Difference between revisions of "Juan Pablo Montoya"

From WOI Encyclopedia Italia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m
 
(35 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
__NOEDITSECTION__
+
{{X}}
{| border=1 align="right" cellpadding=2 cellspacing=0 width=250  style="margin-left:3em; margin-bottom: 2em;"
+
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:250px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
|-
+
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
|colspan=2|[[Image:j_p_montoya.jpg|250px|Juan Pablo Montoya]]
+
| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#333333; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" |[[Image:j_p_montoya.jpg|280px|Juan Pablo Montoya]]
|-
+
|- style="color:#fff; background:darkred; font-size:larger;"
!colspan=2 style="color: white; background: darkred;"|'''Juan Pablo Montoya'''
+
! colspan=2 |'''Juan Pablo Montoya''' {{flagiconColombia}}
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Car number || 4  
 
|Car number || 4  
Line 29: Line 29:
 
|-
 
|-
 
|Last position || 4th (60 pts)  
 
|Last position || 4th (60 pts)  
 +
|-
 +
|colspan=2|
 +
|-
 +
| colspan=2 style="padding:0; background:#333333; color:#fff; border-bottom:1px solid #999;" |<videoflash>slCYrHJvd0o|280|200</videoflash>
 
|}
 
|}
  
'''Juan Pablo Montoya Roldán''' (born [[September 20]], [[1975]]) is a [[Colombia]]n [[Formula One]] [[motor racing]] driver.  He was born in [[Bogotá]] where he was taught by his [[father]] Pablo, an [[architect]] and [[motorsport]] enthusiast, the secrets of [[karting]] becoming with the time in not only the best Colombian driver of all time but in one of the most charismatic stars in the motorsports world wide as he has enjoyed great success particularly in top [[Open-wheel]] racing series. His curriculum features one of the most impressive lists of achievements a driver could possess, having to his credit an [[Formula 3000|International F3000]] title, a world title in the [[Champ Car|CART FedEx Championship Series]], and victories in the [[Indianapolis 500]] and [[Monaco Grand Prix]].
 
  
 +
'''Juan Pablo Montoya Roldán''' (born [[September 20]], [[1975]], in [[Bogotá]], [[Colombia]]) is a [[race car driver]] in [[NASCAR]] and a former [[Formula One]] and [[CART]] driver. He has enjoyed great success, most famously in top [[open wheel racing]] series.  He currently drives the #42 [[Target Corporation|Target]]/[[Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company|Wrigley's]] [[Chevrolet Impala]] for [[Earnhardt Ganassi Racing]] in the [[Sprint Cup Series]].
 +
 +
The highlights of his career include winning the [[International Formula 3000|International F3000]] championship in 1998, and the [[Champ Car|CART Championship Series]] in 1999, as well as victories in some of the most prestigious races in the world. He is the only driver to have won the premier North American open-wheel [[CART]] title, the [[Indianapolis 500]] and the [[Rolex 24 at Daytona|24 Hours of Daytona]], all at the first attempt. Montoya is one of two drivers to have won the CART title in his [[rookie]] year, the first being [[1992 Formula One season| Formula One World Champion]] [[Nigel Mansell]] in [[1993 CART World Series season|1993]]. He has also equalled [[Graham Hill]]'s feat of being a [[Monaco Grand Prix]] and Indianapolis 500 race winner; Montoya is currently one of only two active drivers (along with [[Jacques Villeneuve]]) who has won two legs of the [[Triple Crown of Motorsport]].
 +
 +
Montoya has also become a crossover race winner by taking race victories (staring in each case in his rookie year) in [[Formula One]], [[CART]], [[IndyCar Series|IndyCar]], [[Rolex Sports Car Series|Grand-AM]] and [[Sprint Cup|NASCAR]] equalling in that respect [[Mario Andretti]]'s caliber of success (except for the F1 World Championship); And shares honors as well with [[Dan Gurney]] in being IndyCar/F1/NASCAR race winner. Montoya is also the only driver to have competed in all three major events at [[Indianapolis Motor Speedway|Indianapolis]], finishing fourth or better in each event. He finished 1st in the [[Indianapolis 500]], 2nd in the [[Brickyard 400]], and 4th in the [[United States Grand Prix#Indianapolis|US Grand Prix]].
 +
 +
In [[April 2009]], Montoya was ranked 29th in a list of the top 50 [[Formula One]] drivers of all time by [[Times Online]].
  
 
==Early career==
 
==Early career==
 +
He was born in [[Bogotá]] where he was taught the techniques of [[karting]] from an early age by his father Pablo, an architect and [[motorsport]] enthusiast.
 +
 +
Montoya moved to the Colombian [[Formula Renault]] Series in 1992, while racing there he won four of eight races and had five poles. The same year, he also participated in the [[United States|U.S.]] [[Skip Barber]] driving school, and was hailed by driving instructors as being one of the best pupils to ever come through their school.  1993 saw Montoya switch to the Swift GTI Championship, a series he dominated by winning seven of eight races and earning eight poles.  The following year, 1994, was a very busy year for the 19-year-old Colombian, as it saw him race in three separate series: the Sudam 125 Karting (he won the title), USA Barber Saab (finished third in points, won two races), and Formula N in [[Mexico]] (a series in which he won the title).  As his success continued year after year, Montoya came to be known for his uncanny ability to win [[pole position]]s (as well as races), in some cases taking 80% of a [[season (sport)|season's]] poles (see Career results below). For the next three years, Montoya raced in various divisions, continually progressing upward.  He raced in the 1995 [[United Kingdom|British]] Formula [[Vauxhall Motors|Vauxhall]] Championship, winning three races and finishing third in the championship. In 1996, he raced in the British [[Formula 3]] with [[Fortec Motorsport]], winning two races, and finishing 5th in the championship points standings, as well as taking part in events in [[Circuit Park Zandvoort|Zandvoort]], [[TT Circuit Assen|Netherlands]] and [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]].
 +
 +
==F3000 Career – F1 Testing==
 +
===1997===
 +
Montoya got the opportunity to advance in his motor racing career when he was hired by the RSM [[Marko]], [[International Formula 3000|Formula 3000]] team in 1997. In the ten races during the season, Montoya had three wins and three pole positions. He finished his rookie season, second in the championship points standings, just 1.5 points shy of taking the overall season title. During this time, [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] noticed his potential and invited him to test with the team at [[Jerez, Spain]] along with three other drivers. Montoya was the fastest of them all and he and [[Max Wilson]] were signed by [[WilliamsF1]] to be test drivers for the following season.
 +
 +
===1998===
 +
Alongside his Formula One testing duties for Williams, he competed again in F3000 and took the title in a close contest with [[Nick Heidfeld]] who was driving for [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]'s F3000 team. During the 1998 F3000 season, Montoya opened the season up with a record four straight pole positions. He also achieved another record that year by being the first driver to lap the entire grid at the [[Grand Prix de Pau|race in Pau]]. Montoya finished the 1998 F3000 season with four wins, seven pole positions, and nine podium finishes in twelve races.
 +
 +
==CART career==
 +
===1999===
 +
[[Renault F1|Renault]], [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]' [[engine]] supplier for most of the 1990s, left Formula One at the end of the 1997 season. With no major engine suppliers available, Williams were forced to sign a contract to run customer engines for the 1998 and 1999 seasons. In 1998 the team failed to win a race for the first time in a decade. For the 1999 season, in the hope of attracting more investors to the underperforming team, [[Frank Williams]] agreed a driver swap with CART team owner [[Chip Ganassi]], in which Ganassi's 1997 and 1998 CART champion driver, [[Alessandro Zanardi]], would return to [[Formula One]] and Montoya would take his place in the competitive American series.
 +
 +
While Zanardi had a miserable year in Formula One, Montoya, with [[Honda]] power and a great [[Reynard Motorsport|Reynard]] chassis at his disposal, took the American motorsport scene by storm. He took the 1999 title in his [[rookie]] year, something accomplished six years earlier by former [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|Formula One Champion]] [[Nigel Mansell]].
 +
 +
The season that saw Montoya crowned as the youngest ever [[Champ Car|CART FedEx Championship Series]] Champion at the age of 24 was closely fought, especially with [[Dario Franchitti]] who led the championship going into the final race in California. Both drivers finished the season with equal number of points but having won seven races to the Scotsman's three decided the title in the Colombian's favor. However, the CART rookie also attracted criticism—notably from [[Michael Andretti]] and his team  for his aggressive style of driving.
 +
 +
Montoya still had a contractual relationship with Williams and after his impressive rookie season the [[Grove, Oxfordshire|Grove]]-based team were keen for him to drive for them in Formula One. However, the young Colombian decided to race in the US for one more year.
 +
 +
===2000===
 +
In 2000 the Ganassi team switched to [[Toyota]] engines and [[Lola Cars|Lola]] chassis. The package was strong for ovals and high speed tracks, but was less well suited to street and most road circuits. Toyota’s engines were not yet reliable and often failed the team. Despite this, Montoya led more laps than anyone else and took the maiden victory for a Toyota engine in the series. He was also the most popular driver, but in a season where he failed to finish in 40% of the races, he was out of contention for the championship.
 +
 +
That season the Ganassi team also competed in the prestigious [[Indianapolis 500]] race, part of the rival  [[Indy Racing League]] series. Media and drivers were critical of the way Juan Pablo approached the ''Brickyard'', many IRL drivers labelled him as reckless and predicted an early retirement from the race. The media activity around the event was intense, with Montoya and his CART teammate [[Jimmy Vasser]] being the first CART drivers to "cross-over" to drive in the Indy 500. Despite public warnings from two-time Indy 500 winner [[Al Unser, Jr.]] claiming that if a driver doesn't respect the [[Indianapolis Motor Speedway]], the place "will bite you - hard" Montoya shrugged off the advice claiming that all four corners were exactly the same and that the track required less attention than the road courses in the CART series and in European racing.
 +
 +
In the event, the Colombian star led 167 of 200 laps and claimed top honours at the end of the 500mi race, taking an easy victory on his first attempt. He was the first to do so since Formula One World Champion [[Graham Hill]] in 1966 and was the first Colombian winner. His compatriot [[Roberto Guerrero|Roberto José Guerrero]] had previously finished twice as runner up.
 +
 +
Montoya also won CART's U.S 500. That victory marked his ninth and Toyota's first win in the CART ([[Champ Car World Series]]) series.
 +
 +
==Formula One career==
 +
 +
Over the weekend of the 2000 Indianapolis 500, [[Williams F1|Williams-BMW]] announced a two year deal for Montoya to partner [[Ralf Schumacher]] starting in 2001. His entrance was very much anticipated by the Formula One community due to the talent and raw speed showed in the Americas based series.
 +
 +
Montoya showed great potential from the beginning. Critics and fans alike anticipated that he would challenge for the [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|World Drivers' Championship]]. During the first half of his Formula One career he consolidated his position as a fast driver and a race win challenger and also became a title contender during 2003 but the hopes of fighting for the title gradually faded as his cars lacked pace and stronger, more consistent challengers arrived on the scene.
 +
 +
Montoya has been criticized during his Formula One career for his unreliability and tendency to make costly mistakes. His driving style is too characteristic of the [[History of Formula One#The turbo F1 era|80's Formula One era]]. In this matter it is difficult to build a car that suits him well as [[engineer]]s and [[aerodynamicist]]s have adapted their work to build [[chassis]] that are more appropriate to a more fine and soft, and perhaps less live, driving style.
 +
 +
Entering his sixth season, in [[2006 Formula One season|2006]], it was evident that Juan Pablo Montoya had not developed into the title contender that racing fans and the media had predicted. In particular after five full seasons the necessary consistency never materialised. However, he often challenged for race victories and was voted top [[Latin American]] driver at the Premios [[Fox Sports Net|Fox]] Sports awards in 2003 and 2005.
 +
 +
===2001 – Williams===
 +
Montoya made his Formula One debut for the [[BMW]]-powered Williams team in the [[2001 Formula One season]] at the [[2001 Australian Grand Prix|Australian Grand Prix]]. In that race, he qualified 11th and went off in the first corner and went further down the order but with a good drive and a high rate of retirements, he went up to fifth until he retired with an engine failure.
 +
 +
The second round was the [[2001 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysian Grand Prix]] and Montoya qualified better in sixth place but stalled on the grid and had to start from the back. He only lasted for three laps before retiring after spinning off in a rain shower.
 +
 +
Less than a month after his debut, in the [[2001 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian Grand Prix]], he had his best qualifying, a fourth place finish. He got up to second on the first lap and there was a safety car due to an incident in the first corner. On the restart, which was on the third lap, Montoya shocked the F1 world by passing World Champion [[Michael Schumacher]] into the first corner. He held off Schumacher, who was on a two-stop strategy compared to Montoya's one stop strategy until Schumacher's first stop. Montoya now seemed to have the race in his pocket as he had a five-second advantage over eventual winner [[David Coulthard]]. But however, while he was lapping [[Jos Verstappen]], the Dutchman accidentally rammed into the back of him, taking Montoya out.
 +
 +
After his performance in Brazil, expectations were high going into the fourth round, the [[2001 San Marino Grand Prix|San Marino Grand Prix]]. Montoya qualified in seventh, and was well set for points in the race but more bad luck, this time due to a brake failure which took him out of fifth place, leaving him without a point after four races.
 +
 +
Round 5 was the [[2001 Spanish Grand Prix|Spanish Grand Prix]] and Montoya needed a good result but did not look like getting so after another poor qualifying, down in 12th place. He made up for it by making a lightning quick start by gaining five places and was up to sixth in the first corner ([[David Coulthard]] was starting from the back of the grid after stalling on the formation lap). He got ahead of [[Jacques Villeneuve]] in the second round of pitstops. He stayed on the track and climbed up to second due to a high attrition rate. The second place finish was just what he needed after the four retirements.
 +
 +
In the next race, the [[2001 Austrian Grand Prix|Austrian Grand Prix]], Montoya finally outpaced his teammate [[Ralf Schumacher]] in qualifying and took a career-best second. It looked better and better for him as he took the lead at the start and pulled away, with second-placed Ralf holding up a string of five cars behind him. But, after 10 laps, Ralf retired with brake failure. It was proven that even Montoya was struggling with the same problems, and Ralf was told to hold the others up so Montoya can build a gap. With Ralf out, the five drivers, led by [[Michael Schumacher]] began to zero in on Montoya at over a second a lap. Soon Schumacher was right on Montoya's tail and tried to pass him around the outside at Remus Curve. Montoya kept on the inside, braked late, locked up and went to the gravel. Schumacher was also forced to go to the gravel to avoid Montoya. Montoya rejoined seventh, just behind Schumacher. Montoya went for an early stop which solved his problems. He was set for one point in sixth until he stopped on the track with a hydraulic failure. After the race, Schumacher said that 'all Montoya was doing was to try to take Schumacher out with himself off the circuit'.
 +
 +
In the glamourous [[2001 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]], Montoya did not reproduce his previous form and had to be satisfied with qualifying seventh. In the race, he made 1 position at the start. He then tried to pressurize teammate [[Ralf Schumacher]] to make a mistake, but it was he himself who made the mistake, by sliding into the barriers on the Swimming Pool section on lap 3. That was the end of his race
 +
 +
Montoya went into the [[2001 Canadian Grand Prix|Canadian Grand Prix]] desperately needing some points, after having had only 6 points from seven races. His qualifying did not help the cause at all though, as he qualified way down in 10th. He gained one place at the first corner but then could not keep the pace of the cars in front. He came under pressure from a charging [[Rubens Barrichello]], and pushed his car too hard and retired after crashing into a wall while trying to both fend off Barrichello and catch up with the cars in front.
 +
 +
The ninth round of the season was the [[2001 European Grand Prix|European Grand Prix]] and Montoya held pole for most of qualifying only for both [[Michael Schumacher|Michael]] and [[Ralf Schumacher]] to bump him down to third in the final seconds. At the start of the race, he kept third and ran three seconds behind the two leaders. After the first round of stops, the two leaders came ahead of the one-stopping [[David Coulthard]] but Montoya came behind. He was stuck there for five laps and it cost him three seconds. He was forced to settle for third and that became second when Ralf was given a ten second stop-go penalty for a pitlane infringement. Montoya finished in second, and the result gave him more confidence then ever.
 +
 +
Montoya only finished six races, but he nevertheless won three pole positions and stood on the podium four times, including his maiden Formula One victory at the [[2001 Italian Grand Prix]] at [[Autodromo Nazionale Monza|Monza]].
 +
 +
===2002===
 +
In the [[2002 Formula One season]], Montoya was the best of the rest as [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]'s dominance left available no better place than third. Schumacher and [[Rubens Barrichello]] won 15 of 17 races. Although he did not win a race, unlike Coulthard and his team mate Ralf Schumacher, Montoya was one of the few drivers to compete with Schumacher on the track. As in 2001, he stood out for his forceful overtaking moves on the World Champion, although several times he lost places through clashing with the German. For qualifying the [[Williams F1|BMW WilliamsF1]] FW24 could be set up to use its tires more effectively than its rivals and generate more grip. With this weapon Montoya was able to achieve seven pole positions, usually setting his pole time in the very last seconds of the session. He set the fastest ever lap for a Grand Prix during the qualifying session of the [[2002 Italian Grand Prix]] at [[Autodromo Nazionale Monza|Monza]].
  
