Peter Dumbreck

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Peter Dumbreck (born 13 October 1973 in Kirkcaldy) is a racing driver from Scotland.

In 1994 he dominated the British Formula Vauxhall Junior championship and followed this in 1996 with a similarly strong performance when he won ten races to take the full Formula Vauxhall Championship.

In 1998 he took the Japanese Formula 3 title with a record breaking eight wins out of ten races.

The climax of Peter Dumbreck's 1998 season in Formula 3 was victory at the Macau Grand Prix - a race that traditionally attracts entries from all the world's top flight Formula 3 drivers.

In 1999 Peter Dumbreck momentarily shot to world prominence when he not only survived but walked away uninjured from a horrifying high speed incident during the 1999 24 Hours of Le Mans race when his #5 Mercedes-Benz CLR somersaulted into the woods at about 300 km/h. Mark Webber had already suffered similar crashes in the #4 car during the Thursday night practice and the Saturday morning Warm-up. The remaining #6 car was retired immediately, and the team withdrew from all other planned entries in endurance racing and ALMS.

When the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (DTM) returned from the 2000 season onwards, Dumbreck continued to race for Mercedes-Benz in the DTM touring car championship until 2002. A 3rd place in the final standings of the 2001 season was his best result. He then moved to the Opel team in 2003 and 2004.

In 2005 Peter Dumbreck returned to Japanese Super GT (JGTC/Super GT), driving a Toyota which became Lexus for 2006. His first Victory for Lexus came at Fuji on 4th May 2006.

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Sporting positions
Preceded by
Tom Coronel
All-Japan Formula Three Champion
1998
Succeeded by
Darren Manning
Preceded by
Soheil Ayari
Macau GP winner
1998
Succeeded by
Darren Manning
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