Carlos Sainz Jr.: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Carlos Sainz Jr 2010 Formula BMW Malaysia April.jpg|thumb|left|Sainz during Race 1 of the [[2010 Formula BMW Pacific season]] at [[Sepang International Circuit]]]] |
[[File:Carlos Sainz Jr 2010 Formula BMW Malaysia April.jpg|thumb|left|Sainz during Race 1 of the [[2010 Formula BMW Pacific season]] at [[Sepang International Circuit]]]] |
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Sainz raced in [[Formula BMW]] Europe in [[2010 Formula BMW Europe season|2010]] with the [[EuroInternational]] team. He was also part of the [[Red Bull Junior Team]] programme. He made his Formula BMW debut during a guest drive in the [[2010 Formula BMW Pacific season|Formula BMW Pacific series]] at [[Sepang International Circuit|Sepang]] |
Sainz raced in [[Formula BMW]] Europe in [[2010 Formula BMW Europe season|2010]] with the [[EuroInternational]] team. He was also part of the [[Red Bull Junior Team]] programme. He made his Formula BMW debut during a guest drive in the [[2010 Formula BMW Pacific season|Formula BMW Pacific series]] at [[Sepang International Circuit|Sepang]], Malaysia where he was ineligible to score points as a guest driver. However, he placed second in the opening race in Malaysia. That debut was followed by a 4th place. The following race day, he retired from the first race but won the second race. It was this start that got him a place at the Red Bull Junior Team.{{citation needed|date=August 2022}} [[Helmut Marko]] applauded Sainz and his strong start in motor racing. He finished 7th in the following race but again exceeded expectations{{opinion|date=February 2022}} by winning again. He missed the next races in China but returned in Singapore. He finished 6th in the first race and 2nd in the second race. He missed the Japanese races but returned to win the season finale in Macau. Overall, in 9 races he achieved 3 pole positions, 2 wins, and 2 fastest laps. |
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In Formula BMW Europe, he started his career with a podium position of 3rd and 6th place at the Circuit de Catalunya. At Zandvoort, he took 5th and 2nd place. At Valencia, he scored 7th and 10th place. A weekend at Silverstone saw him take 3rd place and a victory in the following race, his first that season. Hockenheim saw him take 11th and 6th place. A 4th and a podium position of 3rd enlightened his championship hopes but [[Robin Frijns]] was on a charge, scoring a podium position in every race but 3, two he finished in 4th. A double retirement at Spa put him out of championship contention. An 8th and 6th at the season finale at Monza followed. He finished the season 4th with 227 points. |
In Formula BMW Europe, he started his career with a podium position of 3rd and 6th place at the Circuit de Catalunya. At Zandvoort, he took 5th and 2nd place. At Valencia, he scored 7th and 10th place. A weekend at Silverstone saw him take 3rd place and a victory in the following race, his first that season. Hockenheim saw him take 11th and 6th place. A 4th and a podium position of 3rd enlightened his championship hopes but [[Robin Frijns]] was on a charge, scoring a podium position in every race but 3, two he finished in 4th. A double retirement at Spa put him out of championship contention. An 8th and 6th at the season finale at Monza followed. He finished the season 4th with 227 points. |
Revision as of 16:42, 16 June 2023
Born | Carlos Sainz Vázquez de Castro 1 September 1994 Madrid, Spain |
---|---|
Formula One World Championship career | |
Nationality | Spanish |
Car number | 55 |
Entries | 209 (206 starts) |
Championships | 0 |
Wins | 4 |
Podiums | 27 |
Career points | 1272.5 |
Pole positions | 6 |
Fastest laps | 4 |
First entry | 2015 Australian Grand Prix |
First win | 2022 British Grand Prix |
Last win | 2022 British Grand Prix |
Last entry | 2024 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix |
2022 position | 5th (246 pts) |
Signature | |
Website | Official website |
Previous series | |
2013–14 2013 2012 2012 2011 2010–11 2010 2010 | Formula Renault 3.5 Series GP3 Series FIA European F3 Championship British Formula 3 Formula Renault 2.0 NEC Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 Formula BMW Europe Formula BMW Pacific |
Championship titles | |
2014 2011 | Formula Renault 3.5 Series Formula Renault 2.0 NEC |
Carlos Sainz Vázquez de Castro (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈkaɾlos ˈsajnθ ˈβaθkeθ ðe ˈkastɾo] ; born 1 September 1994), otherwise known as Carlos Sainz Jr. or simply Carlos Sainz,[a] is a Spanish racing driver currently competing in Formula One for Scuderia Ferrari. He is the son of Carlos Sainz Sr., a double World Rally Champion.[3][4][5][6]
In 2012, Sainz raced in the British and European Formula 3 championships for Carlin.[7] He raced for DAMS in the 2014 Formula Renault 3.5 season, winning the championship before moving to F1 with Toro Rosso.[8] Sainz moved to McLaren for the 2019 season, while at the same time ending his contract with Red Bull Racing. At the 2019 Brazilian Grand Prix Sainz took his maiden Formula One podium finish with third. Sainz moved to Ferrari at the end of the 2020 season. At the 2022 British Grand Prix, Sainz took his maiden Formula One pole position and career win.