Montoya began racing karts in [[1981]] at the young age of six, and by age nine he won the Children's National Kart Championship.  In [[1986]], he won the junior division of the National Championship.  For the next three years, he won many local and national titles in the Kart Komet Division.  Montoya capped off his karting career by winning the Kart Junior Championships in [[1990]] and [[1991]].
+
===2003===
  
Montoya moved to the Copa Formula [[Renault]] Series in [[1992]]. The same year, he also participated in a [[United States|U.S.]] series operated by [[Skip Barber]].  [[1993]] saw Montoya switch to the Swift GTI Championship, a series he dominated by winning seven of eight races.  The following year, [[1994]], was a very busy year for the 19-year-old Colombian, as it saw him race in three separate series: the Sudam 125 Karting, USA Barber Saab, and Formula N in [[Mexico]] (a series in which he won the title).  As his success continued year after year, Montoya came to be known for his uncanny ability to win [[pole position]]s (as well as races), in some cases taking 80% of a [[season (sport)|season's]] poles. For the next three years, Montoya raced in various divisions, continually progressing upward. He raced in the [[1995]] [[United Kingdom|British]] Formula [[Vauxhall]] Championship, and he won the [[1996]] British [[Formula 3]] crown, as well as taking part in events in [[Zandvoort]], [[Netherlands]] and at [[Silverstone Circuit|Silverstone]].
+
[[File:Montoya 2003.jpg|thumb|right|Montoya at the [[2003 French Grand Prix]], a race in which his [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] team finished first and second.]]
  
==Entry into top Open-Wheel Series==
+
Although the 2003 chassis was built by the team specifically for Montoya's driving style, the machine needed time to be developed. Problems with [[oversteer]] were still present, often resulting in 360° spins in front of the crowd, in addition to reliability problems with the [[BMW]] engine.
  
As a youngster Juan Pablo Montoya spent his days as a resident of Austria struggling to gather money for his basic expenditures, at this stage of his life he recalls of having no money for even a public transport instead he used skids to go from one place to another. Retirement from the motorsport activity was very likely but a call to take part in the [[1997|1997's]] [[Formula 3000]] season was in fact the blessing he was praying for as not only he managed to perform at a high level in his rookie season but the year later he took the title in which [[Nick Heidfeld]] was his main competitor. Montoya's manager brought Montoya to the attention of the [[Williams F1]] team, whom had already noticed the potential of this driver, particularly [[Frank Williams]] who signed him to a multi-[[year]] testing contract, duties he accomplished alongside his performances for the [[1998|1998's]] season of Formula 3000.
+
From the [[2003 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]] the FW25 proved to be the class of the field, allowing Montoya to take victory at [[Circuit de Monaco]] from [[Kimi Räikkönen]]. During the [[2003 French Grand Prix]], after a misunderstanding with the pit crew, there was a vocal exchange of expletives between the Colombian and his team. This was followed by a formal [[letter of reprimand]] from the BMW Williams F1 team. [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]|-[[Mercedes-Benz in motorsport|Mercedes]] announced that they would take on his racing services from 2005 at an end of season announcement, although it was believed that Montoya had already decided to leave immediately after the French GP.
  
== CART career ==
+
Bad luck for rivals and excellent on-track performances from the Colombian meant he was a title contender, particularly after a key victory at the [[2003 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]]. Williams, however, were unable to keep pace with the latest developments from [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]]. Montoya failed to claim another victory that year. A drive-through penalty at the [[2003 United States Grand Prix|United States Grand Prix]] after a collision with Ferrari's Barrichello ended his title chances in the last race he would finish in 2003.
  
After having lost the [[Renault F1|Renault]] [[engines]] for the [[1998 Formula One season]] the [[Williams F1|Williams]] team were about to face yet another season without a top engine in 1999, in the hope of attracting more investors in the bad performing team [[Frank Williams|Sir Frank Williams]] planned a switch with [[Chip Ganassi]], owner of the most successful [[CART]] team, in which the all conquering in America [[Alessandro Zanardi]] seen his return to [[Formula One]] and Montoya would take his place in the competitive American-based series.
+
[[File:J p montoya usgp 2004.jpg|thumb|right|Juan Pablo Montoya driving for [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] at the [[2004 United States Grand Prix|2004 US GP]].]]
  
While Zanardi had a miserable year in F1, Montoya, having at his disposal [[Honda]] power and a great Reynard chassis, took by storm the American motorsport scene by showing one of the most memorable performances in the series, in fact conquering the 1999 title in his rookie year, something that just had been accomplished by a former [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|Formula One Champion]], [[Nigel Mansell]].
+
===2004===
 +
2004 was a disappointing year for Montoya. His relationship with the team was strained throughout the season since both parties knew he would be leaving for the McLaren team at the end of the year.
  
The season that crowned him as the youngest ever [[Champ Car|CART FedEx Championship Series]] Champion, at the age of 24, was very disputed specially with [[Dario Franchitti]] with whom he fought until the final race. they both finished with equal number of points but having won 7 races decided the title in favor of the [[Colombian]]. He managed to be considered the fastest driver in a series which lacked electronic aids as traction control, adaptive suspension or automatic gearboxes, winning pole positions and setting fast laps as well as being the center of controversy for his aggressive style of driving, discussions arouse specially with [[Michael Andretti]] and his team.
+
Early season promise faded as the radical looking ‘tusked’ Williams FW26 initially lacked pace and both drivers were frequently left struggling to score points. However, the car was significantly overhauled during the season and the radical nose designed by a former Ferrari aerodynamicist was finally replaced with a more conventional one for the final stages of the season. Montoya left the team on a high note by winning his last race with them, the [[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix]], which was closely contested with future team mate [[Kimi Räikkönen]].
  
Such tremendous performance from the young rookie called into the attention of [[Williams F1]] with whom he still had an active contract, in fact Montoya was asked to return to Europe but he decided to stay for one more year.
+
===2005 – McLaren===
 +
After driving for Williams for four full seasons, Montoya found the [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]] Mercedes car unpredictable, often claiming it felt like the [[steering wheel]] was not "attached" to the rest of the car.
  
In 2000 the Ganassi team switched to the unreliable [[Toyota]] engines and they swapped off chassis as well building a package strong for ovals and high speed venues but not for permanent and street circuits. However Montoya managed to lead more laps than anyone else and taking the maiden victory for a [[Toyota]] engine in the series. He also was the most popular driver but in a season where he failed to finish more than 60% of races he was out of battle for top honors.
+
Having been criticised in previous years for his lack of fitness, Montoya began a training program under the direction of McLaren personnel but all the effort was lost when, just after the [[2005 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysian Grand Prix]], he injured his shoulder while in [[Spain]]. The official reason given to media was that he had injured himself while playing tennis. However, rumors stated that a motorcycle accident was the real cause. After missing two Grands Prix he made an early return before he was completely healed. In fact he was often seen with his arm almost motionless for the remaining five Grands Prix even while in the paddock for the British GP.{{Fact|date=June 2009}}
  
In a merchandising oriented decision, the Ganassi team competed in the prestigious [[Indianapolis 500]] race. Media and drivers were critical of the way Juan Pablo approached the ''Brickyard'', many local [[IRL]] drivers labeled him as crazy and predicted an early retirement from the race. In fact was the very opposite as the Colombian star claimed top honors at the end of the 500 Mile race in fact making it seem an easy victory, again equaling a record previously set by a Formula One World Champion, [[Graham Hill]], and becoming the first Colombian to accomplish such a goal as [[Roberto Guerrero|Roberto José Guerrero]] had failed by finishing runner up twice.
+
In practice for the [[Monaco Grand Prix]] Montoya was penalized to start from the back by race stewards for [[Brake test|brake-testing]] his former Williams team mate, [[Ralf Schumacher]], causing a four car collision. At the [[Canadian Grand Prix]] Montoya was in contention for the win, but he was disqualified after leaving the pitlane under a red light. As a Michelin runner, Montoya did not start the US Grand Prix (''see [[2005 US Grand Prix]]''). The Colombian was on track for a possible podium finish at Magny-Cours when his suspension failed. He retired from the lead of the [[2005 Hungarian Grand Prix|Hungarian GP]] due to a broken [[driveshaft]]. His team mate had a similar failure 8 GP before, which shows the differences in [[Multi-link suspension|suspension geometry]] between both McLaren's as the torsional forces are carried out in different manner.
  
==Entry into F1==
+
During the year Montoya suffered even more from oversteer than he had at [[Williams F1|Williams]]. On several occasions he spun during practice. More seriously he spun in his return from injury at the [[2005 Spanish Grand Prix|Spanish Grand Prix]] and most notoriously at the last corner during qualifying for the [[2005 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]]. On that occasion he made up for it by climbing from 20th to 8th after the first two corners eventually finishing in a respectable 2nd.
  
In the weekend of the 2000 Indianapolis 500 it was announced his entry as a regular race driver for the [[Williams F1|BMW Williams F1 Team]] partnering [[Ralf Schumacher]] by signing a two year deal. The adaptation process took place in the winter testing season and he entered the world championship with great expectation as the boring on-pit battles between Mclaren Mercedes and Ferrari had made viewing figures drop.
+
[[File:Montoya (McLaren) qualifying at USGP 2005.jpg|thumb|right|Juan Pablo Montoya qualifying in the [[2005 United States Grand Prix|2005 US GP]].]]
 
[[Image:Montoya (McLaren) qualifying at USGP 2005.jpg|thumb|400px|Montoya qualifying in the [[2005 United States Grand Prix|2005 US GP]].]]
 
  
==Formula 1 career==
+
Montoya worked with the team during the year to identify suspension geometry and aerodynamic problems that were making the car unpredictable. It is said that he helped the team to improve the car a lot, benefiting both himself and his team mate.
  
Juan Pablo Montoya, after 5 full seasons, is without doubt one the biggest stars in the [[Formula One|sport]]. He has however failed to take it by storm as the illusion of securing a [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|World Drivers Championship]] has gradually faded.  
+
He had to learn how to cope with a very nervous and 'oversteery' car, in these conditions and after bad luck for his team mate, he scored his first victory for [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]] [[Mercedes-Benz in motorsport|Mercedes]] in the [[2005 British Grand Prix|British GP]] and in the same conditions at [[2005 Italian Grand Prix|Monza]].
  
Although he has revitalized the boring Formula One with his brilliant overtaking maneuvers &mdash; something that is almost impossible at the light of the current formula &mdash; he has seen, in several stages of his F1 career, being outperformed by his team mates mainly due to the fact that his driving style is too characteristic of the 80's Formula One era, in this matter it is difficult to build a car that suits him well as engineers and aerodynamicists have adapted their work to build chassis that are more appropriate to a more fine and soft, and perhaps less live, driving style of the likes of [[Kimi Räikkönen]].  
+
For most of the season Montoya's major concerns were the ongoing problems with backmarkers and team orders. Both [[Tiago Monteiro]] and [[Antônio Pizzonia]] collided with him, as had [[Jos Verstappen]] in 2001, and [[Jacques Villeneuve]] forced him off the track in one of the final races of the year. These incidents prevented Montoya from completing his main task for the team; stopping [[Fernando Alonso]] and [[Renault F1]] from increasing their lead in the standings over Räikkönen and McLaren respectively.
  
