Nico Rosberg
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nico Rosberg | |
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Rosberg at the 2008 Canadian Grand Prix |
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Nationality | German Finnish (dual nationality, races as German) |
Car # | 7 |
Current team | Williams |
Formula One World Championship career | |
Races | 42 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podium finishes | 1 |
Pole positions | 0 |
Career points | 32 |
Fastest laps | 1 |
First race | 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix |
Latest race | 2008 Canadian Grand Prix |
2007 position | 9th (20 pts) |
Nico Rosberg (born June 27, 1985) is a racing driver for the Williams Formula One team. He races under the German flag in Formula One, although he competed for Finland earlier in his career. He holds dual nationality from both countries.[1]
Rosberg won the 2005 GP2 Series for the ART team, having raced in Formula Three Euroseries previously for his father's team.
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[edit] Biography
The son of Finnish 1982 Formula One World Champion Keke Rosberg and his wife Sina, Nico Rosberg was born in Wiesbaden. He spent much of his youth in Monaco with his family, and still lives in the principality. Rosberg speaks fluent German, English, Italian and French; but only a little Finnish, though he is learning the language. In lower formulae drivers race under the nationality of the country that issued their racing licence. Rosberg competed under the Finnish and German flags at different times during his early career.[1] In Formula One, as for all FIA world championships, a driver's nationality is defined by their passport.[2] Rosberg races under the German flag in Formula One as of 2007.
[edit] Pre-Formula One
[edit] 1996-2004: Junior Formulae
Rosberg started out in karting in 1996, at the age of eleven, before moving up to German Formula BMW in 2002, where he won the title. His performances resulted in a move to drive for his father's team in Formula Three Euroseries, a combination of the several national Formula Three championships that had existed prior to its formation. Rosberg did well there, and stayed on for 2004.
[edit] 2005: GP2 - ART Grand Prix
Offered a place on the aerodynamics course at Imperial College London;[3] Rosberg declined and in 2005 joined the ART Grand Prix team in the newly created GP2 Series. He went on to become the first driver to win the GP2 title.
[edit] Formula One
[edit] 2006-Present: Williams
- See also: WilliamsF1
[edit] 2006
In late 2005, Rosberg was officially confirmed as a Williams driver for the 2006 season. In the Engineering Aptitude Test, administered to all new Williams drivers, Rosberg scored the highest score in the team's history.[4] In the first Formula One race of his young career in Bahrain, Rosberg was driving a car which was not considered competitive enough to get to the podium,[5] and also had to fight his way through the field after losing his nosecone on the first lap. Nonetheless, he finished in the points, seventh behind teammate Mark Webber, and recorded the fastest lap, becoming the youngest driver to do so in F1 history. Following this he was linked with a move to teams such as McLaren.[citation needed]
He qualified third at the next round Malaysia, but his Cosworth engine, on its second mandatory race, blew up after only seven laps. Rosberg did get into the points for the second time in the 2006 season at the European Grand Prix, benefiting from the hydraulic failure of his teammate.
The rest of the 2006 season went less well for Rosberg; he retired in four of the next seven Grand Prix, and in the ones he did finish he was outside the points. His closest attempt to get into the points was in Britain, where he was just one second behind eighth placed Jacques Villeneuve. Rosberg scored a total of four points, three less than teammate Webber, over the course of what was a disappointing season for both himself and for the Williams team.
[edit] 2007
Williams brought in new Toyota engines for 2007, along with a new teammate, Alexander Wurz. Rosberg's old teammate, Mark Webber, had moved to partner David Coulthard at Red Bull Racing. Initially, the Toyota powered FW29 showed potential in the pre-season test sessions.[6] However, Rosberg remained realistic: "in F1 you cannot normally just jump back to the front [of the grid] from one year to the next" he said in an interview with Formula1.com. [7]
In 2007, Rosberg finished in the points seven times, including a career best fourth at the season-ending Brazilian Grand Prix. He also placed seventh in the Australian, Hungarian and Turkish Grands Prix and came home sixth at the Italian and Belgian Grands Prix. At the Canadian Grand Prix, Rosberg qualified seventh and moved up two places from the start:
"Early in the race I thought I was set for a good result because I was running fifth and the car felt really good, but then the Safety Car came out on lap 21... I had to stop for fuel on lap 23, which meant I missed the re-fuelling window by 13 seconds and that effectively ended my race. New rules punish people who pit immediately after the Safety Car comes out, so I was given a 10s stop-go penalty and all I could manage after that was 10th place."[8]
He suffered only three retirements during 2007; hydraulic failure 14 laps from home in Malaysia and an oil leak at the US Grand Prix five laps from the finish (although classified 16th), where he was on course for sixth place. He had started the race 14th having "glazed" his brakes during qualifying, therefore damaging his confidence. An electronics glitch also put him out of the Japanese Grand Prix.