Early career
This section is written like a personal reflection, personal essay, or argumentative essay that states a Wikipedia editor's personal feelings or presents an original argument about a topic. (August 2022) |
Karting
Born in Madrid, Sainz began his career in karting. In 2008 he won the Asia-Pacific KF3 title, as well as finishing runner-up in the Spanish Championship.[9] In 2009 he won the prestigious Junior Monaco Kart Cup, and was runner-up in the European KF3 Championship.[9]
Formula BMW
This section contains wording that promotes the subject in a subjective manner without imparting real information. (August 2022) |
Sainz raced in Formula BMW Europe in 2010 with the EuroInternational team. He was also part of the Red Bull Junior Team programme. He made his Formula BMW debut during a guest drive in the Formula BMW Pacific series at Sepang, Malaysia where he was ineligible to score points as a guest driver. However, he placed second in the opening race in Malaysia. That debut was followed by a 4th place. The following race day, he retired from the first race but won the second race. It was this start that got him a place at the Red Bull Junior Team.[citation needed] Helmut Marko applauded Sainz and his strong start in motor racing. He finished 7th in the following race but again exceeded expectations[opinion] by winning again. He missed the next races in China but returned in Singapore. He finished 6th in the first race and 2nd in the second race. He missed the Japanese races but returned to win the season finale in Macau. Overall, in 9 races he achieved 3 pole positions, 2 wins, and 2 fastest laps.
In Formula BMW Europe, he started his career with a podium position of 3rd and 6th place at the Circuit de Catalunya. At Zandvoort, he took 5th and 2nd place. At Valencia, he scored 7th and 10th place. A weekend at Silverstone saw him take 3rd place and a victory in the following race, his first that season. Hockenheim saw him take 11th and 6th place. A 4th and a podium position of 3rd enlightened his championship hopes but Robin Frijns was on a charge, scoring a podium position in every race but 3, two he finished in 4th. A double retirement at Spa put him out of championship contention. An 8th and 6th at the season finale at Monza followed. He finished the season 4th with 227 points.
Sainz also competed in the UK Formula Renault Winter Cup, finishing 6th in the first race and retiring from the second race at Snetterton.
Formula Three
During the 2012 season, Sainz raced in both British and Euro Series Formula 3 championships. Racing for Carlin, he won four races, finished nine times on the podium, as well as scoring a pole position in the British championship, finishing sixth overall in the final championship standings. He scored two podiums and two pole positions in the Euro Series championship, finishing in ninth position overall.