===[[2001 Formula One season|2001]]===
+
In the final stages of the season it was clear that Montoya and his car were finally adapted to one another.{{Fact|date=June 2009}} The Colombian has often attributed this to the greater effort made by the [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]-[[Mercedes-Benz in motorsport|Mercedes]] Team than by Williams to tune the car to his driving style. In the last 7 grand prix's Montoya finished, he scored 3 wins, 2 poles and 5 podiums. At the [[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian GP]], Montoya led home McLaren's first 1-2 result in years, ahead of newly crowned world champion [[Fernando Alonso]] in third. It was his last finish of the year. In Japan he was forced off the track by [[Jacques Villeneuve]] on lap one, while in China a loose drain cover rose up and hit his car, damaging the suspension.
Montoya made his Formula One debut for the [[BMW]]-powered Williams team on [[March 4]],  [[2001 Australian Grand Prix|Australian Grand Prix]]. Less than a [[month]] later, he shocked [[Michael Schumacher]] &mdash; and the F1 world &mdash; in [[2001 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] by overtaking the [[List of Formula One World Drivers' Champions|World Champion]] on a daring move. Montoya was on course to win the race when a backmarker collided into him claiming he didn't know who the race leader was. In his first season in F1 Montoya established himself as a favorite with fans and commentators as a natural racer. Although Williams struggled with reliability that year, Montoya nevertheless won three pole positions, stood on several podiums, and claimed his maiden F1 victory at the [[2001 Italian Grand Prix]] at [[Autodromo Nazionale Monza|Monza]].
 
  
===[[2002 Formula One season|2002]]===
+
[[File:Jp montoya cheste 2006-02.jpg|thumb|right|Montoya testing for McLaren in early 2006]]
Montoya was the best of the rest as [[Scuderia Ferrari|Ferrari]] drivers let no other available place than third. Schumacher and [[Rubens Barrichello]] dominated the season by winning 15 of 17 races. He continued to be the sole driver to be able to challenge on track [[Michael Schumacher]] but the inferiority of his package didn't allow him to claim any victory. Al least during qualifying the [[Williams F1|BMW WilliamsF1 FW24]] had a special configuration that allowed tires to traction harder, with this weapon he was slightly behind the Ferrari's and in some circumstances even ahead, thus he was able to win a breathtaking seven pole positions that year, usually in the very last seconds of the session. He managed to set the fastest ever lap for a Grand Prix during the qualifying session of the [[2002 Italian Grand Prix]] in [[Monza]].
 
  
===[[2003 Formula One season|2003]]===
+
===2006===
With a chassis finally being built by the team specifically for Montoya's driving style, the machine needed time to be tweaked out as oversteering problems were still present often deriving in 360º spins in front of the crowd in addition to the engine reliability problems from [[BMW]].
+
Montoya started his 2006 Formula One World Championship campaign learning that the 2005 F1 Champion [[Fernando Alonso]] had been contracted by [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]-[[Mercedes-Benz in motorsport|Mercedes]] for the [[2007 Formula One season|2007 season]]. At the same time McLaren did not take up their option on Montoya for 2007, while his teammate [[Kimi Räikkönen]] remained a free agent.
  
From the [[2003 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco Grand Prix]] the FW25 proved to be the class of the field, allowing him to take victory at [[Circuit de Monaco]] from [[Kimi Räikkönen]]. Although this newly revamped design had proven successful, [[Williams F1|Williams]] still were not a perfect team often making mistakes and failing to find a correct setup which unfairly made Montoya gain the label of possesor of a poor know-how in the art of setting up a F1 car. As an addition, [[Ralf Schumacher]] had a better relationship within the team specially with the sporting director which resulted in several in-race advantages for the German. Bad luck for rivals and excellent on-track performances from the Colombian led to making him a Title contender, especially so after key victory at the [[2003 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]].  
+
During the first three races, Montoya consistently underperformed on the track, not managing to improve his position from the start at the Bahrain and Malaysia Grands Prix. Problems with his engine mapping also contributed, resulting in poor straight line performance.
  
Williams, however, was unable to keep the pace with the newest improvements from Ferrari, and after failing to claim further victories and with the penalization at the [[2003 United States Grand Prix|United States Grand Prix]] where he collided with Barrichello, his chances were over in this, the last race he finished during the year.
+
At the [[2006 Australian Grand Prix|Australian Grand Prix]], he drove an excellent race that sadly featured a few critical mistakes. His car spun near the end of the warm-up lap, caused by too much throttle whilst warming the tyres, and if [[Giancarlo Fisichella|Fisichella]] hadn't stalled his [[Renault F1|Renault]] before the start of the race and triggered another formation lap, Montoya would have started at the back end of the grid. He did manage to regain his grid position though, which angered other team managers. His race ended when towards the end of the race he hit a kerb on the exit of the final corner, whilst chasing [[Ralf Schumacher]] hard for third place. The impact triggered an automatic electronic device in the McLaren MP4-21, shutting down his engine as it went into safety mode.
  
===[[2004 Formula One season|2004]]===
+
In the [[2006 San Marino Grand Prix|San Marino Grand Prix]], Montoya was forced to use the team spare car for the qualifying session when it was learnt that his car had a fuel pressure problem. McLaren fitted his engine into the team spare car, thus saving Montoya from a 10-place grid penalty. He managed to qualify in seventh place ahead of Räikkönen. The race however was very undramatic for him and a steady performance saw him finish third, earning his first podium finish of the season.
It was a disappointing year for Montoya, as he struggled with a radically new front nose assembly and senior staff of the Williams team, not too keen on working with a driver that had already signed to drive with the competition for 2005. After early season promise faded, the Colombian was frequently left struggling to score points, but everything came together for him at the very last race for Williams when he won the [[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix]], his fourth career victory in Formula One.  Because the race at [[Autódromo José Carlos Pace|Interlagos]] marked Montoya's last race with [[WilliamsF1|Williams]], he went out on a high note with the team.
 
  
===[[2005 Formula One season|2005]]===
+
The races at the [[Nürburgring]] and the [[Circuit de Catalunya]], however, were very disappointing for Montoya. He qualified in 9th position for the [[2006 European Grand Prix|European Grand Prix]] but then was stuck behind traffic for almost the whole race before his engine failed a few laps from the end. Catalunya saw Montoya failing to qualify in the Top 10 for the first time in the season. He qualified 12th in an underperforming McLaren. He was heavily fuelled and was on a one-stop strategy for the race but he spun and his car got stuck on a kerb and his race was over. Juan Pablo had a solid race at [[2006 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco]], inheriting second place 14.5 seconds behind championship leader Fernando Alonso after Räikkönen and [[Mark Webber]] went out with engine problems on lap 50. Once again, though, he appeared to be somewhat off his team mate's pace.
For some drivers the 2005 formula 1 season was full of stories, in the case of Montoya it was
 
a story of early hopes, of bad luck, of brilliant moments, as well as of mistakes. He started driving for the [[Team McLaren|McLaren]] team. Having driven for Williams for 4 full seasons he found the McLaren Mercedes racer a little bit too unpredictable, often claiming it felt like the [[steering wheel]] was not "attached" to the rear end of the car.
 
  
After being critized in his previous years by his lack of fitness Montoya began a training program oriented directly by McLaren personnel but all the effort was lost when, after just the [[2005 Malaysian Grand Prix|second Grand Prix]] in [[Malaysia]], he injured his shoulder while in [[Spain]]. The official reason given to media was that he had injured himself whilst playing [[tennis]]. However rumors stated that it was a [[motorcycle]] accident the real cause.
+
[[File:Juan Pablo Montoya Canada 2006 (crop).PNG|thumb|right|Montoya at the [[2006 Canadian Grand Prix]].]]
After missing two Grand prix he made an early return while not completely healed, in fact he was often seen with his arm almost motionless for the remaining 5 Grand Prix even while in the paddock for the British GP.
 
  
More bad luck continued as in practice for the [[Monaco Grand Prix]] Montoya was penalized to start from the back by race stewards for brake-testing his former Williams team mate causing a 4 car collision. At the [[Canadian Grand Prix]] Montoya was on course for a win, but mistakes made by his team lead to a bad handling of the situation as he was disqualified after being sent out under red light in the pit lane. After a non-start at the [[US Grand Prix]] Montoya was on track for a possible win at Magny-Cours when his suspension failed. Whilst in the lead, retirement from [[2005 Hungarian Grand Prix|Hungarian GP]] followed due to a broken [[driveshaft]], having his team mate had a similar failure 8 GP before shows the differences in [[Multi-link suspension|suspension geometry]] between both McLaren's as the torsional forces are carried out in different manner.  
+
The [[2006 Canadian Grand Prix|Canadian Grand Prix]] saw Montoya pull off a stunning overtaking move on [[Michael Schumacher]] on the opening lap, but contact with [[Nico Rosberg]] on the next lap and a mistake at the last corner resulted in Montoya bracing the wall and damaging the car, leading to retirement.
  
Having even more oversteering problems than what he had in [[Williams F1|Williams]] including several on practice spins, also in his return race in [[2005 Spanish Grand Prix|Spain]] and most notoriously while in the qualification for the [[2005 German Grand Prix|German Grand Prix]] where he spun off in the very last corner, but made up for it by climbing from 20th to 8th after the first two corners eventually finishing in respectable 2nd.
+
The [[2006 United States Grand Prix|US Grand Prix]] also brought further disappointment to Montoya's season. An 8-car crash on the first corner saw him retire from the race, yet again taking no points. This crash also involved team-mate Räikkönen, and as one of the main instigators of the crash, this cast further doubt upon Montoya's future in Formula One.
  
Montoya rewrote his fame in the F1 paddock, as he constantly identified the causes that were making the car unpredictable, it was often related to the Geometry of the Suspension as well as with aerodynamics, it is said that he helped the team to improve a lot the car extending the understanding of it which resulted in his benefit and even of his team mate.
+
Montoya's Formula One career effectively came to an end on [[9 July]] when he announced in a public press conference from the US that he had signed a contract to run in the NASCAR series from 2007. On [[11 July]] [[2006]], [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]-[[Mercedes-Benz in motorsport|Mercedes]] announced that Montoya would stop racing for the team with immediate effect, to enable him to prepare for his future career and take time out with his family. This ultimately confirmed Montoya's exit from F1. However, in the press conference on [[July 14]] at the French Grand Prix, Ron Dennis stated that Montoya was still under contract with McLaren-Mercedes and he would remain in contract with the team until the expiration of the deal. Following further speculation that he could start racing in the NASCAR series as early as 2006, Dennis publicly offered Montoya an early exit from his contract with McLaren-Mercedes, provided that he resigned from receiving any payout to terminate his contract.
  
He had to learn how to cope with a very nervous and oversteery car, in these conditions and after bad luck for his team mate, he scored his first victory for [[Team McLaren|McLaren Mercedes]] in the [[2005 British Grand Prix|British GP]] and in same conditions in [[2005 Italian Grand Prix|Monza]].
+
==NASCAR==
 +
===2006 season===
 +
[[File:IMG 1678.jpg|thumb|right|Juan Pablo Montoya practicing for the 2007 Ford 400 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway.]]On [[July 9]], [[2006]], Montoya announced his plans to compete in the NASCAR [[Nextel Cup]] series beginning with the 2007 season, racing for Chip Ganassi and [[Felix Sabates]]' NASCAR operation, [[Chip Ganassi Racing]], in the No. 42 [[Texaco|Texaco/Havoline]] Dodge. "I'm looking forward to racing in the Nextel Cup Series for Chip Ganassi in the Big Red Dodge.  I think I will learn a lot from my teammates and other drivers around me. It will be tough though to get used to the difference in the cars." Montoya made his stock car debut in an [[Automobile Racing Club of America]] (ARCA) event at the [[Talladega Superspeedway]]  on [[October 6]], [[2006]]. He qualified second, led the first nine laps, and finished third when the race was called after 79 of 92 laps. Three weeks later he followed this with an 11th place finish after a mid-race spin at the [[Sam's Town 250]] at [[Memphis Motorsports Park]], his first appearance in [[NASCAR]]'s second division [[Busch Series]]. He competed in the final three races of the Busch Series season, but did not better this performance. On [[November 19]], [[2006]], Montoya competed for the first time in NASCAR's premier division, the NEXTEL Cup Series. He qualified 29th in the #30 Texaco Dodge at the [[Ford 400]] at [[Homestead-Miami Speedway]]. He was running just outside the top 10 when contact with [[Ryan Newman]] ended his race on lap 251. His car ended up in the grass engulfed in flames and he was credited with a 34th place finish.
  
For some part of the season the major concerns were the outgoing problems with backmarkers and the Team Orders. Both [[Tiago Monteiro]] and [[Antônio Pizzonia]] collided into him, pretty much like [[Jos Verstappen]] in 2001, and [[Jacques Villeneuve]] forced him off the track in one of the final races of the year. All these issues lead for the not completion of his main task for the team, to stop [[Fernando Alonso]] to further get away in the standings from his team mate. As for Team Orders they were evident in Canada, where [[Kimi Räikkönen]] was not allowed to battle him, neither they allow Montoya to pit first, and in [[2005 Belgian Grand Prix|Spa]] he was forced to release and let Raikkonen to catch him.
 
  
At the final stages of the season it was clear Montoya finally adapted to the car and the car was adapted to him, the driver often portraits that the effort done by the [[Team McLaren|McLaren Mercedes Team]] in order to tune the car to his driving style was beyond anything his previous team did. Finally it all worked well at the [[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazilian GP]], his home race, where by the first time in the season the two McLaren Drivers were allowed to race with no restrictions until the final pit stop then bringing the first 1-2 Result for McLaren in years with Montoya on top and the newly crowned world champion [[Fernando Alonso]] in third. But after that point Montoya was unable to further show his worth as for the final two races race incidents and more bad luck prevented him to finish.
+
===2007 season===
  
==Social Labors==
+
[[File:JuanPabloMontoyaTexas2007.jpg|thumb|right|Montoya's 2007 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup car at [[Texas Motor Speedway|Texas]]]]
  
Together with his wife Conny Freydell, a native of [[Medellín]], [[Colombia]], Montoya founded the [[Formula Smiles Foundation]] as part of his duties of [[United Nations]] Goodwill Ambassador. The foundation's main aim is to help children in popular neighborhoods by building or adequating facilities and infrastructure for the practice of sports. Montoya organizes several events for the foundation, such as ''[[Échele Cabeza al casco de Juan Pablo Montoya]]'' - a helmet paint competition where children can design a new pattern for Montoya racing helmet, and where the winning design is wore in the [[Brazilian Grand Prix]] of every year. The most famous event being held under the charity foundation purposes is the ''[[Race of Stars]]'', a kart race disputed by international stars of the motorsport scene. The invited drivers, mainly from Formula One and IRL, attend in the hopes of raising money for children in poor neighborhoods, racing in an adequated street course in the historical center of the city of [[Cartagena de Indias]], [[Colombia]], which features high levels of humidity and temperature, making it a tough driving exercise.
+
Montoya visited victory lane three times across three different racing series in 2007.  Montoya kicked off 2007 with a win in his first Rolex 24 At Daytona race in the Grand-Am Series. Then, in just his seventh-career Nationwide Series race, Montoya took the checkered flag in Mexico City to earn his first win in a stock car. His abilities on the road course were evident to his competitors when he captured his first Sprint Cup victory after qualifying 32nd at Infineon Raceway.  Montoya and his No. 42 crew went on to amass one win, three top-five and six top-10 finishes during the 2007 Sprint Cup season. Montoya also earned the honor of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series 2007 Rookie of the Year.
  
