ISport International

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United Kingdom iSport International
Full name iSport International
Founded 2004
Base United Kingdom Norwich, Norfolk, UK
Founder/s Paul Jackson
Team principal/s Paul Jackson
GP2 Series record
Debut 2005
Latest race 2012
Races competed 167
Teams' Championships 2007
Drivers' Championships 2007 (Glock)
Race victories 19
Pole positions 12
Fastest laps 14
Other Series
Former Series GP2 Asia Series
Drivers' Titles 2009-10 GP2 Asia (Valsecchi)
Teams' Titles 2009-10 GP2 Asia

iSport International is a British Championship motor racing team that was formed to compete in the GP2 Series from its inception in 2005. The decision to race in the GP2 series was based upon the opportunity that the series created to feed drivers to F1 and the profitability of the overall business model. iSport won the Championship title in 2007 and won the 2010 GP2 Asia Series and achieved the second highest GP2 series total of points won up to the end of 2012. iSport provided a successful platform for four F1 driver careers. The decision to cease racing in the 2013 GP2 series was based upon the declining profitability of the original business model and the decline in the number of race drivers with sufficient sponsorship to invest in motor sport. iSport is currently reviewing its future motor sport options.

Overview

iSport International was founded in 2004 to compete in the new Formula One feeder series GP2 after F3000 series ended. The team is composed of several former members of the Petrobras Junior Team who took Bruno Junqueira to his Formula 3000 championship victory in 2000. Their factory is based in Carleton Rode near Norwich, England.

Jonathan Williams, son of Williams F1 founder Sir Frank Williams, is an advisor for the team.

Racing history

GP2 Series

The inaugural season of the GP2 series saw iSport take the fastest time in the shoot-out for race numbers, giving drivers Scott Speed and Can Artam numbers 1 and 2 for the season. While the team was regularly fast at races, neither driver was able to win a race. Nevertheless, Speed finished third in the championship with consistent points-scoring finishes, whilst Artam was 22nd overall with two points. iSport finished the season in fourth place in the teams' championship. For 2006, Speed graduated to Formula One with a drive at Scuderia Toro Rosso and Artam left the series. iSport filled its seats with Ernesto Viso and Tristan Gommendy, the latter of whom was later replaced by Timo Glock at the mid-season point. Viso took the team's first two victories in the category and Glock added two more; the part-season driver overhauling his team-mate's points tally to finish the year fourth overall in the drivers' standings, with Viso sixth and Gommendy 20th. iSport improved to third in the teams' championship.

Bruno Senna driving for iSport at the Silverstone round of the 2008 GP2 Series season.

Glock remained with the team for 2007 and was joined by 2006 race winner Andreas Zuber. Glock won five races on his way to the championship title, prevailing in a season-long duel with Lucas di Grassi (ART Grand Prix). Zuber supported him with a single further victory on his way to ninth overall, although the team-mates embarrassingly collided whilst accelerating away from the front row of the grid at the feature race of the round held at Magny-Cours. To cap a successful year, iSport also won its first teams' championship. For the 2008 season, iSport joined the GP2 Asia Series in its inaugural year, signing Bruno Senna and Karun Chandhok. After a low-key Asia campaign, which saw the team finish fifth in the standings, the Senna-Chandhok combination was retained for the main series season, in which Senna emerged as champion Giorgio Pantano's main rival, accumulating two victories on his way to the runner-up position in the drivers' table. Chandhok also won a race and finished tenth overall; iSport ended the season second in the teams' championship to the Barwa International Campos Team.