GP3
In 2013, Sainz signed with Arden to compete in the GP3 series. Most Red Bull Racing Juniors race for Arden as it is co-owned by Red Bull boss Christian Horner and driver Mark Webber. His first race weekend in the series did not go as expected. During the first qualifying session of the year, he managed to qualify in 5th place and was only 5 tenths off pole sitter Kevin Korjus. However, he, as well as Alex Fontana and Patrick Kujala, were penalised 10 places for ignoring yellow flags during free practice. During the beginning of race one, Sainz managed to get up to 13th place by passing Alex Fontana and Jimmy Eriksson off the start. By the start of lap 3, he was already 13 seconds behind the leader, however, this was due to him being stuck in traffic. Sainz had made it up to 8th place with his teammate Daniil Kvyat until both cars lacked grip. Because they were both pushing to get into the top ten for points, neither driver decided to manage their Pirelli tyres and so by the end of the race, Kvyat was 20th and Sainz managed to get 15th place and so effectively he never gained or lost any positions. However, worryingly for him, he finished 51 seconds off first placed man Tio Ellinas. Sainz started in 15th place for race 2 on Sunday morning. At the end of lap 1, he managed to gain 6 places to find himself in 9th place. As they approached lap 2, the safety car was deployed due to an accident behind, giving Sainz time to save his tyres. With 5 laps remaining, Sainz was up to 8th place. During the next lap, he managed to put a move on Jack Harvey's ART car to move up into 7th place. Sainz eventually would finish in 7th place. However, post race investigating revealed the Sainz's car was underweight, and so he was disqualified from the final results from race 2, thus scoring no points during what was a difficult weekend for not only Sainz but for his teammate, Kvyat, who retired during the race due to contact with another driver.
In Valencia, Sainz began, and finished, the race in 8th place. In race 2, he started in 4th place and managed to get up into 3rd place by the end of lap 1. He remained in that position, scoring a podium for the first time in GP3. Before the weekend, Sainz had not tallied any championship points. By the time the weekend was over, Sainz had managed to obtain 24 world championship points, 4 for fastest laps in both races. He was now in 6th place in the championship and was looking healthy in the title fight.
It was another bad weekend for Sainz at Silverstone, as in both races he got poor results. During the first race, Sainz was squeezed off track, falling to 9th place. By mid distance, it was all looking good and it looked even better when he managed to overtake Lewis Williamson to get into 8th place. Williamson then moved alongside Sainz to try and overtake but Sainz kept moving over towards him until there was contact. Williamson was sent into a spin whilst Sainz continued to circulate round the track. Due to the damage to his car, Sainz fell down the order until he crossed the finish line in 13th place. In race 2, he finished where he started, in 13th place.
Formula Renault 3.5
Sainz raced in Formula Renault 3.5 for the first time in 2013. However, because he was more focused on GP3 at the time he missed several races in his first season. In Monaco he was 6th was after a difficult start to his GP3 season. He had a double retirement in Spa. He missed the Moscow and Austria races but returned to Hungary to take 7th place in Race 1 but 22nd in race 2 after a few problems. In France, at the Circuit de Paul Ricard, he had another double retirement. In the last race weekend of the year in Catulunya, he retired in race 1 but managed to score 6th place.
In 2014, he switched teams to DAMS. In the season opener at Monza, he finished 18th in the first race but won the second. He left Monza with 25 points, beating his previous seasons' score by 3 points. Another win at Aragon meant he doubled his score and in race 2, he finished in 4th. Another 4th place followed at the one race in Monaco. The weekend at Spa followed with another 2 wins. Moscow followed and he did not perform well. 14th and 6th meant that he only took 8 points from a possible 50. At the Nürburgring GP Circuit, he won race 1 but in race 2, he retired. In Hungary, he was no match for Roberto Merhi who led by half a minute from the rest of the field in the wet. Another 6th place followed in race 2. In France, he won and scored a total of 50 points to extend his championship lead over Merhi.