== Formula 1 results ==
+
===2008 season===
===Championship qualifications===
 
[[Image:J_p_montoya_usgp_2004.jpg|400px|thumbnail|Juan Pablo Montoya driving for the Williams Formula One team in early 2004]]
 
  
*2001: 6th, 31 points, 1 win, 3 poles ([[WilliamsF1|Williams]])
+
In 2008, Montoya and the No. 42 team amassed two top-five, three top-10 and seven top-15 finishes which include a runner-up finish at Talladega Superspeedway. In addition, Montoya became the first driver in history to win in his first two starts in the Rolex 24 At Daytona, which he won with teammates Scott Pruett, Memo Rojas and Dario Franchitti.
*2002: 3rd, 50 points, 0 wins, 7 poles ([[WilliamsF1|Williams]])
 
*2003: 3rd, 82 points, 2 wins, 1 pole ([[WilliamsF1|Williams]])
 
*2004: 5th, 58 points, 1 win, 0 poles ([[WilliamsF1|Williams]])
 
*2005: 4th, 60 points, 3 wins, 1 pole ([[Team McLaren|McLaren]])
 
  
===Podiums and wins===
+
Montoya ended the season 25th in the points standings, 5 spots lower than in 2007.
*2001:
+
 
**[[2001 Spanish Grand Prix|Spain]] 2nd
+
On November 14 it was announced the Ganassi team would merge with Dale Earnhardt Inc., Montoya was confirmed to drive the #42 as the team switches from Dodge to Chevrolet.
**[[2001 European Grand Prix|Europe]] 2nd
+
 
**'''[[2001 Italian Grand Prix|Italy]] 1st'''
+
 
**[[2001 Japanese Grand Prix|Japan]] 2nd
+
===2009 season===
*2002:
+
 
**[[2002 Australian Grand Prix|Australia]] 2nd
+
It was announced in January that [[Target Corporation|Target]] would take over as Montoya's primary sponsor for the 2009 Cup season.
**[[2002 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysia]] 2nd
+
 
**[[2002 Spanish Grand Prix|Spain]] 2nd
+
Montoya ran in the [[Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona]] and finished second after a thrilling duel with [[David Donohue]]. Montoya's Lexus did not have the speed that Donohue had in the Porsche he was driving, and when Montoya was slowed by lap traffic in the chicane, Donohue was able to pass Montoya and hold him off to take the victory, denying Montoya his third straight 24 hour win.  The margin of victory in the 2009 Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona was 0.167 seconds, making it the closest finish in Rolex 24 hour history.
**[[2002 Austrian Grand Prix|Austria]] 3rd
+
 
**[[2002 British Grand Prix|Britain]] 3rd
+
Montoya finished 14th in the [[Daytona 500]] and finished 11th at [[Auto Club Speedway]].
**[[2002 German Grand Prix|Germany]] 2nd
+
 
**[[2002 Belgian Grand Prix|Belgium]] 3rd
+
On April 25, he won his first career pole at the [[Aaron's 499]] at Talladega. After going a lap down Montoya finished 8th at the [[Pocono 500]] at Pocono Raceway. He followed this up a week later with a 6th place at the [[Lifelock 400]] at Michigan Motor Speedway. After racing in the top 10 all day Montoya got his third top 10 in a row with a 6th place at the [[Toyota/Save Mart 350]] at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma. Montoya got his best ever finish at [[Daytona International Speedway]] in the [[Coke Zero 400]] where after going a lap down twice he battled back to 9th.
*2003:
+
 
**[[2003 Australian Grand Prix|Australia]] 2nd
+
==Racing record==
**'''[[2003 Monaco Grand Prix|Monaco]] 1st'''
+
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
**[[2003 Canadian Grand Prix|Canada]] 3rd
+
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
**[[2003 European Grand Prix|Europe]] 2nd
+
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
**[[2003 French Grand Prix|France]] 2nd
+
| align="center" | '''Season'''
**[[2003 British Grand Prix|Britain]] 2nd
+
| align="center" | '''Series'''
**'''[[2003 German Grand Prix|Germany]] 1st'''
+
| align="center" | '''Team Name'''
**[[2003 Hungarian Grand Prix|Hungary]] 3rd
+
| align="center" | '''No.'''
**[[2003 Italian Grand Prix|Italy]] 2nd
+
| align="center" | '''Races'''
*2004:
+
| align="center" | '''Poles'''
**[[2004 Malaysian Grand Prix|Malaysia]] 2nd
+
| align="center" | '''Wins'''
**[[2004 San Marino Grand Prix|Imola]] 3rd
+
| align="center" | '''Pts'''
**'''[[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] 1st'''
+
| align="center" | '''Final Placing'''
*2005:
+
|-
**'''[[2005 British Grand Prix|Britain]] 1st'''
+
| align="center" | '''1994'''
**[[2005 German Grand Prix|Germany]] 2nd
+
| align="left" | [[Barber Saab Pro Series]]
**[[2005 Turkish Grand Prix|Turkey]] 3rd
+
| align="left" | -
**'''[[2005 Italian Grand Prix|Italy]] 1st'''
+
| align="center" | 4
**'''[[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|Brazil]] 1st'''
+
| align="center" | 12
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 125
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | <font color=black>3rd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''1995'''
 +
| align="left" | British [[Formula Vauxhall]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Stewart Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 4
 +
| align="center" | 14
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 114
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | <font color=black>3rd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=2| '''1996'''
 +
| align="left" | British [[Formula Three]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Fortec Motorsport]]
 +
| align="center" | 4
 +
| align="center" | 16
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 137
 +
| align="center" | 5th
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[1996 International Touring Car Championship season|International Touring Car Championship]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Warsteiner]] [[Mercedes-AMG]]
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 2/26
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | NC
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''1997'''
 +
| align="left" | [[International Formula 3000|Formula 3000]]
 +
| align="left" | RSM Marko
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 9
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 37.5
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| <font color=black>2nd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''1998'''
 +
| align="left" | [[International Formula 3000|Formula 3000]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Super Nova Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 12
 +
| align="center" | 7
 +
| align="center" | 4
 +
| align="center" | 65
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>1st
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''1999'''
 +
| align="left" | [[Champ Car|CART]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 4
 +
| align="center" | 20
 +
| align="center" | 7
 +
| align="center" | 7
 +
| align="center" | 212
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>1st
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=2 | '''2000'''
 +
| align="left" | [[Champ Car|CART]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 20
 +
| align="center" | 7
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 126
 +
| align="center" | 9th
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[IRL IndyCar Series]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 9
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 54
 +
| align="center" | 25th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''2001'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2001 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[WilliamsF1]]
 +
| align="center" | 6
 +
| align="center" | 17
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 31
 +
| align="center" | 6th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''2002'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2002 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[WilliamsF1]]
 +
| align="center" | 6
 +
| align="center" | 17
 +
| align="center" | 7
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 50
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | <font color=black>3rd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''2003'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2003 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[WilliamsF1]]
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 16
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 82
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFDF9F" | <font color=black>3rd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''2004'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2004 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[WilliamsF1]]
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 18
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 58
 +
| align="center" | 5th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" | '''2005'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2005 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]
 +
| align="center" | 10
 +
| align="center" | 16
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 3
 +
| align="center" | 60
 +
| align="center" | 4th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=2 | '''2006'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2006 Formula One season|Formula One]]
 +
| align="left" | [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]]
 +
| align="center" | 4
 +
| align="center" | 10
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 26
 +
| align="center" | 8th
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series|NASCAR Nextel Cup]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 30
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 61
 +
| align="center" | 69th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=3 | '''2007'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2007 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series|NASCAR Nextel Cup]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 42
 +
| align="center" | 36
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 3487
 +
| align="center" | 20th
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[2007 Rolex 24 At Daytona|Rolex 24 At Daytona]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing|Telmex Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 01
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | N/A
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>1st
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[2007 NASCAR Busch Series|NASCAR Busch Series]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 42
 +
| align="center" | 15
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 1525
 +
| align="center" | 22nd
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=3| '''2008'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series|NASCAR Sprint Cup]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 42
 +
| align="center" | 36
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 3329
 +
| align="center" | 25th
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[24 Hours of Daytona|Rolex 24 At Daytona]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing|Telmex Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 01
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | N/A
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>1st
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[2008 NASCAR Nationwide Series|NASCAR Nationwide Series]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 40
 +
| align="center" | 2
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 230
 +
| align="center" | 86th
 +
|-
 +
| align="center" rowspan=2 | '''2009'''
 +
| align="left" | [[2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series|NASCAR Sprint Cup]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Earnhardt Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 42
 +
| align="center" | 16
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 2321
 +
| align="center" | 9th (Until yet, season is not finished)
 +
|-
 +
| align="left" | [[24 Hours of Daytona|Rolex 24 At Daytona]]
 +
| align="left" | [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
| align="center" | 01
 +
| align="center" | 1
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | 0
 +
| align="center" | N/A
 +
| align="center" bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| <font color=black>2nd
 +
|}
 +
:<small>No. = Car Number</small>
  
==Complete F1 results==
+
===Champ Car===
([[:Template:F1 driver results legend 2|key]]) (Races in '''bold''' indicate pole position)
+
([[:Template:American Open Wheel driver results legend|key]]) (Races in '''bold''' indicate pole position)
{| class="wikitable" style="font-size: 95%" border=1 cellpadding=3
+
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
|- tr BGCOLOR="darkred"
+
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 
! Year
 
! Year
 
! Team
 
! Team
 +
! Chassis
 +
! Engine
 +
! 1
 +
! 2
 +
! 3
 +
! 4
 +
! 5
 +
! 6
 +
! 7
 +
! 8
 +
! 9
 +
! 10
 +
! 11
 +
! 12
 +
! 13
 +
! 14
 +
! 15
 +
! 16
 +
! 17
 +
! 18
 +
! 19
 +
! 20
 +
! Rank
 +
! Points
 +
|-
 +
| [[1999 CART World Series Season|1999]]
 +
! [[Chip Ganassi Racing|Ganassi]]
 +
! [[Reynard]]
 +
! [[Honda]]
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>MIA<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| <font color=black>MOT<br/><font color=black><small>13</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>''LBH''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''NAZ'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>''RIO''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''GAT'''<br/><font color=black><small>11</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>MIL<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| <font color=black>'''POR'''<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''CLE'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| <font color=black>ROA<br/><font color=black><small>13</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>TOR<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| <font color=black>MIC<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''''DET'''''<br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>''MDO''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>CHI<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''''VAN'''''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>LAG<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''HOU'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>SUR<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| <font color=black>FON<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''1st'''
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''212'''
 +
|-
 +
| [[2000 CART World Series Season|2000]]
 +
! [[Chip Ganassi Racing|Ganassi]]
 +
! [[Lola Cars|Lola]]
 +
! [[Toyota]]
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>''MIA''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>LBH<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>RIO<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>'''''MOT'''''<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| <font color=black>'''''NAZ'''''<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''MIL'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''DET'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>POR<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>''CLE''<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>TOR<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>''MIC''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''CHI'''<br/><font color=black><small>12</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>MDO<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>ROA<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>''VAN''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>LAG<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| <font color=black>'''GAT'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| <font color=black>HOU<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| <font color=black>'''SUR'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black>FON<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black> <font color=black>'''9th'''
 +
|bgcolor="#CFEAFF"| <font color=black> '''126'''
 +
|}
 +
 +
===Complete Formula One results===
 +
([[:Template:F1 driver results legend 2|key]]) (Races in '''bold''' indicate pole position; races in ''italics'' indicate fastest lap)
 +
<div style="float:left;">
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:800px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
! Year
 +
! Entrant
 +
! Chassis
 +
! Engine
 
! 1
 
! 1
 
! 2
 
! 2
Line 179: Line 560:
 
! 18
 
! 18
 
! 19
 
! 19
! Team
 
 
! WDC
 
! WDC
 
! Points
 
! Points
 
|-
 
|-
 
| [[2001 Formula One season|2001]]
 
| [[2001 Formula One season|2001]]
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
! [[BMW]] [[WilliamsF1|WilliamsF1 Team]]
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] [[Williams FW23|FW23]]
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
! [[BMW]] P80 3.0 [[V10 engine|V10]]
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2001 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Brazilian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 San Marino Grand Prix|<font color=black>SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2001 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Austrian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUT]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2001 European Grand Prix|EUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2001 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| ''[[2001 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]''<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2001 German Grand Prix|GER]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 French Grand Prix|<font color=black>FRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2001 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>8</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2001 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2001 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''''[[2001 German Grand Prix|<font color=black>GER]]'''''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''[[2001 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2001 Hungarian Grand Prix|<font color=black>HUN]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2001 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2001 Belgian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BEL]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2001 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''[[2001 Italian Grand Prix|<font color=black>ITA]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| ''[[2001 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2001 Japanese Grand Prix|<font color=black>JPN]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
 
