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Tiago Monteiro,
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Tiago Vagaroso da Costa Monteiro (
pron. IPA ti'agu ; born
24 July,
1976 in
Porto,
Portugal) is a
Formula One driver for the
MF1 Racing team. In his first Formula One season (2005) he broke the records for most finishes by a driver in a single F1 season, and also achieved a podium position (3rd place).
Early career
Born in
Porto,
Portugal, Monteiro was inspired by his father to begin racing, and drove in the
1997 French Porsche Carrera Cup. He took 5 wins and 5
pole positions to become B-class champion and rookie of the year. In
1998, he moved on to the French
Formula 3 Championship, finishing 12th overall and taking the rookie of the year award. He continued in the championship in
1999, taking one win and three other podium positions to finish 6th overall. He also competed in the
24 hours of Le Mans race, finishing 16th overall and 6th in the GT2 class. In the International Renault Finals held at
Estoril, Monteiro claimed the win after taking pole position and the fastest lap of the race.
In
2000, Monteiro again competed in French F3, this time finishing 2nd in the championship after taking 4 wins throughout the season. He also competed in the single Formula 3
European Championship double-header race, finishing 2nd overall with one win at
Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps. He also competed in a couple of one-off events, coming 2nd in the
Korea Super Prix and 9th at the famous
Macau Grand Prix. In the
Lamborghini Super Trophy, he managed the fastest lap at
Magny-Cours, and both pole position and the fastest lap at
Laguna Seca. In
2002, Monteiro again finished 2nd overall in the French F3 Championship after taking 6 pole positions, 4 wins and 4 podiums. Also competing in the French GT Championship, he managed 4 pole positions, 2 class wins and 5 podium finishes in the GTB class. A one-off entry in the Formula France series saw him win in both races, and in the Andros Trophy, he did one fastest lap with a best finishing position of 4th.
In
2002, he moved up to the
Formula 3000 International Championship with the
Super Nova Racing team, taking 5 top-ten finishing positions on his way to 12th in the championship standings. He also completed the
Renault F1 Driver Development Scheme, and had his first taste of a Formula One car, testing with the Renault team at
Barcelona. In
2003, he joined Fittipaldi Dingman Racing for the
Champ Car World Series, achieving a pole position in
Mexico City and leading two races. He finished the year with 10 top-ten finishes, scoring 29 points to come 15th in the championship. Monteiro was signed up as an official
Minardi test driver for the
2004 season, but also competed in the
Nissan World Series with
Carlin Motorsport. He was named Rookie of the Year after finishing 2nd in the championship, and was ranked fifth in
Autosport magazine's top ten drivers in the Formula One "breeding ground" championships.
Ironically, his middle name "Vagaroso" means "slow" in
Portuguese.
Formula One career
thumb|right|Monteiro at the 2005 US GP.]
After the
Midland Group bought
Jordan Grand Prix, Monteiro was announced as a full-time race driver alongside
Indian Narain Karthikeyan. In the
2005 United States Grand Prix he achieved his first podium finish in farcical circumstances when all but 3 teams pulled out due to arguments over tyre safety (the Michelin-equipped teams pulled out of the race, not taking their place on the grid. The Bridgestone teams were the only ones to run). Monteiro finished 3rd out of just 6 drivers.
left|thumb|200px|Monteiro testing the [MF1 M16 in 2006.]As of the
2005 United States Grand Prix, Tiago is now the most successful Portuguese driver ever in Formula 1 racing.
Pedro Lamy held this record before Tiago with 1 point and 6th place at the
1995 Australian Grand Prix with
Minardi. Also of note, as of the
2005 Belgian Grand Prix (where he also scored another point), Tiago had finished every race of the 2005 season, and holds the record for consecutive finishes for a rookie driver in F1, taking this from
Jackie Stewart, who finished his first 8 races. At the
2005 Brazilian Grand Prix, however, engine failure brought his run to end. Despite this, however, by finishing the last two races of the season in Japan and China, he still managed to break the record for the most finishes in a single season.
Michael Schumacher finished all 17 races of the
2002 season, whilst both he and
Rubens Barrichello finished 17 out of 18 races in
2004. 11th place at the
2005 Chinese Grand Prix meant that he had finished 18 out 19 races.
Near the end of the 2005 season Tiago was involved in an incident with
Colombian driver
Juan Pablo Montoya in the final laps of the
Turkish Grand Prix, the crash damaged Juan Pablo's car and caused him to lose control of it on the penultimate lap letting rival
Fernando Alonso through and ruining
McLaren's chance of a first 1-2 finish since 2000. Some observers consider the accident was caused by a miscalculated maneuver of
In 2006 Midland re-signed Monteiro to partner
Christijan Albers. The two endured a much less successful season, with their car, the M16, not even registering a single point. In the 18 races, Monteiro retired from seven, with his best finish being at the
Hungarian Grand Prix where he finished ninth, just outside the points-scoring positions.
[http://www.manipef1.com/drivers/2006/tmonteiro.php]Although currently unconfirmed, Monteiro is expecting to continue racing for the newly re-named team.
Spyker MF1 Team, as it is known now since its takeover by Spyker, has already signed Albers on for
2007[cite news| title = Spyker retain Albers for 2007| publisher = Manipe F1| url = http://www.manipef1.com/news/2006/index.php?id=1608| date = 2006-09-29| accessdate = ], with Monteiro set to announce his confirmation "Very soon".
[cite news| title = Monteiro expecting 2007 seat| publisher = Manipe F1| url = http://www.manipef1.com/news/2006/index.php?id=1726| date = 2006-10-20| accessdate = ]Complete Formula One results
(
key)
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; font-size:95%"
! Yr
! Team
! 1
! 2
! 3
! 4
! 5
! 6
! 7
! 8
! 9
! 10
! 11
! 12
! 13
! 14
! 15
! 16
! 17
! 18
! 19
! Team
! WDC
! Points
|-
|align="left"|
2005!align="left"|
Jordan|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
AUS16|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
MYS12|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
BAH10|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
SMR13|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
ESP12|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
MON13|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
EUR15|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
CAN10|bgcolor="#FFDF9F"|
USA3|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
FRA13|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
GBR17|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
DEU17|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
HUN13|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
TUR15|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
ITA17|bgcolor="#DFFFDF"|
BEL8|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"|
BRARet|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
JPN13|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
CHN11!align="left"|
Jordan! 16th
! 7
|-
|align="left"|
2006!align="left"|
MF1|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
BAH17|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
MYS13|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"|
AUSRet|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
SMR16|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
EUR12|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
SPA16|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
MON15|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
GBR16|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
CAN19|bgcolor="#EFCEFF"|
USARet|bgcolor="#EFCEFF"|
FRARet|bgcolor="#000000" style="color: white;"|
DEUDSQ|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
HUN9|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"|
TURRet|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"|
ITARet|bgcolor="#EFCFFF"|
CHNRet|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
JPN16|bgcolor="#CFCFFF"|
BRA15|
!align="left"|
MF1! 21st
! 0
|}
References
External links
*
http://www.tiagoracing.com/ The official website for Tiago Monteiro*
http://www.f1db.com/f1/page/Tiago_Monteiro Tiago Monteiro profile and statisticsMonteiro, TiagoMonteiro, TiagoMonteiro, TiagoMonteiro, TiagoMonteiro, Tiagocommons|Tiago
Formula One
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