Formula One
Sainz became part of the Red Bull Junior Team in 2010.[10] His first experience in a Formula One car came at the young drivers' test at Silverstone Circuit in July 2013, where he drove both the Toro Rosso STR8 and the Red Bull RB9.[11][12] Sainz confirmed that discussions had taken place with the struggling Caterham team for a race debut during the 2014 season but ultimately no agreement was reached.[13] As a reward for his Formula Renault 3.5 Series title, Sainz drove the Red Bull RB10 in the post-season test after the 2014 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.[14]
Toro Rosso (2015–2017)
2015 season - Debut season
Sainz drove for Scuderia Toro Rosso in the 2015 season where he partnered Max Verstappen, following Daniil Kvyat's promotion to Red Bull.[15] Sainz selected 55 as his race number. He qualified inside the top ten for his début, the Australian Grand Prix, and finished the race in ninth position.[16] He scored points again at the Malaysian Grand Prix, but failed to score at the Chinese Grand Prix after spinning and then retired from the Bahrain Grand Prix with a wheel issue. He qualified fifth at the Spanish Grand Prix, his highest grid position of the year, and finished the race ninth. He was forced to start the Monaco Grand Prix from the pit lane after failing to attend the weigh-bridge during qualifying. He recovered to tenth place in the race.
Four consecutive retirements began with electrical failures at the Austrian and British Grands Prix, then a fuel pressure issue at the Hungarian Grand Prix and a power unit issue at the Belgian Grand Prix. A 150 km/h and 46 g impact into the barriers during practice for the Russian Grand Prix resulted in Sainz spending the night in hospital.[17] He missed qualifying but was declared fit to race, however he failed to finish after a brake failure.[18] He crashed in qualifying for the United States Grand Prix and started from last place, but gained ten positions on the first lap and went on to record his best finish of the year with seventh place. Sainz finished his debut season fifteenth in the Drivers' Championship, scoring 18 of Toro Rosso's 67 points.[19]
2016 season
Toro Rosso retained Sainz and Verstappen for the 2016 championship. Sainz qualified seventh and finished ninth at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, but retired from the Bahrain Grand Prix due to a collision with Sergio Pérez. After the Russian Grand Prix, Sainz gained a new teammate in Daniil Kvyat as Verstappen was promoted to Red Bull. Three points finishes followed for Sainz, including his best career finish with sixth place at the Spanish Grand Prix and a drive from twentieth to ninth place at the Canadian Grand Prix. After a suspension-related retirement at the European Grand Prix, Sainz recorded three consecutive eighth-place finishes.
A run of six races without points followed, including retirement due to a puncture at the Belgian Grand Prix and a first-lap collision with Nico Hülkenberg at the Singapore Grand Prix having started sixth. Sainz equalled his best race result at the United States Grand Prix with sixth place and scored the same result at the Brazilian Grand Prix after starting fifteenth. He retired from the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix due to a collision with Jolyon Palmer. Sainz ended the season twelfth in the Drivers' Championship, scoring 46 of Toro Rosso's 63 points.[20]
2017 season
Sainz and Kvyat remained with Toro Rosso for the 2017 season. Sainz scored points in the opening two races, but a collision with Lance Stroll eliminated him from the Bahrain Grand Prix. Both drivers blamed each other for the incident, but Sainz was handed a grid penalty for the next race.[21] Three points finishes followed including sixth place at the Monaco Grand Prix. Sainz was again handed a grid penalty for a first-lap collision with Romain Grosjean and Felipe Massa at the Canadian Grand Prix.[22] Sainz spun on the first lap of the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, attempting to avoid a collision with teammate Kvyat, and recovered to finish eighth.[23]
Prior to the Austrian Grand Prix, Sainz commented that it was "unlikely" he would remain with Toro Rosso for a fourth year.[24] Red Bull team principal Christian Horner rejected this, stating that Sainz would race for Toro Rosso in 2018.[25] Sainz retired from the Austrian Grand Prix with an engine problem[26] and was eliminated on the first lap of the British Grand Prix after a collision with Kvyat.[27] Prior to the Singapore Grand Prix it was announced that Sainz would join Renault for 2018, on loan from Red Bull.[28] He finished the race in a career-best fourth place, in what he described as his "best day in Formula One".[29] He was joined at Toro Rosso by Pierre Gasly for the Malaysian Grand Prix after Kvyat was dropped by the team.[30] Sainz retired from the race due to an engine problem. He crashed in practice for the Japanese Grand Prix and again on the opening lap of the race.[31] At this stage of the season, Sainz had scored 48 of Toro Rosso's 52 points.[32]
Renault (2017–2018)
2017 season
Sainz's move to Renault was brought forward and he replaced Jolyon Palmer and partnered Nico Hülkenberg at the team for the final four races of 2017, beginning with the United States Grand Prix where he started and finished seventh.[33] Sainz made his way from eighth to fifth place on the first lap of the Mexican Grand Prix but then spun and had to pit for new tyres. He later retired from the race with steering problems.[34] He failed to finish the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix after he was released from a pit stop with a loose wheel.[35] Sainz ended the 2017 season ninth in the Drivers' Championship, scoring 54 points.[36]
2018 season
Over the first eight races of 2018, Sainz qualified in the top ten at each of them and scored points in all but one, finishing eleventh at the Bahrain Grand Prix. These results included the Azerbaijan Grand Prix where he took advantage of a collision between Red Bull teammates Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo to finish a season-high position of fifth.[37] Sainz described his Monaco Grand Prix as a "disaster" and criticised the team's tyre strategy having started eighth and finished tenth.[38] He had run in sixth place for much of the French Grand Prix but dropped to eighth place at the finish after his MGU-K failed.[39] Three races without points followed, including a race-ending crash with Romain Grosjean at the British Grand Prix and a penalty for overtaking during safety car conditions at the German Grand Prix.