 
! 6th
 
! 6th
 
! 31
 
! 31
 
|-
 
|-
 
| [[2002 Formula One season|2002]]
 
| [[2002 Formula One season|2002]]
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
! [[BMW]] [[WilliamsF1|WilliamsF1 Team]]
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] [[Williams FW24|FW24]]
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
! [[BMW]] P82 3.0 [[V10 engine|V10]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| '''[[2002 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| ''[[2002 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]''<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| '''''[[2002 Brazilian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BRA]]'''''<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2002 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 San Marino Grand Prix|<font color=black>SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2002 Austrian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUT]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 European Grand Prix|EUR]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''[[2002 British Grand Prix|GBR]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''''[[2002 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]'''''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| '''[[2002 French Grand Prix|FRA]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 German Grand Prix|GER]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''[[2002 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2002 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>11</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| '''[[2002 French Grand Prix|<font color=black>FRA]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2002 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2002 German Grand Prix|<font color=black>GER]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2002 Hungarian Grand Prix|<font color=black>HUN]]<br/><font color=black><small>11</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2002 Belgian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BEL]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| '''[[2002 Italian Grand Prix|<font color=black>ITA]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2002 Japanese Grand Prix|<font color=black>JPN]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| <font color=black>'''3rd'''
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''3rd'''  
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| <font color=black>'''50'''
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''50'''  
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| [[2003 Formula One season|2003]]
 
| [[2003 Formula One season|2003]]
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
! [[BMW]] [[WilliamsF1|WilliamsF1 Team]]
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] [[Williams FW25|FW25]]
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2003 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>12</small>
+
! [[BMW]] P83 3.0 [[V10 engine|V10]]
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>7</small>
+
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2003 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>12</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Brazilian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Austrian Grand Prix|AUT]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 San Marino Grand Prix|<font color=black>SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2003 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2003 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Austrian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUT]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 European Grand Prix|EUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2003 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2003 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''[[2003 German Grand Prix|GER]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| ''[[2003 French Grand Prix|<font color=black>FRA]]''<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2003 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''''[[2003 German Grand Prix|<font color=black>GER]]'''''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>6</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| ''[[2003 Hungarian Grand Prix|<font color=black>HUN]]''<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2003 Italian Grand Prix|<font color=black>ITA]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2003 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2003 Japanese Grand Prix|<font color=black>JPN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| <font color=black>'''3rd'''
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''3rd'''
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| <font color=black>'''82'''
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| '''82'''
 
 
|-
 
|-
 
| [[2004 Formula One season|2004]]
 
| [[2004 Formula One season|2004]]
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
+
! [[BMW]] [[WilliamsF1|WilliamsF1 Team]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]] [[Williams FW26|FW26]]
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2004 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
! [[BMW]] P84 3.0 [[V10 engine|V10]]
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2004 Bahrain Grand Prix|BAH]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>13</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2004 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| ''[[2004 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]''<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2004 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2004 Bahrain Grand Prix|<font color=black>BHR]]<br/><font color=black><small>13</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2004 San Marino Grand Prix|<font color=black>SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 European Grand Prix|EUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>8</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2004 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2004 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=red><small>DSQ</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2004 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=red><small>DSQ</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>8</small>
+
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2004 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]<br/><font color=white><small>DSQ</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2004 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]<br/><font color=white><small>DSQ</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 German Grand Prix|GER]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 French Grand Prix|<font color=black>FRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2004 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 German Grand Prix|<font color=black>GER]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Hungarian Grand Prix|<font color=black>HUN]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Chinese Grand Prix|CHN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2004 Belgian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BEL]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>7</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Italian Grand Prix|<font color=black>ITA]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Chinese Grand Prix|<font color=black>CHN]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2004 Japanese Grand Prix|<font color=black>JPN]]<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| ''[[2004 Brazilian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BRA]]''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 
|
 
|
! [[WilliamsF1|Williams]]
 
 
! 5th
 
! 5th
 
! 58
 
! 58
 
|-
 
|-
 
| [[2005 Formula One season|2005]]
 
| [[2005 Formula One season|2005]]
! [[McLaren]]
+
! [[McLaren (racing)|Team McLaren]] [[Mercedes-Benz Motorsport|Mercedes]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>6</small>
+
! [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]] [[McLaren MP4-20|MP4-20]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
! [[Mercedes-Benz Motorsport|Mercedes]] FO 110R 3.0 [[V10 engine|V10]]
| [[2005 Bahrain Grand Prix|BAH]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Inj</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
| [[2005 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Inj</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>7</small>
+
| [[2005 Bahrain Grand Prix|BHR]]<br/><font color=black><small> </small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
| [[2005 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small> </small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 European Grand Prix|EUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>7</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2005 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=red><small>DSQ</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFFF"| [[2005 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>DNS</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2005 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"| [[2005 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]<br/><font color=white><small>DSQ</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2005 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFFF"| [[2005 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]<br/><font color=black><small>DNS</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2005 German Grand Prix|GER]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 French Grand Prix|<font color=black>FRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2005 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2005 Turkish Grand Prix|TUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2005 German Grand Prix|<font color=black>GER]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''[[2005 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Hungarian Grand Prix|<font color=black>HUN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| '''[[2005 Belgian Grand Prix|BEL]]'''<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>14</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| ''[[2005 Turkish Grand Prix|<font color=black>TUR]]''<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>1</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| '''[[2005 Italian Grand Prix|<font color=black>ITA]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| '''[[2005 Belgian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BEL]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>14</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Chinese Grand Prix|CHN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2005 Brazilian Grand Prix|<font color=black>BRA]]<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
! [[McLaren]]
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Japanese Grand Prix|<font color=black>JPN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2005 Chinese Grand Prix|<font color=black>CHN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
 
! 4th
 
! 4th
 
! 60
 
! 60
 
|-
 
|-
| [[2006 Formula One Season|2006]]
+
| [[2006 Formula One season|2006]]
! [[McLaren]]
+
! [[McLaren (racing)|Team McLaren]] [[Mercedes-Benz Motorsport|Mercedes]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 Bahrain Grand Prix|BAH]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>5</small>
+
! [[McLaren (racing)|McLaren]] [[McLaren MP4-21|MP4-21]]
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 Malaysian Grand Prix|MYS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>4</small>
+
! [[Mercedes-Benz Motorsport|Mercedes]] FO 108S 2.4 [[V8 engine|V8]]
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Australian Grand Prix|AUS]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 Bahrain Grand Prix|<font color=black>BHR]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2006 San Marino Grand Prix|SMR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>3</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 Malaysian Grand Prix|<font color=black>MAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 European Grand Prix|EUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Australian Grand Prix|<font color=black>AUS]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Spanish Grand Prix|ESP]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2006 San Marino Grand Prix|<font color=black>SMR]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2006 Monaco Grand Prix|MON]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>2</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 European Grand Prix|<font color=black>EUR]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 British Grand Prix|GBR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>6</small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Spanish Grand Prix|<font color=black>ESP]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Canadian Grand Prix|CAN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2006 Monaco Grand Prix|<font color=black>MON]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 United States Grand Prix|USA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small>Ret</small>
+
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2006 British Grand Prix|<font color=black>GBR]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
| [[2006 French Grand Prix|FRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 Canadian Grand Prix|<font color=black>CAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
| [[2006 German Grand Prix|GER]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"| [[2006 United States Grand Prix|<font color=black>USA]]<br/><font color=black><small>Ret</small>
| [[2006 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 French Grand Prix|FRA]]
| [[2006 Turkish Grand Prix|TUR]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 German Grand Prix|GER]]
| [[2006 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 Hungarian Grand Prix|HUN]]
| [[2006 Chinese Grand Prix|CHN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 Turkish Grand Prix|TUR]]
| [[2006 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 Italian Grand Prix|ITA]]
| [[2006 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]<br /><font face=“Trebuchet MS” font color=black><small></small>
+
| [[2006 Chinese Grand Prix|CHN]]
 +
| [[2006 Japanese Grand Prix|JPN]]
 +
| [[2006 Brazilian Grand Prix|BRA]]
 
|
 
|
! [[McLaren]]
+
! 8th
! 8th*
 
 
! 26
 
! 26
 
|}
 
|}
  
  
 +
===NASCAR Sprint Cup results===
 +
([[Template:NASCAR driver results legend|key]]) (Races in '''bold''' indicate pole position)
 +
<div style="float:left;">
 +
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:right; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:250px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 +
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- style="color:#fff; background:darkred; font-size:larger;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
! Year
 +
! Team
 +
! No.
 +
! Sponsor
 +
! Make
 +
! 1
 +
! 2
 +
! 3
 +
! 4
 +
! 5
 +
! 6
 +
! 7
 +
! 8
 +
! 9
 +
! 10
 +
! 11
 +
! 12
 +
! 13
 +
! 14
 +
! 15
 +
! 16
 +
! 17
 +
! 18
 +
! 19
 +
! 20
 +
! 21
 +
! 22
 +
! 23
 +
! 24
 +
! 25
 +
! 26
 +
! 27
 +
! 28
 +
! 29
 +
! 30
 +
! 31
 +
! 32
 +
! 33
 +
! 34
 +
! 35
 +
! 36
 +
! NSCC
 +
! Points
 +
|-
 +
! [[2006 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series|2006]]
 +
! [[Chip Ganassi Racing|'''Chip Ganassi Racing''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: red;"|'''30'''
 +
! Texaco/Havoline
 +
! [[Dodge|'''Dodge''']]
 +
| [[2006 Daytona 500|DAY]]
 +
| [[2006 Auto Club 500|CAL]]
 +
| [[2006 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400|LSV]]
 +
| [[2006 Golden Corral 500|ATL]]
 +
| [[2006 Food City 500|BRI]]
 +
| [[2006 DirecTV 500|MAR]]
 +
| [[2006 Samsung/Radio Shack 500|TEX]]
 +
| [[2006 Subway Fresh 500|PHO]]
 +
| [[2006 Aaron's 499|TAL]]
 +
| [[2006 Crown Royal 400|RIC]]
 +
| [[2006 Dodge Charger 500|DAR]]
 +
| [[2006 Coca-Cola 600|LOW]]
 +
| [[2006 Neighborhood Excellence 400 presented by Bank of America|DOV]]
 +
| [[2006 Pocono 500|POC]]
 +
| [[2006 3M Perfomance 400|MIC]]
 +
| [[2006 Dodge/Save Mart 350|INF]]
 +
| [[2006 Pepsi 400|DY2]]
 +
| [[2006 USG Sheetrock 400|CHI]]
 +
| [[2006 Lenox Industrial Tools 300|NHA]]
 +
| [[2006 Pennsylvania 500|PO2]]
 +
| [[2006 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard|IND]]
 +
| [[2006 AMD at the Glen|GLN]]
 +
| [[2006 GFS Marketplace 400|MI2]]
 +
| [[2006 Sharpie 500|BR2]]
 +
| [[2006 Sony HD 500|CA2]]
 +
| [[2006 Chevy Rock and Roll 400|RI2]]
 +
| [[2006 Sylvania 300|NH2]]
 +
| [[2006 Dover 400|DV2]]
 +
| [[2006 Banquet 400|KAN]]
 +
| [[2006 UAW-Ford 500|TL2]]
 +
| [[2006 Bank of America 500|LW2]]
 +
| [[2006 Subway 500|MR2]]
 +
| [[2006 Bass Pro Shops 500|AT2]]
 +
| [[2006 Dickies 500|TX2]]
 +
| [[2006 Checker Auto Parts 500|PH2]]
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2006 Ford 500|<font color=black>HOM]]<br /><font color=black><small>34</small>
 +
! '''69th'''
 +
! '''61'''
 +
|-
 +
! [[2007 NASCAR Nextel Cup Series|2007]]
 +
! [[Chip Ganassi Racing|'''Chip Ganassi Racing''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: red;"|'''42'''
 +
! Texaco/Havoline
 +
! [[Dodge|'''Dodge''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Daytona 500|<font color=black>DAY]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Auto Club 500|<font color=black>CAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>26</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 UAW-DaimlerChrysler 400|<font color=black>LSV]]<br/><font color=black><small>22</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2007 Kobalt Tools 500|<font color=black>ATL]]<br/><font color=black><small>5</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Food City 500|<font color=black>BRI]]<br/><font color=black><small>32<small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Goody's Cool Orange 500|<font color=black>MAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>16</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2007 Samsung 500|<font color=black>TEX]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Subway Fresh Fit 500|<font color=black>PHO]]<br/><font color=black><small>33</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Aaron's 499|<font color=black>TAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>31</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Crown Royal Presents The Jim Stewart 400|<font color=black>RIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>26</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Dodge Avenger 500|<font color=black>DAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>23</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Coca-Cola 600|<font color=black>LOW]]<br/><font color=black><small>28</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Autism Speaks 400 presented by Visa|<font color=black>DOV]]<br/><font color=black><small>31</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Pocono 500|<font color=black>POC]]<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2007 Citizens Bank 400|<font color=black>MIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>43</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFFBF"| [[2007 Toyota/Save Mart 350|<font color=black>INF]]<br/><font color=black><small>1</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Lenox Industrial Tools 300|<font color=black>NHA]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Pepsi 400|<font color=black>DY2]]<br/><font color=black><small>32</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 USG Sheetrock 400|<font color=black>CHI]]<br/><font color=black><small>15</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2007 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard|<font color=black>IND]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Pennsylvania 500|<font color=black>PO2]]<br/><font color=black><small>16</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2007 Centurion Boats at the Glen|<font color=black>GLN]]<br/><font color=black><small>39</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 3M Performance 400|<font color=black>MI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>26</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Sharpie 500|<font color=black>BR2]]<br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Sharp Aquos 500|<font color=black>CA2]]<br/><font color=black><small>33</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2007 Chevy Rock & Roll 400|<font color=black>RI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>41</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Sylvania 300|<font color=black>NH2]]<br/><font color=black><small>23</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2007 Dodge Dealers 400|<font color=black>DV2]]<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 LifeLock 400|<font color=black>KAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>28</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 UAW-Ford 500|<font color=black>TL2]]<br/><font color=black><small>15</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2007 Bank of America 500|<font color=black>LW2]]<br/><font color=black><small>37</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2007 Subway 500|<font color=black>MR2]] <br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2007 Pep Boys Auto 500|<font color=black>AT2]] <br/><font color=black><small>34</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2007 Dickies 500|<font color=black>TX2]] <br/><font color=black><small>25</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Checker Auto Parts 500|<font color=black>PH2]] <br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2007 Ford 400|<font color=black>HOM]] <br/><font color=black><small>15</small>
 +
! '''20th'''
 +
! '''3487'''
 +
|-
 +
! [[2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series|2008]]
 +
! [[Chip Ganassi Racing|'''Chip Ganassi Racing''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: red;"|'''42'''
 +
! Texaco Havoline
 +
! [[Dodge|'''Dodge''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2008 Daytona 500|<font color=black>DAY]] <br/><font color=black><small>32</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Auto Club 500|<font color=black>CAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 UAW-Dodge 400|<font color=black>LSV]] <br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Kobalt Tools 500|<font color=black>ATL]]<br/><font color=black><small>16</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Food City 500|<font color=black>BRI]]<br/><font color=black><small>15</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Goody's Cool Orange 500|<font color=black>MAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>13</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Samsung 500|<font color=black>TEX]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Subway Fresh Fit 500|<font color=black>PHO]]<br/><font color=black><small>16</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2008 Aaron's 499|<font color=black>TAL]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2008 Crown Royal Presents the Dan Lowry 400|<font color=black>RIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>32</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2008 Dodge Challenger 500|<font color=black>DAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>23</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2008 Coca-Cola 600|<font color=black><font color=black>LOW]]<br/><font color=black><small>30</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Best Buy 400 benefiting Student Clubs for Autism Speaks|<font color=black>DOV]]<br/><font color=black><small>12</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Pocono 500|<font color=black>POC]]<br/><font color=black><small>38</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2008 Lifelock 400|<font color=black>MIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>38</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2008 Toyota/Save Mart 350|<font color=black>INF]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2008 Lenox Industrial Tools 301|<font color=black>NHA]]<br/><font color=black><small>32</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola|<font color=black>DY2]]<br/><font color=black><small>38</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 LifeLock.com 400|<font color=black>CHI]]<br/><font color=black><small>18</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard|<font color=black>IND]]<br/><font color=black><small>38</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard|<font color=black>PO2]]<br/><font color=black><small>40</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2008 Centurion Boats at the Glen|<font color=black>GLN]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2008 3M Performance 400|<font color=black>MI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>25</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Sharpie 500|<font color=black>BR2]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2008 Pepsi 500|<font color=black>CA2]]<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2008 Chevy Rock & Roll 400|<font color=black>RI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>31</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 Sylvania 300|<font color=black>NH2]]<br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Camping World RV 400|<font color=black>DV2]]<br/><font color=black><small>39</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 LifeLock 400|<font color=black>KAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2008 AMP Energy 500|<font color=black>TL2]]<br/><font color=black><small>25</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Bank of America 500|<font color=black>LW2]]<br/><font color=black><small>34</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2008 TUMS QuikPak 500|<font color=black>MR2]]<br/><font color=black><small>14</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"| [[2008 Pep Boys Auto 500|<font color=black>AT2]]<br/><font color=black><small>40</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFFF2F"|  [[2008 Dickies 500|<font color=black>TX2]]<br/><font color=black><small>43</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"|  [[2008 Checker Auto Parts 500|<font color=black>PH2]]<br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"|  [[2008 Ford 400|<font color=black>HOM]]<br/><font color=black><small>17</small>
 +
! '''25th'''
 +
! '''3329'''
 +
|-
 +
! [[2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series|2009]]
 +
! [[Earnhardt Ganassi Racing|'''Earnhardt Ganassi Racing''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#FF0000" style="color: white;"|'''42'''
 +
! Target
 +
! [[Chevrolet|'''Chevy''']]
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Daytona 500|<font color=black><font color=black>DAY]] <br/><font color=black><small>14</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Auto Club 500|<font color=black><font color=black>CAL]] <br/><font color=black><small>11</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2009 Shelby 427|<font color=black>LSV]] <br/><font color=black><small>31</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|[[2009 Kobalt Tools 500|<font color=black><font color=black>ATL]]<br/><font color=black><small>27</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Food City 500|<font color=black>BRI]]<br/><font color=black><small>9</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[Goody's Cool Orange 500|<font color=black>MAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>12</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Samsung 500|<font color=black>TEX]]<br/><font color=black><small>7</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2009 Subway Fresh Fit 500|<font color=black>PHO]]<br/><font color=black><small>24</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| '''[[2009 Aaron's 499|TAL]]'''<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Crown Royal 400|<font color=black>RIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Southern 500 presented by GoDaddy.com|<font color=black>DAR]]<br/><font color=black><small>20</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Coca-Cola 600|<font color=black>LOW]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2009 Autism Speaks 400 presented by Heluva Good!|DOV]]<br/><font color=black><small>30</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Pocono 500|<font color=black>POC]]<br/><font color=black><small>8</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 LifeLock 400|<font color=black>MIC]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Dodge/Save Mart 350|<font color=black>INF]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Lenox Industrial Tools 300|<font color=black>NHA]]<br/><font color=black><small>12</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Coke Zero 400 Powered by Coca-Cola|DY2]]<br/><font color=black><small>9</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 LifeLock.com 400|<font color=black>CHI]]<br/><font color=black><small>10</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Allstate 400 at the Brickyard|IND]]<br/><font color=black><small>11</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Pennsylvania 500|<font color=black>PO2]]<br/><font color=black><small>2</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"| [[2009 Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips at The Glen|<font color=black>GLN]]<br/><font color=black><small>6</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 GFS Marketplace 400|<font color=black>MI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"| [[2009 Sharpie 500|<font color=black>BR2]]<br/><font color=black><small>25</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Pep Boys Auto 500|<font color=black>AT2]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"| [[2009 Chevy Rock and Roll 400|<font color=black>RI2]]<br/><font color=black><small>19</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Sylvania 300|<font color=black>NH2]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 AAA 400|<font color=black>DV2]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Price Chopper 400|<font color=black>KAN]]<br/><font color=black><small>4</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Pepsi 500|<font color=black>CAL2]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#FCD765"| [[2009 NASCAR Banking 500 only from Bank of America 500|<font color=black>LW2]]<br/><font color=black><small>35</small>
 +
|bgcolor="#DFDFDF"| [[2009 Tums Fast Relief 500|<font color=black>MR2]]<br/><font color=black><small>3</small>
 +
| [[2009 Amp Energy 500|<font color=>TL2]]
 +
| [[2009 Dickies 500|<font color=>TX2]]
 +
| [[2009 Checker Auto Parts 500|<font color=>PH2]]
 +
| [[2009 Ford 400|<font color=>HOM]]
 +
! '''5th'''
 +
! '''5898'''
 +
|}
 +
''*''Season in progress.
  
