Italian Formula 2000 National Trophy by a large margin in a Dallara 392, and was also given a taste of Italian Formula Three in a Dallara 395. In 1996, he joined the bigger Italian F3 team Coloni Motorsport, driving a Dallara 396 with an Alfa Romeo engine. His performances in the series started generating interest from Formula One teams, with Benetton in the frame for signing him. It would be Minardi, though, who secured his services as a test driver for the team, despite being just 18 years old.

[edit] Route to Formula One

His 1996 Formula Three season was a success, showcasing his skills. Tuero finished fourth in his first race, and he won his second race, only to be disqualified due to using illegal fuel. In the non-championship Monaco event, he would start on the front row alongside the successful F1 driver Jarno Trulli, battling with him before eventually punting him at the hairpin on Lap 17. Tuero would retire due to a flat battery later in the race.

Tuero opted to not finish the season in Formula Three, though, and jumped ship to Formula 3000 halfway through. His finishes in Italian F3 left him 13th in the final championship standings. At the age of 16, Tuero's inexperience showed in F3000, his run for Draco resulting in only one top ten and a final championship position of 16th. His poor performance for Draco meant he was dropped for 1997, but instead of dropping to Formula 3, he went to the Formula Nippon series in Japan. He only scored one point and finished 16th in the standings (ending up 81 points down on championship winner Pedro de la Rosa, but Tuero covered the required mileage making him eligible for a F1 Superlicense. His continuing test role with Minardi impressed the team to the extent that the Italian outfit gave him a race seat for the 1998 season, alongside the Japanese driver Shinji Nakano.

[edit] Formula One career

Initially there were doubts over whether Tuero would be allowed to compete in the 1998 season. Although Minardi had signed him to a valid contract, the young Argentine failed to meet all of the requirements of the superlicense. Many were pleased at this, claiming to fear the safety risks imposed by a young, inexperienced driver. F1 pundit Martin Brundle, incorrectly believing that Tuero had failed to acquire a Superlicense, is quoted as saying, "As for Tuero, it would have been scary. I don't like to see these guys out there with so little experience. Imagine it: even if he didn't qualify, he'd be getting in the way during qualifying. And if he did qualify, then he'd definitely be being lapped plenty. He'd have really needed to have his wits about him. To be honest, it annoys me, people like that, with zilch credibility."

Tuero was eventually awarded his license by the FIA, though, and upon starting the season he become the third youngest ever F1 driver. Only Mike Thackwell and Ricardo Rodriguez had competed at a younger age. Indeed, he qualified ahead of five drivers at Melbourne, including the experienced Olivier Panis as well as Tuero's own teammate Nakano. Minardi was a team stuck at the back of the pack with the Tyrrells, who were completing their final season in F1, and Tuero thus only made the top ten once (at Imola).

Despite his poor results, Tuero was able to hack it in the sport, despite being over ten years younger than some. Many looked at him by the end of his first year as a great prospect for the future, and he never caused problems as Brundle and others had predicted. His final race of the season, however, would also be his final race in a single seater Formula sport ever, at the 1998 Japanese Grand Prix. Starting 21st on the Suzuka grid, Tuero made his first and only mistake of the season on Lap 29 when he accidentally hit the wrong pedal, accelerating instead of braking. This resulted in him slamming into the back of the helpless Toranosuke Takagi, and Tuero ended up riding high over his rival's car, injuring a vertrebra in his neck in the process. He ended his season with an on-track argument with Takagi, the angry Tyrrell driver he had just ploughed into.

[edit] Retirement

Tuero had ended his season badly, but he had more than shown that he deserved his place on the grid. A restructured Minardi team looked forward to pairing the Argentine with newcomer Marc Gené in 1999, but Tuero surprised everyone in late January with the announcement of his retirement. Despite lots of speculation as to why he left the sport so soon, Tuero himself has been sworn to secrecy over the matter. Some speculated that he was merely homesick, having started his career so young, and his never having recovered from the injuries suffered at Suzuka. Another theory, put forward by French magazine Auto-Hebdo, is that Tuero was embarrassed at the Argentine media's mocking his performances, though this criticism has been generally deemed unfair, since he was driving a Minardi was so young and inexperienced. Others say he may have been hindered by sponsorship difficulties and by a fallout with manager Eduardo Ramirez.

[edit] After Formula One

Although he retired from Formula One, Tuero never completely left motorsport. In 1999, he joined the Argentinian TC2000 touring car racing series, where he struggled to make an impact by finishing outside the top ten overall. In 2000, he stayed in the series with the same car, a Volkswagen Polo, finishing 8th in the championship. In 2001, he also drove the series, finishing in the top six. He was linked with a pay-drivers seat in the CART series for 2002, but it never happened, and he continues to drive in minor championships in Argentina.

[edit] Complete Formula One results

All races were for Minardi-Ford in car #23.

Grand Prix Venue Grid Classification Note Report
Australian Grand Prix Melbourne 17 Retired Engine Report
Brazilian Grand Prix Interlagos 19 Retired Throttle Report
Argentine Grand Prix Buenos Aires 20 Retired Spun Off Report
San Marino Grand Prix Imola 19 8 +2 Laps Report
Spanish Grand Prix Catalunya 19 15 +2 Laps Report
Monaco Grand Prix Monaco 21 Retired Spun Off Report
Canadian Grand Prix Circuit Gilles Villeneuve 21 Retired Electrical Report
French Grand Prix Magny-Cours 22 Retired Gearbox Report
British Grand Prix Silverstone 18 Retired Spun Off Report
Austrian Grand Prix A1-Ring 19 Retired Spun Off Report
German Grand Prix Hockenheimring 21 16 +2 laps Report
Hungarian Grand Prix Hungaroring 21 Retired Engine Report
Belgian Grand Prix Spa-Francorchamps 22 Retired Gearbox Report
Italian Grand Prix Monza 22 11 +2 Laps Report
Luxembourg Grand Prix Nürburgring 21 Retired Engine Report
Japanese Grand Prix Suzuka 21 Retired Collision Report
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