Sainz scored points at five of the next seven races, including a season's-best qualifying performance of fifth place at the Hungarian Grand Prix. Damage received from contact with Sergey Sirotkin on the first lap of the Russian Grand Prix resulted in a seventeenth-place finish. Battery issues caused Sainz's retirement from the Mexican Grand Prix. He ended the season with a drive from eleventh on the grid to sixth place at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Sainz finished the season tenth in the Drivers' Championship, three places behind teammate Hülkenberg, scoring 53 of Renault's 122 points. Sainz scored points in thirteen out of the nineteen races he finished.[37][40] Despite this success, he was replaced by Daniel Ricciardo at Renault for the following season, with the team opting to keep Hülkenberg on instead of Sainz.[41]
McLaren (2019–2020)
2019 season
Sainz moved to McLaren for the 2019 season, ending his association with Red Bull. He replaced Fernando Alonso and partnered rookie Lando Norris.[42] Sainz had an unlucky start to the season with no points in the first three races due to an engine fire at the Australian Grand Prix and first-lap collisions at the Bahrain and Chinese Grands Prix. Sainz consistently scored points thereafter, often finishing as the highest-placed driver behind the top three teams of Mercedes, Ferrari and Red Bull. He scored points at eight of the next nine races; notable results were finishing eighth at the Austrian Grand Prix having started nineteenth, and fifth place at the German Grand Prix despite an incident where he spun and stopped on a wet section of the track.
Sainz encountered power issues and retired on the second lap of the Belgian Grand Prix.[43] At the subsequent Italian Grand Prix, he was forced to retire when a wheel was fitted incorrectly during a pit stop.[44] Then at the Singapore Grand Prix, a collision with Nico Hülkenberg and a long pit stop caused him to finish outside the points positions.[45] At the Brazilian Grand Prix, Sainz started in twentieth and last place following an engine problem in qualifying. He had made his way to fifth place by the penultimate lap, which became fourth place when Alex Albon was spun around by Lewis Hamilton ahead. Sainz was later elevated to third place after Hamilton received a penalty, earning him his first podium in Formula One.[46] At the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Sainz passed Hülkenberg on the final lap to take tenth place, scoring one point and earning sixth place in the drivers' championship, one point ahead of Pierre Gasly and four ahead of Albon, both of whom spent part of the season in the superior Red Bull.[47] Sainz scored 96 of McLaren's 145 points over the season.[48]
2020 season
Sainz began the season with a fifth-place finish at the Austrian Grand Prix. He qualified third for the Styrian Grand Prix, his best career qualifying result at that time. A slow pit stop contributed to him dropping to ninth place by the finish, however Sainz achieved his first fastest lap in Formula One and in doing so set a new Red Bull Ring track record.[49] Sainz was in fourth place with two laps of the British Grand Prix remaining but suffered a tyre puncture and was ultimately classified thirteenth. He started the 70th Anniversary Grand Prix outside the top ten, but had progressed to fourth place when he entered the pits. A slow pit stop then dropped him back and he went on to finish thirteenth.[50] He finished his home race, the Spanish Grand Prix, in sixth place, but then failed to start the Belgian Grand Prix due to a power unit issue on a reconnaissance lap.[51]