During the first half of 2007 season, Rosberg saw his teammate Alexander Wurz score more points, but later in the season Rosberg passed Wurz in world championship points, eventually more than quadrupling his 2006 points haul with 20 points.
[edit] 2008
Rosberg secured the first podium finish of his career with a strong drive to third place at the 2008 Australian Grand Prix.
[edit] Records and achievements
- Youngest driver to set the fastest lap: 20 years, 258 days in 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix
- Fourth youngest driver to score points: 20 years, 258 days for 7th position in the 2006 Bahrain Grand Prix
[edit] Future
Rosberg is under contract to the Williams team until the end of 2009.[9]
[edit] Racing record
[edit] Career summary
Season | Series | Team Name | Races | Poles | Wins | Points | Final Placing |
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2002 | German Formula BMW | VIVA Racing | 20 | 5 | 9 | 264 | 1st |
2003 | Formula Three Euroseries | Team Rosberg | 20 | 1 | 1 | 45 | 8th |
Macau Grand Prix | Carlin Motorsport[10] | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | |
F3 Korean Superprix | Carlin Motorsport | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 11th | |
2004 | Formula Three Euroseries | Team Rosberg | 19 | 2 | 3 | 70 | 4th |
Macau Grand Prix | Team Rosberg | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | |
Masters of Formula Three | Team Rosberg | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 6th | |
Bahrain F3 Superprix | Team Rosberg | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 2nd | |
2005 | GP2 Series | ART Grand Prix | 23 | 4 | 5 | 120 | 1st |
2006 | Formula One | Williams | 18 | 0 | 0 | 4 | 17th |
2007 | Formula One | Williams | 17 | 0 | 0 | 20 | 9th |
2008 | Formula One | Williams | 7 | 0 | 0 | 8 | 10th* |
* Season in progress
[edit] Complete Formula One results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | WDC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 | WilliamsF1 Team | Williams FW28 | Cosworth CA2006 2.4 V8 4 Series |
BHR 7 |
MAL Ret |
AUS Ret |
SMR 11 |
EUR 7 |
ESP 11 |
MON Ret |
GBR 9 |
CAN Ret |
USA 9 |
FRA 14 |
GER Ret |
HUN Ret |
TUR Ret |
ITA Ret |
CHN 11 |
JPN 10 |
BRA Ret |
17th | 4 |
2007 | AT&T Williams | Williams FW29 | Toyota RVX-07 2.4 V8 | AUS 7 |
MAL Ret |
BHR 10 |
ESP 6 |
MON 12 |
CAN 10 |
USA 16 |
FRA 9 |
GBR 12 |
EUR Ret |
HUN 7 |
TUR 7 |
ITA 6 |
BEL 6 |
JPN Ret |
CHN 16 |
BRA 4 |
9th | 20 | |
2008 | AT&T Williams | Williams FW30 | Toyota RVX-08 2.4 V8 | AUS 3 |
MAL 14 |
BHR 8 |
ESP Ret |
TUR 8 |
MON Ret |
CAN 10 |
FRA |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
EUR |
BEL |
ITA |
SIN |
CHN |
JPN |
BRA |
10th* | 8* |
* Season in progress
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ a b Shedding a father's shadow: the new GP2 champion's route to the top 5th chapter
- ^ FIA International Sporting Code paragraph 112
- ^ "New kid on the grid follows his father's formula", sport.guardian.co.uk, 2006-03-07. Retrieved on 2007-06-01.
- ^ "The Talented Mr. Rosberg" Autosport.com. Retrieved 26 September 2006
- ^ "Williams Admits Humiliating Season" Yahoo.com. Retrieved 26 September 2006
- ^ "First impressions - Williams is quick", GrandPrix.com, February 7, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-07.
- ^ "Exclusive interview - Williams' Nico Rosberg", Official Formula One website, February 22, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-02-28.
- ^ "Nico's Notes from Montreal", attWilliams.com, February 7, 2007. Retrieved on 2007-06-26.
- ^ "Rosberg agrees new Williams deal", news.bbc.co.uk, 2007-12-09. Retrieved on 2007-12-09.
- ^ http://www.macau.grandprix.gov.mo/mgpc/public_html/gp50/en/index.php?cat=news&file=show_news.php&id=510 - Press release on the 2003 Macau Grand Prix
[edit] External links
- Nico Rosberg official website (New website launched 9 April 2008)
- Profile and statistics
- Racing career
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by None |
German Formula BMW Champion 2002 |
Succeeded by Maximilian Götz |
Preceded by Vitantonio Liuzzi (F3000) |
GP2 Series Champion 2005 |
Succeeded by Lewis Hamilton |
Records | ||
Preceded by Fernando Alonso 21 years, 321 days (2003 Canadian GP) |
Youngest driver to set Fastest Lap in Formula One 20 years, 258 days (2006 Bahrain Grand Prix) |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
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