Heidfeld at the 2008 Canadian Grand Prix |
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Nationality German | |
Formula One World Championship career | |
---|---|
2008 team | BMW Sauber |
2008 car # | 3 |
2009 team | BMW Sauber |
Races | 153 (150 starts) |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podium finishes | 11 |
Career points | 200 |
Pole positions | 1 |
Fastest laps | 2 |
First race | 2000 Australian Grand Prix |
Last race | 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix |
2008 position | 6th (60 pts) |
Nick Lars Heidfeld, frequently referred to as Quick Nick,[1] (born May 10 1977 in Mönchengladbach, West Germany) is a German Formula One racing driver, who is currently driving for the BMW Sauber team.
Despite his recent success, Heidfeld is yet to win a race during his nine seasons in Formula One. This means that amongst the current drivers, he has had the most GP starts without standing at the top spot on the podium. Heidfeld has now started 150 races, so if he were to eventually win a race he would break the record, which is currently held by Rubens Barrichello, who claimed his first victory on his 123rd attempt. Heidfeld also currently holds another dubious record; he is the driver who has scored the highest number of world championship points without a Grand Prix win. He also holds the record for the most consecutive race finishes with his current ongoing tally of 28, as well as the most finishes in a season when he finished 18 races in the 2008 season. This record is tied with Tiago Monteiro's 18 finishes in the 2005 season.
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Heidfeld was born in Mönchengladbach, Germany, on May 10 1977, and began racing karts at the age of 11 in 1988. In 1994 he moved into the German Formula Ford series, gaining widespread attention by winning 8 of the 9 races to take the title that season. In 1995 he won the German International Formula Ford 1800 Championship, and came second in the Zetec Cup. This led to a drive in the German International Formula 3 championship for 1996, where he finished third overall, after taking 3 wins. The following year Heidfeld won the German F3 Championship, including a win at the prestigious Monaco event. In 1998, he won three races and was runner-up in the European Formula 3000 championship, with the West Junior Team. At the final race of the season he was demoted to the back of the grid from pole position, after his team used non-compliant fuel.[2] He finished the race ninth and out of the points, losing the championship by seven points to Juan Pablo Montoya. During that season, he was also the official test driver for the McLaren-Mercedes Formula One team. In 1999, he won the International Formula 3000 Championship. that year he also took the official track record at the Goodwood Festival of Speed.[3]
Heidfeld was signed as a race driver for the Prost Grand Prix F1 team for the 2000 season, alongside Formula One veteran Jean Alesi. Heidfeld struggled with his new car and suffered a string of retirements, as well as colliding with his team mate on more than one occasion.
He departed Prost at the end of that season, before signing a three-year contract with Sauber for 2001. He was partnered with then rookie driver Kimi Räikkönen. After the announcement of Mika Häkkinen's retirement, many thought that Heidfeld would replace him in the McLaren team,[4] as he had outperformed Räikkönen over the year, including a podium position in the Brazilian Grand Prix. However, the McLaren seat went to Räikkönen, and Heidfeld stayed with Sauber for 2002 and 2003, where he raked up a small number of points finishes. In 2002 he outperformed another rookie team mate, Felipe Massa, but was then beaten by his more experienced fellow countryman, Heinz-Harald Frentzen, in 2003.
At the end of the 2003 season, Heidfeld was dumped by the Sauber team and looked to be without a race seat for the 2004 season. However, after a number of moderately successful tests, it was announced that Heidfeld would race with the Jordan Grand Prix team, alongside rookie Giorgio Pantano. Heidfeld had a poor season because of the slow and unreliable EJ14, however he still managed to score 3 points over the course of the season. He managed a seventh place in Monaco and an eighth in Canada, where he was beaten by team mate Timo Glock on his F1 debut.
During the winter of 2004–2005, Heidfeld tested with the Williams team, in a 'shootout' against Antônio Pizzonia for the second race seat. At the Williams launch on January 31 2005, it was announced that Heidfeld would be the race driver for the team in 2005.[5]
At the seventh race of the 2005 season at the Nürburgring circuit, his home Grand Prix, Heidfeld took his first ever pole position. He also achieved his best race position to-date in Monaco where he finished second, which he equalled at the Nürburgring.