At the Italian Grand Prix, Sainz qualified third behind the two Mercedes drivers. He lost places during the pit stops and was in sixth place when the race was red-flagged for Charles Leclerc's accident. He passed three cars and benefited from Lewis Hamilton's penalty to move up to second place behind Pierre Gasly with twenty laps remaining. He ultimately finished 0.4 seconds behind Gasly to take his second podium and what was at the time his career best race finish.[52] Sainz retired from the next two races; he was involved in a multi-car start-line accident at the Tuscan Grand Prix and then crashed into a wall on the first lap of the Russian Grand Prix. Seven consecutive points finishes then followed. He finished sixth at the Portuguese Grand Prix having briefly led the race after gaining six positions in the first two laps. He started the Turkish Grand Prix in fifteenth place due to a penalty for impeding Sergio Pérez in qualifying, but gained six positions on the first lap and went on to finish fifth.[53] A brake failure in qualifying at the Bahrain Grand Prix caused him to qualify fifteenth, but he progressed to fifth place by the end of the race.[54]
Sainz finished the 2020 season sixth in the Drivers' Championship for the second consecutive year. He accumulated 105 of McLaren's 202 points and claimed six top-five finishes which, at the time, were both career highs.[55]
Ferrari (2021–present)
2021 season
Sainz joined Scuderia Ferrari on a two-year contract from the 2021 season partnering Charles Leclerc and replacing Sebastian Vettel.[56] He qualified and finished in eighth place at the Bahrain Grand Prix, his first race for the team.[57] He started eleventh at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix but progressed to fifth place by the end of the race.[58] He failed to score points at the Portuguese Grand Prix despite starting fifth, stating "we got it wrong with strategy".[59] He took his third career podium and first with Ferrari at the Monaco Grand Prix, where he benefited from Leclerc's failure to start and a pit stop issue for Valtteri Bottas to finish second.[60] Tyre wear issues meant neither Ferrari driver scored points at the French Grand Prix.[61][62] Sainz recovered from a twelfth-place start at the Styrian Grand Prix to finish sixth. A collision with George Russell on the first lap of sprint qualifying at the British Grand Prix dropped Sainz to the back of the field,[63] but he recovered places in sprint qualifying and in the race to finish sixth.
Sainz crashed in qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix and started fifteenth.[64] He finished fourth on track, but claimed his fourth career podium finish after Sebastian Vettel's disqualification.[65][66] He achieved his then-career-best qualifying position at the Russian Grand Prix, starting second, and took the lead from former teammate Lando Norris on the first lap. Sainz went on to finish the race third.[67] He recovered to eighth place at the Turkish Grand Prix having started from the back of the grid due to engine component penalties. Sainz achieved his fourth podium of the season at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, but criticised the handling of the final-lap restart as being positioned behind lapped cars "nearly cost [him his] podium".[68]
Sainz ended the season fifth in the Drivers' Championship with 164.5 points, two positions and 5.5 points ahead of teammate Leclerc. His ability to adapt quickly to Ferrari and his performances relative to Leclerc were widely praised.[69][70][71]
2022 season - Maiden win and pole position
