Franck Montagny
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Franck Montagny | |
---|---|
Nationality French | |
Formula One World Championship career | |
Active years | 2003, 2005 - 2006 |
Teams | Renault, Jordan, Super Aguri |
Races | 7 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podium finishes | 0 |
Career points | 0 |
Pole positions | 0 |
Fastest laps | 0 |
First race | 2006 European Grand Prix |
Last race | 2006 French Grand Prix |
24 Hours of Le Mans career | |
Participating years | 1998 - 2002, 2005 - 2006 |
---|---|
Teams | Courage Compétition, DAMS, Team Oreca, Pescarolo Sport |
Best finish | 2nd (2006) |
Class wins | 0 |
Franck Montagny (born January 5, 1978) is a French motor racing driver. He briefly raced for the Super Aguri Formula One team in 2006.
Contents |
[edit] Early career
Montagny was born in Feurs, France and started racing karts there in 1988, winning the cadet class in the French Karting Championship in 1992, and the National 1 class the following year.
He made his debut in cars in 1994, aged 16, promptly winning the French Renault Campus championship. The next two years were spent in Formula Renault, with finishes in fourth (the highest-finishing rookie that year) and sixth (despite missing half the season with multiple fractures obtained in an accident at Le Mans) respectively, before transferring up to French Formula Three in 1997 with the La Filière Martini team, debuting with another fourth place championship finish.
[edit] Formula Three breakthrough
Montagny had a breakthrough year in Formula Three in 1998, including a pole position at the Spa-Francorchamps race ahead of much more experienced drivers including Mark Webber, Luciano Burti, Enrique Bernoldi and Peter Dumbreck. He repeated the feat in the Zandvoort Masters in Holland later that year, beating then German Formula Three champion Nick Heidfeld. He consistently outpaced long-time team-mate Sébastien Bourdais and ended the season with 10 wins from 22 races, including 12 pole positions, finishing the championship as runner-up behind David Saelens.
[edit] Formula 3000 and sports cars
Montagny moved up to Formula 3000 in 1999, driving for the DAMS team which was falling from its peak by then. One podium finish at the Hungaroring was his main success; he totalled only 6 points and tenth place that season. He however ended the year with success in the Elf Masters Karting at Paris-Bercy.
A repeat of his unsuccessful year in Formula 3000 prompted a move to World Series by Nissan in 2001, signing for the Epsilon by Graff team. He won 8 races out of a possible 16, and beat Tomas Scheckter to the championship. He changed teams for 2002 to Racing Engineering, but was beaten into second place in the championship by Ricardo Zonta. He supplemented this with a sixth place finish for Oreca at the Le Mans 24 hours.
[edit] Formula One
[edit] Renault and Jordan
Montagny returned to the World Series by Nissan in 2003 with Gabord Competicion, and secured his second championship title with nine victories, ahead of Heikki Kovalainen. This performance earned him a test with the Renault Formula One team, in which he impressed sufficiently to earn a contract as a test driver in 2003, moving up to become third driver during the 2004 & 2005 seasons. He did an impressive one-off for Jordan as third driver on the Friday of the 2005 European Grand Prix, clocking a quicker time than Narain Karthikeyan and Tiago Monteiro, the official Jordan drivers.
In mid-2004, as part of his Renault F1 testing duties, Montagny became the chief test and development driver for the new GP2 Series, which would be powered by Renault engines. Montagny was the first driver to take the wheel of the car, and along with former F1 driver and ex-Renault F1 tester and Friday driver Allan McNish, divided testing duties between them , before the GP2 Series was officially launched in 2005. Much of the success of the championship and the drivability of the car has been placed on the development skills of Montagny. This was further evidenced at the start of the 2006 GP2 Series season, when Montagny was called in to test for the newly created FMS International team, to aid them and their drivers in understanding the complexities of the car, at Circuit Ricardo Tormo, Valencia, Spain, where Montagny had put in hundreds of testing laps in his time with Renault F1.
[edit] Super Aguri
For 2006, Super Aguri took Montagny on as third driver; however, he was promoted to full race driver in May after it was announced that Yuji Ide was to drop back into testing; Ide was demoted at the behest of the governing body who considered him insufficiently experienced for Formula One. Montagny hence competed in his first Grand Prix, the 2006 European Grand Prix on May 7, qualifying last and retiring with a hydraulics problem. He did not finish his second race 2006 Spanish Grand Prix: After a great start, enabling him to gain 3 positions, he retired on lap 10 with a mechanical failure. It was third time lucky for him at the Monaco Grand Prix, when he finished the 78-lap race in 16th place, three laps behind the leader.
During the break between the British Grand Prix and the Canadian Grand Prix, Montagny was able to participate in the Le Mans 24 Hours, finishing second for Pescarolo Sport behind only the dominating Audi factory R10s. He was the first active Formula One driver to also participate at Le Mans in the same year since Bertrand Gachot in 1994.
On July 12, Super Aguri announced that Sakon Yamamoto would replace him from the German Grand Prix onwards. Montagny did not appear in his role as third driver for the next two weekends as only two Super Aguri SA06s were available but a third chassis was prepared during the summer break enabling him to reprise this role at the Turkish Grand Prix.
[edit] Toyota
Montagny tested for Toyota F1 in September 2006 at Silverstone. A month later, Toyota confirmed that he would join the team as test driver for the 2007 season, as Olivier Panis and Ricardo Zonta were leaving the team. After spending 2007 as a test driver, Montagny left the team after a test at the Circuit de Catalunya in November.[1] He is still interested in gaining a ride in F1.[2]
[edit] Champ Car
Montagny drove in the final Champ Car World Series race, held at the Long Beach circuit on April 19, 2008. He finished second in his first appearance in a race in the United States, five seconds behind Australian Will Power.
[edit] Racing record
[edit] Career summary
* Includes points scored by other Team France drivers.
† Championship merged into the IndyCar Series after one race.
[edit] Complete Formula One results
(key)
Yr | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | WDC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Renault F1 Team | Renault R23 | Renault V10 | AUS |
MAL |
BRA |
SMR |
ESP |
AUT |
MON |
CAN |
EUR |
FRA TD |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
ITA |
USA |
JPN |
- | - | |||
2005 | Jordan Grand Prix | Jordan EJ15 | Toyota V10 | AUS |
MAL |
BHR |
SMR |
ESP |
MON |
EUR TD |
CAN |
USA |
FRA |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
TUR |
ITA |
BEL |
BRA |
JPN |
CHN |
- | - |
2006 | Super Aguri F1 | Super Aguri SA05 | Honda V8 | BHR |
MAL |
AUS |
SMR |
EUR Ret |
ESP Ret |
MON 16 |
GBR 18 |
CAN Ret |
USA Ret |
FRA 16 |
27th | 0 | ||||||||
Super Aguri SA06 | GER |
HUN |
TUR TD |
ITA TD |
CHN TD |
JPN TD |
BRA TD |
[edit] References
- ^ "Toyota bids au revoir to Montagny", itv-f1.com, 2007-11-15. Retrieved on 2007-11-16.
- ^ Formula One news: Montagny ready for the next step - GPUpdate.net Formula One
[edit] External links
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Antonio García |
Open Telefónica by Nissan Champion 2001 |
Succeeded by Ricardo Zonta |
Preceded by Ricardo Zonta |
Superfund World Series Champion 2003 |
Succeeded by Heikki Kovalainen |