Michele Alboreto

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Michele Alboreto driving for Ferrari
Michele Alboreto
Nationality 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Italian
Years 1981 - 1994
Team(s) Tyrrell, Ferrari, Larrousse, Arrows, Minardi
Races 215
Championships 0
Wins 5
Podiums 22
Poles 2
Fastest laps 5
First race 1981 San Marino Grand Prix
First win 1982 Las Vegas Grand Prix
Last win 1985 German Grand Prix
Last race 1994 Australian Grand Prix

Michele Alboreto (December 23, 1956 - April 25, 2001) was a Formula One driver who participated during seasons 1981 to 1994 in Tyrrell, Ferrari, Larrousse, Arrows, BMS Scuderia Italia and Minardi. Alboreto studied design, and started racing in 1976 in a car designed by himself; it was called CMR and was raced in Formula Monza without success. He moved to Formula 3 in 1978 and in 1979 finished third in the Italian F3 series. He moved to the European Championship in 1980 while doing endurance races for Lancia. In 1981 he won the Euroracing title, which resulted in a move to the Minardi Formula 2 team, while maintaining his connections with Lancia and partnering with Riccardo Patrese to win the Watkins Six Hours. He scored Minardi's only Formula 2 victory, at Misano, and made his Formula One debut in the 1981 San Marino GP, on board a Tyrrell. While with that team, he gained the distinction of giving the famous Cosworth DFV its last F1 victory (of 155!), at the Detroit GP in 1983.

After leaving Formula One he won the 1997 24 hours of Le Mans with Stefan Johansson and Tom Kristensen in a TWR-run Porsche.

He was killed testing an Audi R8 sports car when he suffered a high-speed tire failure at the Lausitzring in eastern Germany.

To this day he holds the following records:

  • Most Fastest Laps in a Season (5) – set at 1987 Japan
  • Most 5th Fastest Laps (14) – set at 1988 Germany
  • Most 5th Fastest Laps (15) – set at 1988 Portugal
  • Most Consecutive 7th Place Finishes (4) – set at 1992 Germany
  • Most 7th Place Finishes in a Season (5) – set at 1992 Hungary
  • Most 7th Place Finishes in a Season (6) – set at 1992 Italy
  • Most 25th Place Qualifications (12) – set at 1993 Portugal

External links



3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Scuderia Ferrari
Personnel:
22px-Flag of France.png Jean Todt | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Mario Almondo | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Stefano Domenicali | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Luca Baldisseri
Current drivers:
22px-Flag of Finland.png Kimi Räikkönen | 22px-Flag of Brazil.png Felipe Massa | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Luca Badoer | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Giancarlo Fisichella (Test Driver) 22px-Flag of Spain.png Marc Gené (Test Driver)
Notable Former drivers:
22px-Flag of Germany.png Michael Schumacher | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Alberto Ascari | 22px-Flag of Argentina.png Juan Manuel Fangio | 22px-Flag of the United Kingdom.png Mike Hawthorn | 22px-Flag of Austria.png Niki Lauda | 22px-Flag of South Africa.png Jody Scheckter | 22px-Flag of the United Kingdom.png John Surtees | 22px-Flag of the United States.png Phil Hill | 22px-Flag of Brazil.png Rubens Barrichello | 22px-Flag of the United Kingdom.png Eddie Irvine | 22px-Flag of France.png Jean Alesi | 22px-Flag of France.png Alain Prost | 22px-Flag of the United Kingdom.png Nigel Mansell | 22px-Flag of Austria.png Gerhard Berger | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Michele Alboreto | 22px-Flag of France.png René Arnoux | 22px-Flag of France.png Patrick Tambay | 22px-Flag of the Canada.png Gilles Villeneuve | 22px-Flag of Argentina.png Carlos Reutemann | 20px-Flag of Switzerland.png Clay Regazzoni | 22px-Flag of the United States.png Mario Andretti | 22px-Flag of Belgium (civil).png Jacky Ickx | 22px-Flag of Germany.png Wolfgang Graf Berghe von Trips | 3dflagsdotcom italy2bs.gif Lorenzo Bandini
Formula One cars:
125 | 275 | 340 | 375 | 500 | 553 | 625 | 555 | D50 | 801 | 412 | 246 | 256 | 156 | 158 | 1512 | 312 | 312B | 312T | 126C | 156/85 | F1/86 | F1/87 | 640 | 641 | 642 | 643 | F92A | F93A | 412T | F310 | F310B | F300 | F399 | F1-2000 | F2001 | F2002 | F2002B | F2003-GA | F2004 | F2004M | F2005 | 248 | F2007 | F2008 | F60 | F10 | 150° Italia | F2012


24 Hours of Le Mans winners
Eight-time Tom Kristensen
Six-time Jacky Ickx
Five-time Derek Bell · Frank Biela · Emanuele Pirro
Four-time Yannick Dalmas · Olivier Gendebien · Henri Pescarolo
Three-time Woolf Barnato  ·Rinaldo Capello ·Luigi Chinetti ·Hurley Haywood · Phil Hill  · Al Holbert  · Klaus Ludwig ·Marco Werner
Two-time Henry Birkin ·

Ivor Bueb · Ron Flockhart · Jean-Pierre Jaussaud · Gérard Larrousse · JJ Lehto · Allan McNish · Manuel Reuter · André Rossignol · Raymond Sommer · Hans-Joachim Stuck · Gijs van Lennep · Jean-Pierre Wimille

One-time Aïello ·

Alboreto · Amon · Ara · Attwood · Baldi · Bandini · Barilla · Barth · Benjafield · Benoist · Bianchi · Bloch · Blundell · Bouchut · Brabham · Brundle · Chaboud · Clement · Cobb · Davis · de Courcelles · Dickens · Duff · Dumfries · Étancelin · Fontés · Foyt · Frère · Gachot · González · Gregory · Guichet · Gurney · Hamilton · Hawthorn · Hélary · Herbert · Herrmann · G. Hill · Hindmarsh · Howe · Johansson · Jones · Kidston · Krages · Lagache · Lammers · Lang · Léonard · Marko · Martini · Mass · McLaren · Mitchell-Thomson · Nielsen · Nuvolari · Oliver · Ortelli · Pironi · Riess · Rindt · Rodríguez · Rolt · Rondeau · J. Rosier · L. Rosier · Rubin · Salvadori · Sanderson · Scarfiotti · Schuppan · Sekiya · Shelby · Smith · Trémoulet · Trintignant · Vaccarella · Veyron · Walker · Wallace · Warwick · Weidler · Whitehead · B. Whittington · D. Whittington · Winkelhock · Wurz