Sainz continued at Ferrari alongside Leclerc for 2022. He qualified third for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix.[72] He ran in third place until Max Verstappen's retirement, allowing him into second place behind Leclerc to claim a Ferrari 1–2 finish and an early lead in the Constructors' Championship.[73] A mistake and then a red flag in qualifying at the Australian Grand Prix meant he started in ninth place.[74] He dropped places at the start and then spun into the gravel, ending his race on lap two. He crashed in qualifying for the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix and then a collision with Daniel Ricciardo ended his race at the first corner. He finished fourth at the Spanish Grand Prix, his best ever result at his home race, despite having earlier spun and dropped to eleventh.[75][76] Sainz qualified and finished second at the Monaco Grand Prix, but a hydraulics issue caused his third retirement of the year at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. He was runner-up at the Canadian Grand Prix, less than a second behind Verstappen.[77]
For his 150th Formula One race start, the British Grand Prix, Sainz took his first Formula One pole position in a wet qualifying session, beating Verstappen by 0.034 seconds. He was overtaken in the race by Verstappen, but regained the lead when Verstappen slowed with damage. He pitted for soft tyres in the closing laps and passed Leclerc to claim his maiden win in Formula One.[78] Sainz was running third at the Austrian Grand Prix when an engine failure ended his race. He started at the back of the grid at the French Grand Prix after taking new engine components and finished fifth despite a time penalty for an unsafe pit release. He took his second pole position at the Belgian Grand Prix, promoted to the front as Verstappen took an engine penalty, but dropped behind both Red Bulls to finish third.[79]
Sainz finished fifth at the Dutch Grand Prix but was demoted to eighth by a penalty for an unsafe pit release. He started eighteenth at the Italian Grand Prix with an engine component penalty but recovered to finish fourth. At the rain-affected Japanese Grand Prix, he crashed out from third place on the opening lap. He claimed his third pole position at the United States Grand Prix, but retired with damage after being hit by George Russell at the first corner.[80]
Sainz is set to race for Ferrari until the end of 2024 after signing a contract extension.[81]
Karting record
Karting career summary
Season | Series | Team | Position |
---|---|---|---|
2006 | Torneo Industrie — Minikart | 3rd | |
Copa de Campeones — Cadet | 2nd | ||
2007 | Spanish Championship — KF3 | 11th | |
Torneo Industrie — KF3 | 12th | ||
Copa de Campeones — KF3 | 6th | ||
CIK-FIA Asia-Pacific Championship — KF3 | 3rd | ||
2008 | South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 | NC | |
Trofeo Andrea Margutti — KF3 | 7th | ||
CIK-FIA European Championship — KF3 | NC | ||
WSK International Series — KF3 | 16th | ||
Monaco Kart Cup — KF3 | Genikart-LTP | 12th | |
CIK-FIA Asia-Pacific Championship — KF3 | 1st | ||
2009 | South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 | Tony Kart Junior Racing Team | 5th |
Trofeo Andrea Margutti — KF3 | Genikart-LTP | 7th | |
Spanish Championship — KF3 | 2nd | ||
German Karting Championship — Junior | KSM Racing Team | 12th | |
CIK-FIA European Championship — KF3 | Tony Kart Junior Racing Team | 2nd | |
CIK-FIA World Cup — KF3 | 24th | ||
WSK International Series — KF3 | 3rd | ||
Monaco Kart Cup — KF3 | Genikart-LTP | 1st | |
Sources:[82][83] |
Personal life
Carlos Sainz Jr's mother is Reyes Vázquez de Castro/Monic Sainz and his father is Carlos Sainz Sr. His father had become famous through winning many races and winning the World Rally Championship twice.[84] Eventually as Sainz Jr. got older his father mentored him throughout his journey to get in to F1 racing.
Carlos Sainz Jr. is currently dating a fellow Spaniard, Isabel Hernáez. Isabel Hernáez, 27, is of Madrid descent and completed her bachelor's degree in Bilingual Journalism. She is currently employed in the fashion sector as a publicity representative.[85]
Racing record
Racing career summary
† As Sainz was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.
* Season still in progress.