Heidfeld missed the Italian and Belgian Grands Prix due to injuries suffered in a testing accident. Scheduled to come back for Brazil, he was injured again when hit by a motorbike when out cycling, and therefore forced to sit out the rest of the season.
Heidfeld gained a contract with his then Williams' engine supplier, BMW, bought the Sauber team and entered Formula One as BMW Sauber for the 2006 season.
During 2006 Heidfeld scored points several times for his new team. At Melbourne he ran as high as second until the safety car came out. He eventually finished fourth. At Indianapolis, he was eliminated in a spectacular first lap accident which saw fellow drivers, Scott Speed, Kimi Räikkönen and Juan Pablo Montoya also go out. Heidfeld's car was launched into a quadruple barrel roll, the first of his career and the second of the season, after Christijan Albers suffered one at the San Marino Grand Prix. He and the other drivers all walked away unharmed. The Hungarian Grand Prix saw Heidfeld give BMW Sauber their first podium finish and best result of the year, when he finished third, even though he had only qualified 10th on the grid.
At the end of 2006, Heidfeld was quoted attacking the media's saturation coverage of his teammate Robert Kubica, who had scored fewer points than him.[6] This has happened two other times in the German's career; in 2001 when he was teammates with Kimi Räikkönen (whom he beat 12 points to 9) and in 2002, when he was teammates with Felipe Massa (whom he beat by 7 points to 4). Räikkönen and Massa later formed the 2007 Ferrari line-up.
Heidfeld started the 2007 season strongly. In Bahrain, he chased down and overtook reigning world champion Fernando Alonso around the outside, finishing half a minute ahead of his BMW teammate Kubica. He scored three fourth places in the opening three races, a sixth in Monaco, and a second place at the Canadian Grand Prix, where he also out-qualified both Ferraris, equalling his best ever Grand Prix finish. After retiring from fifth place at Indianapolis, he was outscored by team-mate Kubica at both Magny-Cours and Silverstone. At an eventful European Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, Heidfeld's home circuit, where he collided with Kubica on the opening lap, he recovered and overtook Kubica on the final lap to finish sixth, despite making six pitstops during the race. Heidfeld returned to form in Hungary, qualifying second and finishing third to score his and BMW's second podium of the season. He finished fourth at the Turkish and Italian Grand Prix, and fifth in the Belgian Grand Prix. He eventually finished a career-best fifth in the championship with 61 points, outpointing Kubica by 22.
On 28 April 2007, Heidfeld drove three demonstration laps around the Nürburgring's legendary 14 mile Nordschleife track, which made him the first driver in 31 years to pilot a current F1 car there. About 45,000 spectators attended the event, which was held after a four hour VLN endurance race.
After several months of negotiations, BMW confirmed that Heidfeld would stay with the team for 2008.[7]
Heidfeld began the 2008 season strongly, finishing second in Australia after qualifying fifth. In Malaysia, he qualified fifth but dropped down to tenth at the first corner after being pushed wide by Jarno Trulli. He got back up to sixth, also setting his first ever fastest lap in the process. In Bahrain he started from sixth place but he did not gain a place at the start, but passed Trulli and Heikki Kovalainen to climb up to fourth. He finished there and this fourth gave him second in the championship.
After a few disappointing qualifying sessions and races in the following weeks (after which the German press started to call him "Leidfeld", with "Leid" meaning "misery" in German), Kubica and Heidfeld made BMW Sauber history by securing the third-year team's first victory, and first one-two finish respectively in Montreal, Canada on June 9 2008. Heidfeld was positioned eighth on the grid and after losing a place at the start, before gaining it back, was sitting comfortably in eighth place once again before a safety car situation saw the top 7 cars enter the pits in what was to soon become a bizarre series of errors that left Heidfeld and Kubica battling for the top two places. Heidfeld was switched to a one stop fuel strategy and came out of his stop ahead of Kubica, but considerably heavier on fuel. Not long afterwards, Heidfeld moved off the racing line allowing Kubica to make an easy pass, which then allowed the lighter BMW Sauber to build up a considerable lead on Heidfeld, who was occupied with preventing Fernando Alonso, also in a lighter car, from chasing Kubica. The gap built by Kubica allowed him to rejoin the race comfortably in the lead after his final pitstop with no threats behind him. Heidfeld finished the race second, solidifying his fifth place position in the driver's points. Heidfeld had a disappointing race in France after failing to score any points. He came back strongly at the British Grand Prix, starting fifth and finishing second in the wet conditions. Another strong performance, where he set the fastest lap of the race for the second time this season, was his home grand prix at the Hockenheimring shows that, for the time being, he has reversed the performance deficit to his team mate. Another second place finish at the Belgian Grand Prix, followed by 5th and 6th place finishes in Italy and Singapore respectively put him just one point behind current World Champion Kimi Räikkönen with just three races remaining.