'''*'''Was placed 6th in WDC standings before leaving F1.
+
{| border=1 cellspacing=3 cellpadding=4 style="float:center; margin:0 0 .5em 1em; width:400px; background:#505050; border-collapse:collapse; border:1px solid #999; font-size:83%; line-height:1.5; " summary="Infobox Automobile"
 
+
|- style="text-align:center; background:#505050;"
 +
|- tr BGCOLOR=darkred
 +
! Year || Starts || Wins || Top Fives || Top Tens || Poles || Rank || Team(s)
 +
|-
 +
|2006 || 1 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 0 || 69th || [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
|-
 +
|2007 || 36  || 1 || 3 || 6 || 0 || 20th || [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
|-
 +
|2008 || 36  || 0 || 2 || 3 || 0 || 25th || [[Chip Ganassi Racing]]
 +
|-
 +
|2009 || 19 || 0 || 0 || 9 || 1 || 9th || [[Earnhardt Ganassi Racing]]
 +
|-
 +
|'''Totals''' || '''92''' || '''1''' || '''5''' || '''18''' || '''1''' || '''32'''
 +
|}
  
  
  
== External links ==
+
==External links==
  
 
*[http://www.jpmontoya.com/Templates/home.aspx?Page_ID=182 The official site for Juan Pablo Montoya]
 
*[http://www.jpmontoya.com/Templates/home.aspx?Page_ID=182 The official site for Juan Pablo Montoya]
*[http://www.mclaren.com Team McLaren official site]
+
*[http://www.twitter.com/jpmontoya On twitter]
*[http://www.f1db.com/f1/page/Juan-Pablo_Montoya Juan Pablo Montoya Profile and Statistics]
 
  
  
 
{{24 Hours of Daytona winners}}
 
{{24 Hours of Daytona winners}}
 
{{Indy 500 winners}}
 
{{Indy 500 winners}}
 +
{{Autosport International Racing Driver Award}}
 +
 +
 +
 +
[[Category:Champ Car drivers]]
 +
[[Category:Indy 500 drivers]]
 +
[[Category:Indy 500 winners]]
 +
[[Category:Monaco Grand Prix winners]]
 +
[[Category:Kart racing drivers]]
 +
[[Category:Indy 500 Rookie of the Year]]
 +
[[Category:Indy Racing League drivers]]
 +
[[Category:International Formula 3000 Champions]]
 +
[[Category:NASCAR drivers]]
 +
[[Category:NASCAR Rookies of the Year]]
 +
[[Category:International Formula 3000 drivers]]

Latest revision as of 17:25, 4 November 2009

Juan Pablo Montoya
Juan Pablo Montoya 22px-Flag of Colombia.png
Car number 4
Team McLaren-Mercedes
Races 81
Championships 0
Wins 7
Podiums 27
Poles 12
Fastest laps 12
First race 2001 Australian Grand Prix
First win 2001 Italian Grand Prix
Last season 2005
Last position 4th (60 pts)


Juan Pablo Montoya Roldán (born September 20, 1975, in Bogotá, Colombia) is a race car driver in NASCAR and a former Formula One and CART driver. He has enjoyed great success, most famously in top open wheel racing series. He currently drives the #42 Target/Wrigley's Chevrolet Impala for Earnhardt Ganassi Racing in the Sprint Cup Series.

The highlights of his career include winning the International F3000 championship in 1998, and the CART Championship Series in 1999, as well as victories in some of the most prestigious races in the world. He is the only driver to have won the premier North American open-wheel CART title, the Indianapolis 500 and the 24 Hours of Daytona, all at the first attempt. Montoya is one of two drivers to have won the CART title in his rookie year, the first being Formula One World Champion Nigel Mansell in 1993. He has also equalled Graham Hill's feat of being a Monaco Grand Prix and Indianapolis 500 race winner; Montoya is currently one of only two active drivers (along with Jacques Villeneuve) who has won two legs of the Triple Crown of Motorsport.

Montoya has also become a crossover race winner by taking race victories (staring in each case in his rookie year) in Formula One, CART, IndyCar, Grand-AM and NASCAR equalling in that respect Mario Andretti's caliber of success (except for the F1 World Championship); And shares honors as well with Dan Gurney in being IndyCar/F1/NASCAR race winner. Montoya is also the only driver to have competed in all three major events at Indianapolis, finishing fourth or better in each event. He finished 1st in the Indianapolis 500, 2nd in the Brickyard 400, and 4th in the US Grand Prix.

In April 2009, Montoya was ranked 29th in a list of the top 50 Formula One drivers of all time by Times Online.

Early career

He was born in Bogotá where he was taught the techniques of karting from an early age by his father Pablo, an architect and motorsport enthusiast.

Montoya moved to the Colombian Formula Renault Series in 1992, while racing there he won four of eight races and had five poles. The same year, he also participated in the U.S. Skip Barber driving school, and was hailed by driving instructors as being one of the best pupils to ever come through their school. 1993 saw Montoya switch to the Swift GTI Championship, a series he dominated by winning seven of eight races and earning eight poles. The following year, 1994, was a very busy year for the 19-year-old Colombian, as it saw him race in three separate series: the Sudam 125 Karting (he won the title), USA Barber Saab (finished third in points, won two races), and Formula N in Mexico (a series in which he won the title). As his success continued year after year, Montoya came to be known for his uncanny ability to win pole positions (as well as races), in some cases taking 80% of a season's poles (see Career results below). For the next three years, Montoya raced in various divisions, continually progressing upward. He raced in the 1995 British Formula Vauxhall Championship, winning three races and finishing third in the championship. In 1996, he raced in the British Formula 3 with Fortec Motorsport, winning two races, and finishing 5th in the championship points standings, as well as taking part in events in Zandvoort, Netherlands and Silverstone.

F3000 Career – F1 Testing

1997

Montoya got the opportunity to advance in his motor racing career when he was hired by the RSM Marko, Formula 3000 team in 1997. In the ten races during the season, Montoya had three wins and three pole positions. He finished his rookie season, second in the championship points standings, just 1.5 points shy of taking the overall season title. During this time, Williams noticed his potential and invited him to test with the team at Jerez, Spain along with three other drivers. Montoya was the fastest of them all and he and Max Wilson were signed by WilliamsF1 to be test drivers for the following season.

1998

Alongside his Formula One testing duties for Williams, he competed again in F3000 and took the title in a close contest with Nick Heidfeld who was driving for McLaren's F3000 team. During the 1998 F3000 season, Montoya opened the season up with a record four straight pole positions. He also achieved another record that year by being the first driver to lap the entire grid at the race in Pau. Montoya finished the 1998 F3000 season with four wins, seven pole positions, and nine podium finishes in twelve races.

CART career

1999

Renault, Williams' engine supplier for most of the 1990s, left Formula One at the end of the 1997 season. With no major engine suppliers available, Williams were forced to sign a contract to run customer engines for the 1998 and 1999 seasons. In 1998 the team failed to win a race for the first time in a decade. For the 1999 season, in the hope of attracting more investors to the underperforming team, Frank Williams agreed a driver swap with CART team owner Chip Ganassi, in which Ganassi's 1997 and 1998 CART champion driver, Alessandro Zanardi, would return to Formula One and Montoya would take his place in the competitive American series.

While Zanardi had a miserable year in Formula One, Montoya, with Honda power and a great Reynard chassis at his disposal, took the American motorsport scene by storm. He took the 1999 title in his rookie year, something accomplished six years earlier by former Formula One Champion Nigel Mansell.

The season that saw Montoya crowned as the youngest ever CART FedEx Championship Series Champion at the age of 24 was closely fought, especially with Dario Franchitti who led the championship going into the final race in California. Both drivers finished the season with equal number of points but having won seven races to the Scotsman's three decided the title in the Colombian's favor. However, the CART rookie also attracted criticism—notably from Michael Andretti and his team for his aggressive style of driving.

Montoya still had a contractual relationship with Williams and after his impressive rookie season the Grove-based team were keen for him to drive for them in Formula One. However, the young Colombian decided to race in the US for one more year.

2000

In 2000 the Ganassi team switched to Toyota engines and Lola chassis. The package was strong for ovals and high speed tracks, but was less well suited to street and most road circuits. Toyota’s engines were not yet reliable and often failed the team. Despite this, Montoya led more laps than anyone else and took the maiden victory for a Toyota engine in the series. He was also the most popular driver, but in a season where he failed to finish in 40% of the races, he was out of contention for the championship.

That season the Ganassi team also competed in the prestigious Indianapolis 500 race, part of the rival Indy Racing League series. Media and drivers were critical of the way Juan Pablo approached the Brickyard, many IRL drivers labelled him as reckless and predicted an early retirement from the race. The media activity around the event was intense, with Montoya and his CART teammate Jimmy Vasser being the first CART drivers to "cross-over" to drive in the Indy 500. Despite public warnings from two-time Indy 500 winner Al Unser, Jr. claiming that if a driver doesn't respect the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, the place "will bite you - hard" Montoya shrugged off the advice claiming that all four corners were exactly the same and that the track required less attention than the road courses in the CART series and in European racing.