Complete Formula 3 Euro Series
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | Engine | 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 | D.C. | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | Signature | Volkswagen | LEC 1 |
LEC 2 |
LEC 3 |
HOC 1 |
HOC 2 |
HOC 3 |
ZAN 1 |
ZAN 2 |
ZAN 3 |
RBR 1 |
RBR 2 |
RBR 3 |
NOR 1 |
NOR 2 |
NOR 3 |
NÜR 1 |
NÜR 2 |
NÜR 3 |
SIL 1 |
SIL 2 |
SIL 3 |
VAL 1 |
VAL 2 |
VAL 3 |
HOC 1 Ret |
HOC 2 Ret |
HOC 3 5 |
NC* | N/A |
2012 | Carlin | Volkswagen | HOC 1 2 |
HOC 2 5 |
HOC 3 2 |
BRH 1 4 |
BRH 2 6 |
BRH 3 4 |
RBR 1 16† |
RBR 2 7 |
RBR 3 5 |
NOR 1 Ret |
NOR 2 25† |
NOR 3 19 |
NÜR 1 7 |
NÜR 2 15 |
NÜR 3 10 |
ZAN 1 11 |
ZAN 2 9 |
ZAN 3 5 |
VAL 1 Ret |
VAL 2 10 |
VAL 3 6 |
HOC 1 Ret |
HOC 2 13 |
HOC 3 11 |
9th | 112 |
† Driver did not finish the race but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.
Complete GP3 Series results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Entrant | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | D.C. | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | MW Arden | CAT FEA 15 |
CAT SPR DSQ |
VAL FEA 5 |
VAL SPR 3 |
SIL FEA 13 |
SIL SPR 13 |
NÜR FEA 6 |
NÜR SPR 5 |
HUN FEA 5 |
HUN SPR 2 |
SPA FEA Ret |
SPA SPR 13 |
MNZ FEA 9 |
MNZ SPR 9 |
YMC FEA DSQ |
YMC SPR 18 |
10th | 66 |
Complete Formula Renault 3.5 Series results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | Pos. | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | Zeta Corse | MNZ 1 |
MNZ 2 |
ALC 1 |
ALC 2 |
MON 1 6 |
SPA 1 Ret |
SPA 2 18† |
MSC 1 |
MSC 2 |
RBR 1 |
RBR 2 |
HUN 1 7 |
HUN 2 22 |
LEC 1 16† |
LEC 2 Ret |
CAT 1 Ret |
CAT 2 6 |
19th | 22 |
2014 | DAMS | MNZ 1 18 |
MNZ 2 1 |
ALC 1 1 |
ALC 2 4 |
MON 1 4 |
SPA 1 1 |
SPA 2 1 |
MSC 1 14 |
MSC 2 6 |
NÜR 1 1 |
NÜR 2 Ret |
HUN 1 4 |
HUN 2 6 |
LEC 1 1 |
LEC 2 1 |
JER 1 15 |
JER 2 11 |
1st | 227 |
† Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.
Complete Formula One results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicates fastest lap)
† Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.
‡ Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.
* Season still in progress.
Notes
References
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{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Richards, Giles (20 March 2022). "Charles Leclerc wins dramatic Bahrain F1 GP as Ferrari bring home one-two". The Guardian.
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- ^ P, Anjana (17 July 2022). "Carlos Sainz Girlfriend - Isabel Hernaez's Age, Height, Bio, Kids, Instagram, Love Story and Net Worth". The SportsLite. Retrieved 8 November 2022.
External links
- Official website (in Spanish)
- Carlos Sainz Jr. on Twitter
- Carlos Sainz Jr. career summary at DriverDB.com
- Carlos Sainz Jr. at AS.com (in Spanish)
- 1994 births
- Living people
- Sportspeople from Madrid
- Spanish racing drivers
- Karting World Championship drivers
- Formula BMW Pacific drivers
- Formula BMW Europe drivers
- British Formula Renault 2.0 drivers
- Formula Renault Eurocup drivers
- Euroformula Open Championship drivers
- Formula Renault 2.0 NEC drivers
- British Formula Three Championship drivers
- Formula 3 Euro Series drivers
- FIA Formula 3 European Championship drivers
- Spanish GP3 Series drivers
- World Series Formula V8 3.5 drivers
- Spanish Formula One drivers
- Toro Rosso Formula One drivers
- Renault Formula One drivers
- McLaren Formula One drivers
- Ferrari Formula One drivers
- EuroInternational drivers
- Epsilon Euskadi drivers
- Tech 1 Racing drivers
- De Villota Motorsport drivers
- Koiranen GP drivers
- Signature Team drivers
- Carlin racing drivers
- Arden International drivers
- Zeta Corse drivers
- DAMS drivers
- Formula One race winners