Red Bull Junior Team

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Red Bull Junior Team and Red Bull Driver Search are young driver progammes run by the drinks company Red Bull.

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[edit] Red Bull Junior Team

Red Bull Junior Team is Red Bull's European driver programme. Red Bull offers funding and support for promising young drivers. The drinks company also sponsors several racing teams and drivers, particularly in the GP2 Series, the Formula One "feeder series".

The scheme has been successful, with several of the drivers backed by Red Bull making it into Formula One:

As well as these, Red Bull supports many up-and-coming young drivers:

In 2004 Red Bull bought Jaguar Racing and renamed the team Red Bull Racing for the 2005 Formula One season. This offered an easy way in to Formula One for Red Bull Junior Team's drivers.

[edit] Red Bull Driver Search

Red Bull Driver Search was an American scheme run in parallel with Red Bull Junior Team. Its aim was "Searching for the future American F1 Champion". Another goal was to create "the first ever All-American Formula 1 team."

There has been one clear star of Red Bull Driver Search: Scott Speed. After winning Red Bull's Driver Search in 2002, Speed went on to compete in British Formula 3, before winning the German and Eurocup Formula Renault Championships. In 2005, Speed impressed onlookers with his performances in the GP2 Series and drove for Scuderia Toro Rosso in Formula One in the 2006 and 2007 seasons.

Red Bull Driver Search formally concluded on 17 October 2005.[1]

[edit] A victim of its own success?

Many talented drivers have risen through the ranks of Red Bull's driver programmes — so many, in fact, that Red Bull did not have the space to bring all of their best drivers into Formula One. In the 2005 Formula One season the second Red Bull Racing seat was shared between Christian Klien and Vitantonio Liuzzi, with the drivers swapping between races. To further complicate matters, Scott Speed was vying for a place in Formula One but had to make to with being a third driver.

If it becomes clear that drivers that are part of Red Bull's driver programmes will simply get held in a queue to join Red Bull Racing they will inevitably break their ties with Red Bull in an attempt to make their own way into another Formula One team. There had been suggestions that Red Bull may pay smaller teams such as Midland F1 to race their drivers in an attempt to stop their talented drivers from leaving.

To solve this problem, in late 2005 Red Bull instead purchased the Minardi Formula One team to help promote more of its drivers [2]. Red Bull described the new outfit as a "Rookie Team", and renamed it as Scuderia Toro Rosso, Italian simply for "Team Red Bull". Liuzzi and Speed drove the cars for the first season, and will do so again for 2007.

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