Will Hoy

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Will Hoy
Image:No image.png
BTCC record
Nationality England
Teams Ford, BMW,
Toyota, Renault,
Arena, VLR
Drivers championships 1
Wins 9
Podium finishes
Poles -
Fastest laps -
Debut season 1989
First win 1991
Best championship position 1st (1991)
Final season (2000) position 15th (Class B)
edit

Will Hoy (b April 2, 1953 in Royston, Hertfordshire, d 2002), is a former British racecar driver. He was the 1991 British Touring Car Championship winner, the highlight of a 20-year career in motor racing. He did not begin racing until his late 20s and first raced at international level in 1985, taking on the full World Sportscar Championship including Le Mans. Over the next few years, he raced in an assortment of championships and one-off races, the highlight undoubtedly being second overall in the 1988 All Japan Touring Car Championship.

For 1991 he concentrated on the BTCC, in the first season of Super Touring regulations. Although manufacturers including Vauxhall and Toyota had factory entries, the established BMWs were the car to have initially. Will made full use of his opportunity in a car entered by Vic Lee, building a championship lead nobody was able to overhaul. For 1992 he was signed by the Toyota team, and an engine failure in the final round denied him a successful title defence. However, the car was not competitive in subsequent seasons, Toyota never winning another BTCC race. The closest Will came was at Silverstone in 1993, when he was punted off onto his roof by team-mate Julian Bailey, an incident remembered for Murray Walker's commentary line "the car upside down is a Toyota", a play on the company's advertising slogan of the time.

Despite 2 largely result-free seasons, Will was still an established star, and Renault hired him alongside Alain Menu for 1995. The early part of the season was a disaster, with many mechanical failures and crashes, although in the latter part of the season Will moved up to 4th with 3 race wins, in what was now the fastest car. Hopes of a title push for 1996 was erased by the entry of the 4-wheel drive Audi of Frank Biela. Although Menu was again championship runner-up, Will slipped back to 9th.

The BTCC of this era was dominated by high-investment manufacturer teams, largely made up of overseas former single-seater drivers. Like Tim Harvey and Robb Gravett, Will was struggling to remain in a competitive car or make use of it. He went to a fading Ford team for 1997 and 1998, and raced independently for part of 1999, before entering semi-retirement. In 2002 he suffered a brain tumour, and died shortly afterwards.

In other languages