It was confirmed on October 6 that both Heidfeld and team-mate Kubica would remain at the BMW Sauber team for the 2009 season.[8]
In the last three races Heidfeld scored four points, ending in sixth place in the standings after being passed by Fernando Alonso at the last round of the season. However, Heidfeld became the first driver since Michael Schumacher in 2002 to finish every race of the season, and the first to do so in a season that contains at least eighteen races.
Heidfeld lives in Stäfa, Switzerland with his wife Patricia, daughter Juni (born July 2005) and son Joda (born July 2007).[9] He has an elder brother, Tim, and a younger brother, Sven, who is also a racing driver.
Season | Series | Team Name | Races | Poles | Wins | Points | Final Placing |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1994 | German Formula Ford 1600 | ? | 9 | ? | 8 | ? | 1st |
1995 | German Formula Ford 1800 | ADAC Nordrhein Junior Team | ? | ? | ? | ? | 2nd |
1996 | German Formula Three | Opel Team BSR | 15 | 3 | 3 | 138 | 3rd |
Macau Grand Prix | Opel Team BSR | 1 | 1 | 0 | N/A | 6th | |
Grand Prix de Monaco F3 | Opel Team BSR | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 21st | |
Masters of Formula Three | ? | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 3rd | |
1997 | German Formula Three | Opel Team BSR | 18 | 5 | 5 | 224 | 1st |
Grand Prix de Monaco F3 | Opel Team BSR | 1 | 1 | 1 | N/A | 1st | |
Masters of Formula Three | Opel Team BSR | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 7th | |
1998 | International Formula 3000 | McLaren Junior Team | 12 | 2 | 3 | 58 | 2nd |
Formula One | McLaren | Test driver | |||||
1999 | International Formula 3000 | McLaren Junior Team | 10 | 4 | 4 | 59 | 1st |
Le Mans 24 Hours | Mercedes-AMG (GTP) | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | |
Formula One | McLaren | Test driver | |||||
Prost | Test driver | ||||||
2000 | Formula One | Prost | 17 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 20th |
2001 | Formula One | Sauber | 17 | 0 | 0 | 12 | 8th |
2002 | Formula One | Sauber | 17 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 10th |
2003 | Formula One | Sauber | 16 | 0 | 0 | 6 | 14th |
2004 | Formula One | Jordan | 18 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 18th |
2005 | Formula One | Williams | 14 | 1 | 0 | 28 | 11th |
2006 | Formula One | BMW Sauber | 18 | 0 | 0 | 23 | 9th |
2007 | Formula One | BMW Sauber | 17 | 0 | 0 | 61 | 5th |
2008 | Formula One | BMW Sauber | 18 | 0 | 0 | 60 | 6th |
