Masami Kageyama

Kageyama in 2011

Masami Kageyama (影山 正美 Kageyama Masami, born May 2, 1967) is a Japanese racing driver from Kanagawa Prefecture.[1] His older brother is Masahiko Kageyama who was also a successful racing driver in similar categories.

Racing career

Early career - Japanese formula and touring cars

Kageyama began his career by winning the inaugural 1990 Formula Toyota championship. In 1991 he moved up to the All-Japan Formula Three Championship and finished fourth with one win. He embarked on a full-fledged touring car racing campaign in 1992, competing in the All Japan Touring Car Championship Class 3 in a Honda Civic, finishing 9th. He also continued in Japanese F3 but failed to finish in the points. He continued in the same series and teams in 1993, finishing 11th in JTCC-C3 and 15th in F3 Japan. 1994 was his breakout year in Japanese F3 where he drove for the famous Tom's team and finished second in points with 2 poles, one win and six podium finishes. He also drove in the All Japan GT Championship (JGTC) and made two starts in Japanese Formula 3000 in 1994.

Formula Nippon and International GT cars

In 1995 Kageyama raced full time in both Japanese F3000, where he finished 13th in points with the Advan Sport Pal team, and in the Japanese Touring Car Championship where he finished 10th in points driving a Toyota. In 1996 Kageyama only raced in JGTC in a Nissan 300ZX and in JTCC in a Toyota Corona EXiV, however he also made his 24 Hours of Le Mans debut in a Toyota Supra. However, the team failed to finish. In 1997 Kageyama finished second in JGTC-GT500 in a Supra fielded by Toyota Team SARD. He also returned to Formula Nippon (formerly Japanese F3000) and finished fifth in the 1997 championship.

1998 was a tremendously successful year for Kageyama, he finished second in Formula Nippon, finished tenth in the 1998 24 Hours of Le Mans in a factory-backed Nissan R390 GT1 and was the JGTC-GT500 champion in a factory Nissan Skyline GT-R. In 1999 his fortunes turned as he only managed ninth in points in his JGTC-GT500 Skyline and only competed in one Formula Nippon race.

2000s

In the 2000 24 Hours of Le Mans Kageyama's Team Dragon squad finished sixth overall in their Panoz LMP-1 Roadster-S. Kageyama also rebounded in JGTC and finished second in points in his Skyline GT-R. In 2001 Kageyama fell to seventh in JGTC and returned to Formula Nippon, finishing ninth in points. 2002 was a very disappointing JGTC season with Kageyama only finishing 28th in points. In 2003 however, he rebounded to fifth in points in his NISMO Skyline GT-R. In 2004 he stayed with the NISMO team as they switched cars to the new Nissan Fairlady Z. Kageyama finished ninth in points. In 2005 he dropped down to the GT300 class still driving a Fairlady Z, but switched teams to Endless Sports. He finished sixth in GT300. He improved to fourth in 2006 in the same car, team, and class. The same combination finished fifth in points in 2007.

Kageyama returned to Le Mans for the 2008 race but the Tōkai University Courage-Oreca LC70 he drove failed to finish. He switched teams in JGTC-GT300 to a Hankook-fielded Porsche 911 GT3 RSR and fell to 21st in points. The team improved to ninth in points in 2009 and also made two starts in the Asian Le Mans Series. The team and Kageyama fell back to 17th place in JGTC-GT300 in 2010, however they rebounded to finish third in 2011 and second in 2012. However, they fell back to 19th in 2013 and Kageyama left the team in 2014 for an APR Nissan GT-R GT3.

24 Hours of Le Mans results

Year Team Co-Drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
1996 Japan Team SARD Toyota Co. Ltd. Japan Masanori Sekiya
Japan Hidetoshi Mitsusada
Toyota Supra LM GT1 205 DNF DNF
1998 Japan Nissan Motorsports
United Kingdom TWR
Japan Satoshi Motoyama
Japan Takuya Kurosawa
Nissan R390 GT1 GT1 319 10th 9th
2000 Japan TV Asahi Team Dragon Japan Toshio Suzuki
Japan Masahiko Kageyama
Panoz LMP-1 Roadster-S-Élan LMP900 340 6th 6th
2008 Japan Tōkai University
Japan YGK Power
Japan Toshio Suzuki
Japan Haruki Kurosawa
Courage-Oreca LC70-YGK LMP1 185 DNF DNF

Japanese Top Formula Championship results

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 DC Points
1994 Team Le Mans SUZ
FUJ
MIN
SUZ
SUG
FUJ
SUZ
14
FUJ
FUJ
SUZ
11
NC 0
1995 Advan Sport Pal SUZ
12
FUJ
C
MIN
Ret
SUZ
Ret
SUG
Ret
FUJ
Ret
TOK
3
FUJ
14
SUZ
Ret
13位 4
1996 Advan Pal Checkers SUZ
10
MIN
5
FUJ
Ret
TOK
2
SUZ
17
SUG
15
FUJ
9
MIN
11
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
Ret
11位 8
1997 Navi Connection Racing Team SUZ
11
MIN
9
FUJ
11
SUZ
5
SUG
6
FUJ
4
MIN
7
MOT
2
FUJ
3
SUZ
4
5th 19
1998 Shionogi Team Nova SUZ
2
MIN
10
FUJ
Ret
MOT
3
SUZ
3
SUG
1
FUJ
C
MIN
6
FUJ
4
SUZ
1
2nd 38
1999 Be Brides Impul SUZ
Ret
MOT
Ret
MIN
6
FUJ
12
SUZ
1
SUG
Ret
FUJ
Ret
MIN
Ret
MOT
4
SUZ
4
6th 17
2001 Cosmo Oil Racing Team Cerumo SUZ
4
MOT
5
MIN
6
FUJ
5
SUZ
Ret
SUG
11
FUJ
6
MIN
4
MOT
8
SUZ
7
9th 12
2002 Team LeMans SUZ
14
FUJ
Ret
MIN
SUZ
MOT
SUG
FUJ
MIN
MOT
SUZ
NC 0
2004 Cosmo Oil Racing Team Cerumo SUZ
SUG
MOT
SUZ
SUG
MIN
Ret
SEP
11
MOT
Ret
SUZ
15
NC 0

References

  1. Masami Kageyama biography, Speedsport Magazine, Retrieved 2014-09-18

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, August 22, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.