Jan Nilsson
Jan "Flash" Nilsson | |
---|---|
Nilsson in 2010. | |
Nationality | Swedish |
Born |
Karlstad (Sweden) | 15 December 1960
Swedish Touring Car Championship career | |
Debut season | 1996 |
Current team | Flash Engineering |
Car no. | 6 |
Former teams |
Volvo Jan Nilsson Racing |
Wins | 33 |
Best finish | 1st in 1996, 1997 |
Previous series | |
Clio Cup Scandinavia Renault Spider Cup Porsche Carrera Cup Swedish F3 | |
Championship titles | |
1997, 1996 1994 1989 |
STCC Clio Cup Scandinavia Swedish F3 |
Jan "Flash" Nilsson (born 15 December 1960) is a Swedish racecar driver.[1] He is most famous for his appearance in the Swedish Touring Car Championship, having appeared in all fourteen seasons and for being the second most victorious driver (two championship wins and 33 race wins).
Early career
Jan Nilsson started competing in Formula Ford in 1983 before moving on to Formula 3. He became the Swedish F3 champion in 1989[2] and drove Formula 3 in Japan and Mexico before moving to Clio Cup Scandinavia. He finished second in 1992 and moved up to Renault Spider Eurocup in 1993 after becoming champion in 1992.[3] His first year in the Spider Eurocup saw him finishing in fourth place, as did the 1995 season. In 1996 he finished third, and the very same year he was the main force behind the creation of the Swedish Touring Car Championship.
STCC
Jan Nilsson's own team, Flash Engineering, became the official Volvo team. He took the title in 1996[4] and 1997,[5] both in a Volvo 850. and was second in 1998, this time in a Volvo S40. In 1999 he was 5th, and 6th in 2000. Some critics meant that he had lost his pace, but he proved them wrong with becoming second overall in the 2001, 2002 and 2003[6] seasons.
After a somewhat tough 2004 season (only one race win during the whole season) Jan Nilsson sold Flash Engineering. The team changed its name to Polestar Racing. Jan Nilsson started a new, smaller team from scratch for the 2005 season, also called Flash Engineering.[7] The team ran one BMW 320i E46 for Jan Nilsson, finishing 9th overall in STCC 2005.
Flash Engineering signed on several new sponsors, the Swedish mailservice "Posten"[8] among others, for 2006 and dramatically increased their available funds. They also signed on double Swedish champion Richard Göransson and former Flash Engineering Volvo driver Edward Sandström. Göransson and Nilsson drove new BMW 320si E90 cars for the 2006 season, while Sandström drove the older BMW 320i E46. Richard Göransson finished second in the championship[9] while Nilsson was 9th again. Sandström was involved in a major accident early in the season in which the car was completely destroyed, and Sandström had to sit out the remaining races.[10]
After a couple of struggling years in STCC, 2005 to 2007, Jan Nilsson was back winning races in 2008, 2009 and 2010. "Flash" had a hard fight with previous team mate Richard Göransson for the most overall victories in STCC. The both switched places several times between the 2008, 2009 and 2010 seasons, with Göransson finally taking the top spot with 34 versus 33 victories at the end of the 2010 season.[11]
"Flash" finished 5th in the STCC 2007, 6th in 2008 and 2009, and 9th in 2010.[12]
Carrera Cup
In 2005 Jan Nilsson took part in the Scandinavian Porsche Carrera Cup that runs as a support class to STCC, alongside his STCC programme in a BMW. This meant that Nilsson did four races each weekend, two in the BMW and two in the Porsche. Luckily for him both cars were rear wheel drive. Nilsson had more success in Carrera Cup and finished third overall. For 2006 he focused on STCC and his spot was filled by reigning champion Fredrik Ros in Carrera Cup.
References
- ↑ STCC: Jan "Flash" Nilsson, accessed 2010-09-20 (in Swedish)
- ↑ Formula 3 1989 Championship Tables, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Renault Clio Cup - Champions, accessed 2010-11-29 (in Swedish)
- ↑ Swedish Touring Car Championship 1996, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Swedish Touring Car Championship 1997, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Swedish Touring Car Championship 2003, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Swedish Touring Car Championship 2003, accessed 2010-11-29 (in Swedish)
- ↑ Posten + Flash = sant!, accessed 2010-11-29 (in Swedish)
- ↑ Swedish Touring Car Championship 2006, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Aftonbladet - Sandström utan bil efter kraschen: ”Redan över budget", accessed 2010-11-29 (in Swedish)
- ↑ Press: Fantastisk seger och segerrekord!, accessed 2010-11-29
- ↑ Career Details - Driver DB, accessed 2010-11-29
External links
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Michael Johnsson |
Swedish Formula Three Champion 1989 |
Succeeded by Niclas Jönsson |
Preceded by none |
Swedish Touring Car Champion 1996 - 1997 |
Succeeded by Fredrik Ekblom |