(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 | 19 | WDC | Pts. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 | Gauloises Prost Peugeot | Prost AP03 | Peugeot A20 3.0 V10 | AUS 9 |
BRA Ret |
SMR Ret |
GBR Ret |
ESP 16 |
EUR EX |
MON 8 |
CAN Ret |
FRA 12 |
AUT Ret |
GER 12 |
HUN Ret |
BEL Ret |
ITA Ret |
USA 9 |
JPN Ret |
MAL Ret |
20th | 0 | ||
2001 | Sauber Petronas | Sauber C20 | Petronas 01A 3.0 V10 | AUS 4 |
MAL Ret |
BRA 3 |
SMR 7 |
ESP 6 |
AUT 9 |
MON Ret |
CAN Ret |
EUR Ret |
FRA 6 |
GBR 6 |
GER Ret |
HUN 6 |
BEL Ret |
ITA 11 |
USA 6 |
JPN 9 |
8th | 12 | ||
2002 | Sauber Petronas | Sauber C21 | Petronas 02A 3.0 V10 | AUS Ret |
MAL 5 |
BRA Ret |
SMR 10 |
ESP 4 |
AUT Ret |
MON 8 |
CAN 12 |
EUR 7 |
GBR 6 |
FRA 7 |
GER 6 |
HUN 9 |
BEL 10 |
ITA 10 |
USA 9 |
JPN 7 |
10th | 7 | ||
2003 | Sauber Petronas | Sauber C22 | Petronas 03A 3.0 V10 | AUS Ret |
MAL 8 |
BRA Ret |
SMR 10 |
ESP 10 |
AUT Ret |
MON 11 |
CAN Ret |
EUR 8 |
FRA 13 |
GBR 17 |
GER 10 |
HUN 9 |
ITA 9 |
USA 5 |
JPN 9 |
14th | 6 | |||
2004 | Benson & Hedges Jordan Ford | Jordan EJ14 | Ford RS2 3.0 V10 | AUS Ret |
MAL Ret |
BHR 15 |
SMR Ret |
ESP Ret |
MON 7 |
EUR 10 |
CAN 8 |
USA Ret |
FRA 16 |
GBR 15 |
GER Ret |
HUN 12 |
BEL 11 |
ITA 14 |
CHN 13 |
JPN 13 |
BRA Ret |
18th | 3 | |
2005 | BMW WilliamsF1 Team | Williams FW27 | BMW P84/5 3.0 V10 | AUS Ret |
MAL 3 |
BHR Ret |
SMR 6 |
ESP 10 |
MON 2 |
EUR 2 |
CAN Ret |
USA DNS |
FRA 14 |
GBR 12 |
GER 11 |
HUN 6 |
TUR Ret |
ITA PO |
BEL Inj |
BRA Inj |
JPN Inj |
CHN Inj |
11th | 28 |
2006 | BMW Sauber F1 Team | BMW Sauber F1.06 | BMW P86 2.4 V8 | BHR 12 |
MAL Ret |
AUS 4 |
SMR 13 |
EUR 10 |
ESP 8 |
MON 7 |
GBR 7 |
CAN 7 |
USA Ret |
FRA 8 |
GER Ret |
HUN 3 |
TUR 14 |
ITA 8 |
CHN 7 |
JPN 8 |
BRA 17 |
9th | 23 | |
2007 | BMW Sauber F1 Team | BMW Sauber F1.07 | BMW P86/7 2.4 V8 | AUS 4 |
MAL 4 |
BHR 4 |
ESP Ret |
MON 6 |
CAN 2 |
USA Ret |
FRA 5 |
GBR 6 |
EUR 6 |
HUN 3 |
TUR 4 |
ITA 4 |
BEL 5 |
JPN 14 |
CHN 7 |
BRA 6 |
5th | 61 | ||
2008 | BMW Sauber F1 Team | BMW Sauber F1.08 | BMW P86/8 2.4 V8 | AUS 2 |
MAL 6 |
BHR 4 |
ESP 9 |
TUR 5 |
MON 14 |
CAN 2 |
FRA 13 |
GBR 2 |
GER 4 |
HUN 10 |
EUR 9 |
BEL 2 |
ITA 5 |
SIN 6 |
JPN 9 |
CHN 5 |
BRA 10 |
6th | 60 |
Sporting positions | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Mario Hilgert |
German Formula Ford 1800 Champion 1995 |
Succeeded by Tomáš Enge |
Preceded by Marcel Tiemann |
Monaco Formula Three Support Race Winner 1997 |
Succeeded by Lewis Hamilton (2005) |
Preceded by Jarno Trulli |
German Formula Three champion 1997 |
Succeeded by Bas Leinders |
Preceded by Juan Pablo Montoya |
International Formula 3000 Champion 1999 |
Succeeded by Bruno Junqueira |
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