Aguri Suzuki
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Aguri Suzuki | |
Formula One Career | |
Nationality | Japanese |
---|---|
Active years | 1988 - 1995 |
Team(s) | Lola, Zakspeed, Footwork, Jordan, Ligier |
Grands Prix | 88 |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 0 |
Podium finishes | 1 |
Pole positions | 0 |
Fastest laps | 0 |
First Grand Prix | 1988 Japanese Grand Prix |
First win | n/a |
Last win | n/a |
Last Grand Prix | 1995 Japanese Grand Prix |
Aguri Suzuki (鈴木 亜久里) (born September 8, 1960) is a former Formula One driver from Japan. He participated in 88 grands prix, and most notable achievement in racing was 3rd place at 1990 Japanese Grand Prix. Aguri is also the owner of Super Aguri F1 team, which is participating in the Formula 1 championship in 2006.
Contents |
[edit] Career
[edit] Early career
Suzuki began racing karts in 1972, at the age of 12. In 1978 he won the Japanese kart championship and in 1979 made his debut in the Japanese Formula Three championship. He continued in karting and in 1981 was again Japanese Kart Champion. In 1983 he finished second in the All-Japan F3 series, driving a Hayashi-Toyota. He then turned to touring car racing and, driving for the Nissan factory team won the Japanese title in 1986. The same year he made his debut in Japanese F2 and drove in the Le Mans 24 Hours. In 1987 he finished runner-up in the Japanese F3000 series, winning one race (Suzuka). In 1988, driving a March-Yamaha he won the title with three wins (Fuji, Nishi-Nippon and Suzuka).
[edit] Formula 1 Career
In 1988 Suzuka raced in European F3000 with the Footwork team, but he finally debuted in Formula 1 on October 30, 1988 for his home race, replacing the ill Yannick Dalmas in Larrousse team, which then ran Lola cars. As the Zakspeed team was running Yamaha engines in 1989, they hired Aguri, but he gained the unwanted record of failing to pre-qualify in all 16 races (at that time there were 38 entrants fighting for 26 places on the grid, so 8 uncompetitive cars were removed on Friday morning).
For 1990 and 1991 he drove again for Larrousse. Three sixth-places were dwarfed by 3rd place at Suzuka - the first ever podium for an Asian driver in Formula 1 – which turned him into a local hero. He also set the second fastest lap, and observers began to think seriously about a Japanese contender in Formula 1. But the 1990 season would prove to be the pinnacle of Aguri's racing career.
In 1992 and 1993 he was at Footwork alongside Michele Alboreto and then Derek Warwick, but both usually outperformed him. He shared a Ligier with Martin Brundle in 1995, but only scored 1 point in his races, and was criticised by Mika Salo after the two collided in Buenos Aires. Suzuka had been inextricably linked to Aguri's F1 career and irony played its part in ensuring that was where it ended. A massive crash in practice caused a neck injury which saw him miss the race, and he immediately announced his retirement.
In Formula 1 he achieved 1 podium, and scored a total of 8 championship points. At the time he retired, he was the most successful Japanese driver ever in Formula 1, besting Satoru Nakajima, but Takuma Sato has later taken the glory.
[edit] After Formula 1
He later move on to JGTC and remained involved in Japanese driver development. In the 2000, with long term sponsor Autobacs, he would run the ARTA (Autobacs Racing Team Aguri) who despite winning the GT300 title in 2002, would expand to DTM a season later and launched Super Aguri Fernandez Racing with Adrian Fernandez, running cars in the IRL. Aguri still competes in both categories in Super GT, with team director/former driver Keiichi Tsuchiya managing the GT300 class, running the ASL Garaiya, a car his main sponsor helped to fund and develop. They race a Honda NSX in the GT500 class.
From 2006 Suzuki is running the Super Aguri F1 Formula One team with the backing of Honda. He managed to put together his new team in just four and half months from his initial announcement on 1 November 2005[1]. The team overcame the hurdle of his initial entry being rejected by the FIA after not securing financial guarantees in time for regular entry bid and was not formally confirmed until January 26, 2006. Suzuki was able to see his team make its debut at the Bahrain Grand Prix on 15 March 2006.
[edit] Complete F1 Results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)
Yr | Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | Team | WDC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1988 | Lola | BRA |
SMR |
MON |
MEX |
CAN |
USA |
FRA |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
BEL |
ITA |
POR |
ESP |
JPN 16 |
AUS |
Lola | NA | 0 | |
1989 | Zakspeed | BRA DNPQ |
SMR DNPQ |
MON DNPQ |
MEX DNPQ |
USA DNPQ |
CAN DNPQ |
FRA DNPQ |
GBR DNPQ |
GER DNPQ |
HUN DNPQ |
BEL DNPQ |
ITA DNPQ |
POR DNPQ |
ESP DNPQ |
JPN DNPQ |
AUS DNPQ |
Zakspeed | NA | 0 | |
1990 | Lola | USA ret |
BRA ret |
SMR ret |
MON ret |
CAN 12 |
MEX ret |
FRA 7 |
GBR 6 |
GER ret |
HUN ret |
BEL ret |
ITA ret |
POR 14 |
ESP 6 |
JPN 3 |
AUS ret |
Lola | 12th | 6 | |
1991 | Lola | USA 6 |
BRA ret |
SMR ret |
MON ret |
CAN ret |
MEX ret |
FRA ret |
GBR ret |
GER ret |
HUN ret |
BEL DNQ |
ITA DNQ |
POR ret |
ESP DNQ |
JPN ret |
AUS DNQ |
Lola | 22nd | 1 | |
1992 | Footwork | RSA 8 |
MEX DNQ |
BRA ret |
ESP 7 |
SMR 10 |
MON 11 |
CAN DNQ |
FRA ret |
GBR 12 |
GER ret |
HUN ret |
BEL 9 |
ITA ret |
POR 10 |
JPN 8 |
AUS 8 |
Footwork | NA | 0 | |
1993 | Footwork | RSA ret |
BRA ret |
EUR ret |
SMR 9 |
ESP 10 |
MON ret |
CAN 13 |
FRA 12 |
GBR ret |
GER ret |
HUN ret |
BEL ret |
ITA ret |
POR ret |
JPN ret |
AUS 7 |
Footwork | NA | 0 | |
1994 | Jordan | BRA |
PFC ret |
SMR |
MON |
ESP |
CAN |
FRA |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
BEL |
ITA |
POR |
EUR |
JPN |
AUS |
Jordan | NA | 0 | |
1995 | Ligier | BRA 8 |
ARG ret |
SMR 11 |
ESP |
MON |
CAN |
FRA |
GBR |
GER 6 |
HUN |
BEL |
ITA |
POR |
EUR |
PFC ret |
JPN DNS |
AUS |
Ligier | 17th | 1 |