For the 2008-09 Asia Series season, the departing driver line-up was replaced with reigning Formula Renault 3.5 Series champion Giedo van der Garde and a series-encouraged Asian driver, Hamad Al Fardan. Van der Garde and Al Fardan scored 13 points between them, resulting in an eighth-place championship finish for the team. For the 2009 main series, Van der Garde was retained with Diego Nunes replacing Al Fardan; Van der Garde won three races but only managed seventh in the drivers' championship, whilst Nunes was back in 20th. iSport finished fifth overall in the teams' championship. Both drivers then moved on, and were replaced by Davide Valsecchi and Oliver Turvey for both the 2009-10 Asia Series and the 2010 main series. In the Asia Series, Valsecchi won three races and sealed the championship title, with rookie driver Turvey backing him up to take sixth overall, allowing iSport to win the Asia teams' championship for the first time. In the main series, however, the team was unable to maintain this level of form: Valsecchi ended the season strongly with the outfit's sole victory at Yas Marina, but was overshadowed by Turvey, who concluded the year sixth in the drivers' championship to Valsecchi's eighth. iSport maintained its fifth place in the teams' championship.

iSport again signed two new driversSam Bird and Marcus Ericssonfor the abortive 2011 Asia Series and the 2011 main series. On this occasion, neither driver won a race: Bird finished sixth in the final standings with a single position, with Ericsson four places behind him but the team improving to fourth overall. Ericsson was retained for 2012, with Jolyon Palmer signed from the Arden team to replace the Formula Renault 3.5-bound Bird. The drivers' fortunes improved, as they took a race victory apiece, but iSport slipped to sixth in the teams' championship at season's end.

The iSport GP2 contract was acquired by Russian Time for the 2013 season.

Formula One

The iSport team was believed to have been evaluating an entry to Formula One, but team principal Paul Jackson said that he was waiting for the FIA to finalise its plans to cap budgets in the sport before making any solid plans. "For many years I've said if the conditions were right and the numbers made sense, then we'd enter F1," said Jackson. "The budget cap could be the perfect opportunity for us, but until we find out what the magic number is, I don't know if it's do-able or feasible. When it's all in print, we'll look at it, start doing our sums and talking to potential investors." iSport's possible F1 entry was cancelled after they pulled out of GP2.[1]

Results

GP2 Series

Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles F.L. Points D.C. T.C.
2005 Dallara-Mecachrome United States Scott Speed 23 0 1 5 57.5 3rd 4th
Turkey Can Artam 23 0 0 0 2 22nd
2006 Dallara-Mecachrome Venezuela Ernesto Viso 21 2 0 1 42 6th 3rd
France Tristan Gommendy 9 0 0 0 6 20th
Germany Timo Glock 12 2 0 1 58† 4th
2007 Dallara-Mecachrome Germany Timo Glock 21 5 4 4 92 1st 1st
United Arab Emirates Andreas Zuber 21 1 1 2 30 9th
2008 Dallara-Mecachrome India Karun Chandhok 20 1 0 0 31 10th 2nd
Brazil Bruno Senna 20 2 3 1 64 2nd
2009 Dallara-Mecachrome Netherlands Giedo van der Garde 20 3 0 0 34 7th 5th
Brazil Diego Nunes 20 0 0 0 8 20th
2010 Dallara-Mecachrome United Kingdom Oliver Turvey 20 0 1 0 47 6th 5th
Italy Davide Valsecchi 20 1 1 0 31 8th
2011 Dallara-Mecachrome United Kingdom Sam Bird 18 0 1 0 45 6th 4th
Sweden Marcus Ericsson 18 0 0 0 25 10th
2012 Dallara-Mecachrome Sweden Marcus Ericsson 24 1 0 0 124 8th 6th
United Kingdom Jolyon Palmer 24 1 0 0 78 11th

† Glock had scored 5 points for BCN Competición during the first 9 races of the season.

GP2 Asia Series

Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points D.C. T.C.
2008 Dallara-Mecachrome India Karun Chandhok 10 0 0 0 7 13th 5th
Brazil Bruno Senna 10 0 0 3 23 5th
2008-09 Dallara-Mecachrome Netherlands Giedo van der Garde 11 0 0 0 11 12th 8th
Bahrain Hamad Al Fardan 11 0 0 0 2 20th
2009-10 Dallara-Mecachrome United Kingdom Oliver Turvey 8 1 0 0 17 6th 1st
Italy Davide Valsecchi 8 3 1 4 56 1st
2011 Dallara-Mecachrome Sweden Marcus Ericsson 4 0 0 0 9 6th 5th
United Kingdom Sam Bird 4 0 0 0 2 12th

References

  1. http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/74916

External links

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