In the event, the Colombian star led 167 of 200 laps and claimed top honours at the end of the 500mi race, taking an easy victory on his first attempt. He was the first to do so since Formula One World Champion Graham Hill in 1966 and was the first Colombian winner. His compatriot Roberto José Guerrero had previously finished twice as runner up.

Montoya also won CART's U.S 500. That victory marked his ninth and Toyota's first win in the CART (Champ Car World Series) series.

Formula One career

Over the weekend of the 2000 Indianapolis 500, Williams-BMW announced a two year deal for Montoya to partner Ralf Schumacher starting in 2001. His entrance was very much anticipated by the Formula One community due to the talent and raw speed showed in the Americas based series.

Montoya showed great potential from the beginning. Critics and fans alike anticipated that he would challenge for the World Drivers' Championship. During the first half of his Formula One career he consolidated his position as a fast driver and a race win challenger and also became a title contender during 2003 but the hopes of fighting for the title gradually faded as his cars lacked pace and stronger, more consistent challengers arrived on the scene.

Montoya has been criticized during his Formula One career for his unreliability and tendency to make costly mistakes. His driving style is too characteristic of the 80's Formula One era. In this matter it is difficult to build a car that suits him well as engineers and aerodynamicists have adapted their work to build chassis that are more appropriate to a more fine and soft, and perhaps less live, driving style.

Entering his sixth season, in 2006, it was evident that Juan Pablo Montoya had not developed into the title contender that racing fans and the media had predicted. In particular after five full seasons the necessary consistency never materialised. However, he often challenged for race victories and was voted top Latin American driver at the Premios Fox Sports awards in 2003 and 2005.

2001 – Williams

Montoya made his Formula One debut for the BMW-powered Williams team in the 2001 Formula One season at the Australian Grand Prix. In that race, he qualified 11th and went off in the first corner and went further down the order but with a good drive and a high rate of retirements, he went up to fifth until he retired with an engine failure.

The second round was the Malaysian Grand Prix and Montoya qualified better in sixth place but stalled on the grid and had to start from the back. He only lasted for three laps before retiring after spinning off in a rain shower.

Less than a month after his debut, in the Brazilian Grand Prix, he had his best qualifying, a fourth place finish. He got up to second on the first lap and there was a safety car due to an incident in the first corner. On the restart, which was on the third lap, Montoya shocked the F1 world by passing World Champion Michael Schumacher into the first corner. He held off Schumacher, who was on a two-stop strategy compared to Montoya's one stop strategy until Schumacher's first stop. Montoya now seemed to have the race in his pocket as he had a five-second advantage over eventual winner David Coulthard. But however, while he was lapping Jos Verstappen, the Dutchman accidentally rammed into the back of him, taking Montoya out.

After his performance in Brazil, expectations were high going into the fourth round, the San Marino Grand Prix. Montoya qualified in seventh, and was well set for points in the race but more bad luck, this time due to a brake failure which took him out of fifth place, leaving him without a point after four races.

Round 5 was the Spanish Grand Prix and Montoya needed a good result but did not look like getting so after another poor qualifying, down in 12th place. He made up for it by making a lightning quick start by gaining five places and was up to sixth in the first corner (David Coulthard was starting from the back of the grid after stalling on the formation lap). He got ahead of Jacques Villeneuve in the second round of pitstops. He stayed on the track and climbed up to second due to a high attrition rate. The second place finish was just what he needed after the four retirements.

In the next race, the Austrian Grand Prix, Montoya finally outpaced his teammate Ralf Schumacher in qualifying and took a career-best second. It looked better and better for him as he took the lead at the start and pulled away, with second-placed Ralf holding up a string of five cars behind him. But, after 10 laps, Ralf retired with brake failure. It was proven that even Montoya was struggling with the same problems, and Ralf was told to hold the others up so Montoya can build a gap. With Ralf out, the five drivers, led by Michael Schumacher began to zero in on Montoya at over a second a lap. Soon Schumacher was right on Montoya's tail and tried to pass him around the outside at Remus Curve. Montoya kept on the inside, braked late, locked up and went to the gravel. Schumacher was also forced to go to the gravel to avoid Montoya. Montoya rejoined seventh, just behind Schumacher. Montoya went for an early stop which solved his problems. He was set for one point in sixth until he stopped on the track with a hydraulic failure. After the race, Schumacher said that 'all Montoya was doing was to try to take Schumacher out with himself off the circuit'.

In the glamourous Monaco Grand Prix, Montoya did not reproduce his previous form and had to be satisfied with qualifying seventh. In the race, he made 1 position at the start. He then tried to pressurize teammate Ralf Schumacher to make a mistake, but it was he himself who made the mistake, by sliding into the barriers on the Swimming Pool section on lap 3. That was the end of his race

Montoya went into the Canadian Grand Prix desperately needing some points, after having had only 6 points from seven races. His qualifying did not help the cause at all though, as he qualified way down in 10th. He gained one place at the first corner but then could not keep the pace of the cars in front. He came under pressure from a charging Rubens Barrichello, and pushed his car too hard and retired after crashing into a wall while trying to both fend off Barrichello and catch up with the cars in front.

The ninth round of the season was the European Grand Prix and Montoya held pole for most of qualifying only for both Michael and Ralf Schumacher to bump him down to third in the final seconds. At the start of the race, he kept third and ran three seconds behind the two leaders. After the first round of stops, the two leaders came ahead of the one-stopping David Coulthard but Montoya came behind. He was stuck there for five laps and it cost him three seconds. He was forced to settle for third and that became second when Ralf was given a ten second stop-go penalty for a pitlane infringement. Montoya finished in second, and the result gave him more confidence then ever.

Montoya only finished six races, but he nevertheless won three pole positions and stood on the podium four times, including his maiden Formula One victory at the 2001 Italian Grand Prix at Monza.

2002

In the 2002 Formula One season, Montoya was the best of the rest as Ferrari's dominance left available no better place than third. Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello won 15 of 17 races. Although he did not win a race, unlike Coulthard and his team mate Ralf Schumacher, Montoya was one of the few drivers to compete with Schumacher on the track. As in 2001, he stood out for his forceful overtaking moves on the World Champion, although several times he lost places through clashing with the German. For qualifying the BMW WilliamsF1 FW24 could be set up to use its tires more effectively than its rivals and generate more grip. With this weapon Montoya was able to achieve seven pole positions, usually setting his pole time in the very last seconds of the session. He set the fastest ever lap for a Grand Prix during the qualifying session of the 2002 Italian Grand Prix at Monza.

2003

Montoya at the 2003 French Grand Prix, a race in which his Williams team finished first and second.

Although the 2003 chassis was built by the team specifically for Montoya's driving style, the machine needed time to be developed. Problems with oversteer were still present, often resulting in 360° spins in front of the crowd, in addition to reliability problems with the BMW engine.

From the Monaco Grand Prix the FW25 proved to be the class of the field, allowing Montoya to take victory at Circuit de Monaco from Kimi Räikkönen. During the 2003 French Grand Prix, after a misunderstanding with the pit crew, there was a vocal exchange of expletives between the Colombian and his team. This was followed by a formal letter of reprimand from the BMW Williams F1 team. McLaren|-Mercedes announced that they would take on his racing services from 2005 at an end of season announcement, although it was believed that Montoya had already decided to leave immediately after the French GP.

Bad luck for rivals and excellent on-track performances from the Colombian meant he was a title contender, particularly after a key victory at the German Grand Prix. Williams, however, were unable to keep pace with the latest developments from Ferrari. Montoya failed to claim another victory that year. A drive-through penalty at the United States Grand Prix after a collision with Ferrari's Barrichello ended his title chances in the last race he would finish in 2003.

Juan Pablo Montoya driving for Williams at the 2004 US GP.

2004

2004 was a disappointing year for Montoya. His relationship with the team was strained throughout the season since both parties knew he would be leaving for the McLaren team at the end of the year.

Early season promise faded as the radical looking ‘tusked’ Williams FW26 initially lacked pace and both drivers were frequently left struggling to score points. However, the car was significantly overhauled during the season and the radical nose designed by a former Ferrari aerodynamicist was finally replaced with a more conventional one for the final stages of the season. Montoya left the team on a high note by winning his last race with them, the 2004 Brazilian Grand Prix, which was closely contested with future team mate Kimi Räikkönen.

2005 – McLaren

After driving for Williams for four full seasons, Montoya found the McLaren Mercedes car unpredictable, often claiming it felt like the steering wheel was not "attached" to the rest of the car.

Having been criticised in previous years for his lack of fitness, Montoya began a training program under the direction of McLaren personnel but all the effort was lost when, just after the Malaysian Grand Prix, he injured his shoulder while in Spain. The official reason given to media was that he had injured himself while playing tennis. However, rumors stated that a motorcycle accident was the real cause. After missing two Grands Prix he made an early return before he was completely healed. In fact he was often seen with his arm almost motionless for the remaining five Grands Prix even while in the paddock for the British GP.Template:Fact

In practice for the Monaco Grand Prix Montoya was penalized to start from the back by race stewards for brake-testing his former Williams team mate, Ralf Schumacher, causing a four car collision. At the Canadian Grand Prix Montoya was in contention for the win, but he was disqualified after leaving the pitlane under a red light. As a Michelin runner, Montoya did not start the US Grand Prix (see 2005 US Grand Prix). The Colombian was on track for a possible podium finish at Magny-Cours when his suspension failed. He retired from the lead of the Hungarian GP due to a broken driveshaft. His team mate had a similar failure 8 GP before, which shows the differences in suspension geometry between both McLaren's as the torsional forces are carried out in different manner.

During the year Montoya suffered even more from oversteer than he had at Williams. On several occasions he spun during practice. More seriously he spun in his return from injury at the Spanish Grand Prix and most notoriously at the last corner during qualifying for the German Grand Prix. On that occasion he made up for it by climbing from 20th to 8th after the first two corners eventually finishing in a respectable 2nd.

Juan Pablo Montoya qualifying in the 2005 US GP.

Montoya worked with the team during the year to identify suspension geometry and aerodynamic problems that were making the car unpredictable. It is said that he helped the team to improve the car a lot, benefiting both himself and his team mate.

He had to learn how to cope with a very nervous and 'oversteery' car, in these conditions and after bad luck for his team mate, he scored his first victory for McLaren Mercedes in the British GP and in the same conditions at Monza.

For most of the season Montoya's major concerns were the ongoing problems with backmarkers and team orders. Both Tiago Monteiro and Antônio Pizzonia collided with him, as had Jos Verstappen in 2001, and Jacques Villeneuve forced him off the track in one of the final races of the year. These incidents prevented Montoya from completing his main task for the team; stopping Fernando Alonso and Renault F1 from increasing their lead in the standings over Räikkönen and McLaren respectively.

In the final stages of the season it was clear that Montoya and his car were finally adapted to one another.Template:Fact The Colombian has often attributed this to the greater effort made by the McLaren-Mercedes Team than by Williams to tune the car to his driving style. In the last 7 grand prix's Montoya finished, he scored 3 wins, 2 poles and 5 podiums. At the Brazilian GP, Montoya led home McLaren's first 1-2 result in years, ahead of newly crowned world champion Fernando Alonso in third. It was his last finish of the year. In Japan he was forced off the track by Jacques Villeneuve on lap one, while in China a loose drain cover rose up and hit his car, damaging the suspension.

Montoya testing for McLaren in early 2006

2006

Montoya started his 2006 Formula One World Championship campaign learning that the 2005 F1 Champion Fernando Alonso had been contracted by McLaren-Mercedes for the 2007 season. At the same time McLaren did not take up their option on Montoya for 2007, while his teammate Kimi Räikkönen remained a free agent.

During the first three races, Montoya consistently underperformed on the track, not managing to improve his position from the start at the Bahrain and Malaysia Grands Prix. Problems with his engine mapping also contributed, resulting in poor straight line performance.

At the Australian Grand Prix, he drove an excellent race that sadly featured a few critical mistakes. His car spun near the end of the warm-up lap, caused by too much throttle whilst warming the tyres, and if Fisichella hadn't stalled his Renault before the start of the race and triggered another formation lap, Montoya would have started at the back end of the grid. He did manage to regain his grid position though, which angered other team managers. His race ended when towards the end of the race he hit a kerb on the exit of the final corner, whilst chasing Ralf Schumacher hard for third place. The impact triggered an automatic electronic device in the McLaren MP4-21, shutting down his engine as it went into safety mode.

In the San Marino Grand Prix, Montoya was forced to use the team spare car for the qualifying session when it was learnt that his car had a fuel pressure problem. McLaren fitted his engine into the team spare car, thus saving Montoya from a 10-place grid penalty. He managed to qualify in seventh place ahead of Räikkönen. The race however was very undramatic for him and a steady performance saw him finish third, earning his first podium finish of the season.

The races at the Nürburgring and the Circuit de Catalunya, however, were very disappointing for Montoya. He qualified in 9th position for the European Grand Prix but then was stuck behind traffic for almost the whole race before his engine failed a few laps from the end. Catalunya saw Montoya failing to qualify in the Top 10 for the first time in the season. He qualified 12th in an underperforming McLaren. He was heavily fuelled and was on a one-stop strategy for the race but he spun and his car got stuck on a kerb and his race was over. Juan Pablo had a solid race at Monaco, inheriting second place 14.5 seconds behind championship leader Fernando Alonso after Räikkönen and Mark Webber went out with engine problems on lap 50. Once again, though, he appeared to be somewhat off his team mate's pace.

Montoya at the 2006 Canadian Grand Prix.

The Canadian Grand Prix saw Montoya pull off a stunning overtaking move on Michael Schumacher on the opening lap, but contact with Nico Rosberg on the next lap and a mistake at the last corner resulted in Montoya bracing the wall and damaging the car, leading to retirement.

The US Grand Prix also brought further disappointment to Montoya's season. An 8-car crash on the first corner saw him retire from the race, yet again taking no points. This crash also involved team-mate Räikkönen, and as one of the main instigators of the crash, this cast further doubt upon Montoya's future in Formula One.

Montoya's Formula One career effectively came to an end on 9 July when he announced in a public press conference from the US that he had signed a contract to run in the NASCAR series from 2007. On 11 July 2006, McLaren-Mercedes announced that Montoya would stop racing for the team with immediate effect, to enable him to prepare for his future career and take time out with his family. This ultimately confirmed Montoya's exit from F1. However, in the press conference on July 14 at the French Grand Prix, Ron Dennis stated that Montoya was still under contract with McLaren-Mercedes and he would remain in contract with the team until the expiration of the deal. Following further speculation that he could start racing in the NASCAR series as early as 2006, Dennis publicly offered Montoya an early exit from his contract with McLaren-Mercedes, provided that he resigned from receiving any payout to terminate his contract.

NASCAR

2006 season

Juan Pablo Montoya practicing for the 2007 Ford 400 at the Homestead-Miami Speedway.

On July 9, 2006, Montoya announced his plans to compete in the NASCAR Nextel Cup series beginning with the 2007 season, racing for Chip Ganassi and Felix Sabates' NASCAR operation, Chip Ganassi Racing, in the No. 42 Texaco/Havoline Dodge. "I'm looking forward to racing in the Nextel Cup Series for Chip Ganassi in the Big Red Dodge. I think I will learn a lot from my teammates and other drivers around me. It will be tough though to get used to the difference in the cars." Montoya made his stock car debut in an Automobile Racing Club of America (ARCA) event at the Talladega Superspeedway on October 6, 2006. He qualified second, led the first nine laps, and finished third when the race was called after 79 of 92 laps. Three weeks later he followed this with an 11th place finish after a mid-race spin at the Sam's Town 250 at Memphis Motorsports Park, his first appearance in NASCAR's second division Busch Series. He competed in the final three races of the Busch Series season, but did not better this performance. On November 19, 2006, Montoya competed for the first time in NASCAR's premier division, the NEXTEL Cup Series. He qualified 29th in the #30 Texaco Dodge at the Ford 400 at Homestead-Miami Speedway. He was running just outside the top 10 when contact with Ryan Newman ended his race on lap 251. His car ended up in the grass engulfed in flames and he was credited with a 34th place finish.


2007 season

Montoya's 2007 NASCAR NEXTEL Cup car at Texas

Montoya visited victory lane three times across three different racing series in 2007. Montoya kicked off 2007 with a win in his first Rolex 24 At Daytona race in the Grand-Am Series. Then, in just his seventh-career Nationwide Series race, Montoya took the checkered flag in Mexico City to earn his first win in a stock car. His abilities on the road course were evident to his competitors when he captured his first Sprint Cup victory after qualifying 32nd at Infineon Raceway. Montoya and his No. 42 crew went on to amass one win, three top-five and six top-10 finishes during the 2007 Sprint Cup season. Montoya also earned the honor of NASCAR Sprint Cup Series 2007 Rookie of the Year.

2008 season

In 2008, Montoya and the No. 42 team amassed two top-five, three top-10 and seven top-15 finishes which include a runner-up finish at Talladega Superspeedway. In addition, Montoya became the first driver in history to win in his first two starts in the Rolex 24 At Daytona, which he won with teammates Scott Pruett, Memo Rojas and Dario Franchitti.

Montoya ended the season 25th in the points standings, 5 spots lower than in 2007.

On November 14 it was announced the Ganassi team would merge with Dale Earnhardt Inc., Montoya was confirmed to drive the #42 as the team switches from Dodge to Chevrolet.


2009 season

It was announced in January that Target would take over as Montoya's primary sponsor for the 2009 Cup season.

Montoya ran in the Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona and finished second after a thrilling duel with David Donohue. Montoya's Lexus did not have the speed that Donohue had in the Porsche he was driving, and when Montoya was slowed by lap traffic in the chicane, Donohue was able to pass Montoya and hold him off to take the victory, denying Montoya his third straight 24 hour win. The margin of victory in the 2009 Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona was 0.167 seconds, making it the closest finish in Rolex 24 hour history.

Montoya finished 14th in the Daytona 500 and finished 11th at Auto Club Speedway.

On April 25, he won his first career pole at the Aaron's 499 at Talladega. After going a lap down Montoya finished 8th at the Pocono 500 at Pocono Raceway. He followed this up a week later with a 6th place at the Lifelock 400 at Michigan Motor Speedway. After racing in the top 10 all day Montoya got his third top 10 in a row with a 6th place at the Toyota/Save Mart 350 at Infineon Raceway in Sonoma. Montoya got his best ever finish at Daytona International Speedway in the Coke Zero 400 where after going a lap down twice he battled back to 9th.

Racing record

Season Series Team Name No. Races Poles Wins Pts Final Placing
1994 Barber Saab Pro Series - 4 12 1 2 125 3rd
1995 British Formula Vauxhall Stewart Racing 4 14 3 3 114 3rd
1996 British Formula Three Fortec Motorsport 4 16 1 2 137 5th
International Touring Car Championship Warsteiner Mercedes-AMG 3 2/26 0 0 0 NC
1997 Formula 3000 RSM Marko 2 9 3 3 37.5 2nd
1998 Formula 3000 Super Nova Racing 1 12 7 4 65 1st
1999 CART Chip Ganassi Racing 4 20 7 7 212 1st
2000 CART Chip Ganassi Racing 1 20 7 3 126 9th
IRL IndyCar Series Chip Ganassi Racing 9 1 0 1 54 25th
2001 Formula One WilliamsF1 6 17 3 1 31 6th
2002 Formula One WilliamsF1 6 17 7 0 50 3rd
2003 Formula One WilliamsF1 3 16 1 2 82 3rd
2004 Formula One WilliamsF1 3 18 0 1 58 5th
2005 Formula One McLaren 10 16 2 3 60 4th
2006 Formula One McLaren 4 10 0 0 26 8th
NASCAR Nextel Cup Chip Ganassi Racing 30 1 0 0 61 69th
2007 NASCAR Nextel Cup Chip Ganassi Racing 42 36 0 1 3487 20th
Rolex 24 At Daytona Telmex Ganassi Racing 01 1 0 1 N/A 1st
NASCAR Busch Series Chip Ganassi Racing 42 15 0 1 1525 22nd
2008 NASCAR Sprint Cup Chip Ganassi Racing 42 36 0 0 3329 25th
Rolex 24 At Daytona Telmex Ganassi Racing 01 1 0 1 N/A 1st
NASCAR Nationwide Series Chip Ganassi Racing 40 2 0 0 230 86th
2009 NASCAR Sprint Cup Earnhardt Ganassi Racing 42 16 1 0 2321 9th (Until yet, season is not finished)
Rolex 24 At Daytona Chip Ganassi Racing 01 1 0 0 N/A 2nd
No. = Car Number

Champ Car

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 Rank Points
1999 Ganassi Reynard Honda MIA
10
MOT
13
LBH
1
NAZ
1
RIO
1
GAT
11
MIL
10
POR
2
CLE
1
ROA
13
TOR
Ret
MIC
2
DET
17
MDO
1
CHI
1
VAN
1
LAG
8
HOU
Ret
SUR
Ret
FON
4
1st 212
2000 Ganassi Lola Toyota MIA
Ret
LBH
Ret
RIO
Ret
MOT
7
NAZ
4
MIL
1
DET
Ret
POR
Ret
CLE
6
TOR
Ret
MIC
1
CHI
12
MDO
Ret
ROA
Ret
VAN
Ret
LAG
6
GAT
1
HOU
2
SUR
Ret
FON
10
9th 126

Complete Formula One results

(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 Points
2001 BMW WilliamsF1 Team Williams FW23 BMW P80 3.0 V10 AUS
Ret
MAL
Ret
BRA
Ret
SMR
Ret
ESP
2
AUT
Ret
MON
Ret
CAN
Ret
EUR
2
FRA
Ret
GBR
4
GER
Ret
HUN
8
BEL
Ret
ITA
1
USA
Ret
JPN
2
6th 31
2002 BMW WilliamsF1 Team Williams FW24 BMW P82 3.0 V10 AUS
2
MAL
2
BRA
5
SMR
4
ESP
2
AUT
3
MON
Ret
CAN
Ret
EUR
Ret
GBR
3
FRA
4
GER
2
HUN
11
BEL
3
ITA
Ret
USA
4
JPN
4
3rd 50
2003 BMW WilliamsF1 Team Williams FW25 BMW P83 3.0 V10 AUS
2
MAL
12
BRA
Ret
SMR
7
ESP
4
AUT
Ret
MON
1
CAN
3
EUR
2
FRA
2
GBR
2
GER
1
HUN
3
ITA
2
USA
6
JPN
Ret
3rd 82
2004 BMW WilliamsF1 Team Williams FW26 BMW P84 3.0 V10 AUS
5
MAL
2
BHR
13
SMR
3
ESP
Ret
MON
4
EUR
8
CAN
DSQ
USA
DSQ
FRA
8
GBR
5
GER
5
HUN
4
BEL
Ret
ITA
5
CHN
5
JPN
7
BRA
1
5th 58
2005 Team McLaren Mercedes McLaren MP4-20 Mercedes FO 110R 3.0 V10 AUS
6
MAL
4
BHR
SMR
ESP
7
MON
5
EUR
7
CAN
DSQ
USA
DNS
FRA
Ret
GBR
1
GER
2
HUN
Ret
TUR
3
ITA
1
BEL
14
BRA
1
JPN
Ret
CHN
Ret
4th 60
2006 Team McLaren Mercedes McLaren MP4-21 Mercedes FO 108S 2.4 V8 BHR
5
MAL
4
AUS
Ret
SMR
3
EUR
Ret
ESP
Ret
MON
2
GBR
6
CAN
Ret
USA
Ret
FRA GER HUN TUR ITA CHN JPN BRA 8th 26


NASCAR Sprint Cup results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position)

Year Team No. Sponsor Make 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 NSCC Points
2006 Chip Ganassi Racing 30 Texaco/Havoline Dodge DAY CAL LSV ATL BRI MAR TEX PHO TAL RIC DAR LOW DOV POC MIC INF DY2 CHI NHA PO2 IND GLN MI2 BR2 CA2 RI2 NH2 DV2 KAN TL2 LW2 MR2 AT2 TX2 PH2 HOM
34
69th 61
2007 Chip Ganassi Racing 42 Texaco/Havoline Dodge DAY
19
CAL
26
LSV
22
ATL
5
BRI
32
MAR
16
TEX
8
PHO
33
TAL
31
RIC
26
DAR
23
LOW
28
DOV
31
POC
20
MIC
43
INF
1
NHA
19
DY2
32
CHI
15
IND
2
PO2
16
GLN
39
MI2
26
BR2
17
CA2
33
RI2
41
NH2
23
DV2
10
KAN
28
TL2
15
LW2
37
MR2
8
AT2
34
TX2
25
PH2
17
HOM
15
20th 3487
2008 Chip Ganassi Racing 42 Texaco Havoline Dodge DAY
32
CAL
20
LSV
19
ATL
16
BRI
15
MAR
13
TEX
19
PHO
16
TAL
2
RIC
32
DAR
23
LOW
30
DOV
12
POC
38
MIC
38
INF
6
NHA
32
DY2
38
CHI
18
IND
38
PO2
40
GLN
4
MI2
25
BR2
19
CA2
20
RI2
31
NH2
17
DV2
39
KAN
20
TL2
25
LW2
34
MR2
14
AT2
40
TX2
43
PH2
17
HOM
17
25th 3329
2009 Earnhardt Ganassi Racing 42 Target Chevy DAY
14
CAL
11
LSV
31
ATL
27
BRI
9
MAR
12
TEX
7
PHO
24
TAL
20
RIC
10
DAR
20
LOW
8
DOV
30
POC
8
MIC
6
INF
6
NHA
12
DY2
9
CHI
10
IND
11
PO2
2
GLN
6
MI2
19
BR2
25
AT2
3
RI2
19
NH2
3
DV2
4
KAN
4
CAL2
3
LW2
35
MR2
3
TL2 TX2 PH2 HOM 5th 5898

*Season in progress.

Year Starts Wins Top Fives Top Tens Poles Rank Team(s)
2006 1 0 0 0 0 69th Chip Ganassi Racing
2007 36 1 3 6 0 20th Chip Ganassi Racing
2008 36 0 2 3 0 25th Chip Ganassi Racing
2009 19 0 0 9 1 9th Earnhardt Ganassi Racing
Totals 92 1 5 18 1 32


External links



24 Hours of Daytona winners
Five-time Hurley Haywood
Four-time Peter Gregg · Pedro Rodríguez ·Rolf Stommelen · Bob Wollek
Three-time Derek Bell · Butch Leitzinger · Scott Pruett · Brian Redman ·Andy Wallace
Two-time Mauro Baldi ·

Elliott Forbes-Robinson · A. J. Foyt · Al Holbert · Jan Lammers · Ken Miles · Juan Pablo Montoya · John Paul, Jr. · Lloyd Ruby · Wayne Taylor · Didier Theys · Al Unser, Jr.

One-time Amon ·

J. Andretti · M. Andretti · Angelelli · Ballot-Léna · Bandini · Barber · Beretta · Bergmeister · Bernhard · Boesel · Borcheller · Bouchut · Boutsen · Brundle · Collard · Dismore · Dixon · Donohue · Dupuy · Durán · Duxbury · Dyson · Elford · Fellows · Field · Fittipaldi · Fitzpatrick · Franchitti · Fréon · Garretson · Gentilozzi · Graves · Gurney · Hasemi · Helmick · Henn · Herrmann · Hezemans · Hill · Hoshino · Ickx · Jelinski · Joest · D. Jones · P. Jones · Kinnunen · Kneifel · Krages · Lässig · Lavaggi · Lienhard · Luyendyk · Martin · Mears · Merl · Millen · Moran · Moretti · Neerpasch · Nielsen · O'Connell · Oliver · Ongais · Pace · Papis · Parsons · Paul, Sr. · Pescarolo · Pilgrim · Rahal · Robinson · Rojas · Schneider · Schrom · Sharp · Siffert · Suzuki · Unser, Sr. · van der Merwe · Weaver · Wendlinger · Werner · Wheldon

Indianapolis 500 Winners
Four-time winners

A. J. FoytAl Unser, Sr.Rick Mears

Three-time winners

MeyerShawRoseRutherfordB. Unser

Two-time winners

MiltonVukovichWardJohncockFittipaldiLuyendykUnser, Jr.Castroneves

One win

HarrounDawsonGouxThomasDePalmaRestaWilcoxChevroletMurphyCorumBoyerDePaoloLockhartSoudersKeechArnoldSchneiderFrameCummingsPetilloRobertsDavisRobsonHollandParsonsWallardRuttmanSweikertFlahertyHanksBryanRathmannJonesClarkHillAndrettiDonohueSnevaSullivanRahalVilleneuveLazierCheeverBrackMontoyade FerranRiceWheldonHornish

Template:Autosport International Racing Driver Award