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Nyck de Vries

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Nyck de Vries
De Vries in 2019
BornHendrik Johannes Nicasius de Vries
(1995-02-06) 6 February 1995 (age 29)
Uitwellingerga, Netherlands
Formula One World Championship career
NationalityNetherlands Dutch
Active years20222023
TeamsWilliams, AlphaTauri
Car number21
Entries11 (11 starts)
Championships0
Wins0
Podiums0
Career points2
Pole positions0
Fastest laps0
First entry2022 Italian Grand Prix
Last entry2023 British Grand Prix
2023 position22nd (0 points)
Formula E career
Debut season2019–20
Current teamMahindra Racing
Racing licence FIA Platinum
Car number21
Former teamsMercedes EQ Formula E Team
Starts43
Wins4
Podiums8
Poles2
Fastest laps265
Best finish1st in 2020–21
Finished last season9th (106 points)
Previous series
201719
2016
2015
201314
201214
2012
FIA Formula 2 Championship
GP3 Series
Formula Renault 3.5 Series
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC
Championship titles
2020–21
2019
2014
2014
Formula E World Championship
FIA Formula 2 Championship
Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps

Hendrik Johannes Nicasius "Nyck" de Vries[1] (Dutch: [nɪk ˈvriːs]; born 6 February 1995) is a Dutch racing driver currently competing for Mahindra Racing in Formula E and Toyota Gazoo Racing in the FIA World Endurance Championship. He won the 2020–21 Formula E World Championship and the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship as well as the 2010 and 2011 Karting World Championships. He was signed to the McLaren Young Driver Programme from January 2010 until May 2019. De Vries made his Formula One debut in September 2022 as a substitute for Williams at the 2022 Italian Grand Prix. He joined Scuderia AlphaTauri for the 2023 season but was released after the 2023 British Grand Prix – the 10th race of that 22-race season.

Early career

Karting

In 2008, De Vries won the WSK World Series for the KF3 category, as well as the German Junior Championship. In 2009 he retained both his German Junior and WSK World Series titles, as well as winning the European KF3 Championship. In September he won the 2010 Karting World Championship. He also won the World Championship in 2011.

Formula Renault Eurocup

2012

De Vries in 2012

In 2012, De Vries switched to single-seaters, being given a cockpit in the Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 at R-ace GP. De Vries achieved his first podium finish at his debut race in Alcañiz with a second place, and he managed to repeat this result at the Hungaroring. De Vries finished the season in fifth place, beating all of his teammates. In addition, De Vries took part in several races of the Formula Renault 2.0 NEC, in which he managed a victory at his home track in Assen. He was on the podium four times in eleven starts in the series and ended up tenth in the drivers' standings.

2013

The following year De Vries switched to Koiranen GP for his second season in the series. He won one race each at the Hungaroring and the Circuit de Catalunya and again ended the season in fifth place in the championship.

2014

In 2014, De Vries stayed with Koiranen and competed in his third season of the Eurocup. He won six races and finished on the podium in 11 of 14 races. With 254 points to 124, he convincingly beat the runner-up Dennis Olsen in the championship. In addition, he took part in the entire Alpine Formula Renault season. He won 10 out of 14 races and only failed to make the podium twice.

Formula Renault 3.5 Series

In 2015, De Vries made the switch to the Formula Renault 3.5 Series, racing for DAMS. He was on the podium five times before winning the final race of the season at the Circuito de Jerez, putting him third in the final standings with 160 points, only placing behind Oliver Rowland and Matthieu Vaxivière.

GP3 Series

De Vries took part in the GP3 Series in 2016 in with ART Grand Prix. He scored his first podium at the Red Bull Ring with a third place, then obtained his first pole in Budapest. It wasn't until the second race at Monza that he took his first win, a result he replicated at the Yas Marina Circuit at the end of the season. He finished sixth in the championship, behind his teammates Charles Leclerc and Alexander Albon, who became champion and vice-champion respectively.

FIA Formula 2 Championship

2017

In 2017, De Vries switched to the FIA Formula 2 Championship with Rapax.[2] He achieved his first win in the Monte Carlo sprint race and scored a further three podium finishes before the summer break.[3] Before the round at Spa-Francorchamps De Vries switched to Racing Engineering, with whom he scored a second place at that very round. He ended his season seventh in the championship, placing second-highest of all rookies.

2018

De Vries at the Red Bull Ring during the 2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship

For the 2018 season, De Vries moved to partner Sean Gelael at Prema Racing.[4] His season started slowly with just two podiums from the opening third of the season putting him a fair way behind his title rivals. De Vries' first victory of the campaign in the sprint race at Le Castellet was followed by a point-less round in Austria and two finishes outside the top five in Silverstone.[5] Following that however the Dutch driver's form improved, winning the feature races in Hungary and Belgium respectively.[6][7] However, even with his sixth podium of the season in the Sochi feature race, De Vries was unable to finish in the top three in the standings, being beaten by Alex Albon and Lando Norris by ten and 17 points respectively.

2019

De Vries at the 2019 Spielberg Formula 2 round with ART Grand Prix

In 2019, De Vries remained in Formula 2, returning to his former team ART Grand Prix alongside 2018 GP3 vice-champion Nikita Mazepin.[8] His season started in strong fashion with a podium in Baku and a sprint race victory in Barcelona.[9] He followed that up with a win from pole position in Monaco and took the championship lead by winning the main race at Le Castellet.[10][11] A pair of third places at the Red Bull Ring and a podium each in Silverstone and Budapest extended De Vries' advantage,[12] and following another pair of thirds in Monza he had put one hand onto the trophy. After his fourth and final victory of the season, which came at the penultimate round in Sochi, De Vries was mathematically crowned Formula 2 champion.[13]

FIA World Endurance Championship

De Vries at the 2018 6 Hours of Silverstone

On 15 March 2018, De Vries signed at Racing Team Nederland to compete in the LMP2 class.[14] He won the 6 hours of Fuji on 6 October 2019 with this team, their first win in this class.[15] De Vries drove the last stint and put the car over the finish line.

On 6 July 2020, De Vries was announced as the Toyota Gazoo Racing Europe GmbH test and reserve driver. His roles include testing the Toyota TS050 Hybrid and Toyota's hypercar.[16]

During the test week prior to the 2022 24 Hours of Le Mans the ACO officials prohibited TDS Racing x Vaillante driver Philippe Cimadomo from starting. Due to his reserve role for the Toyota Hypercar team, De Vries was already at the circuit and was asked to step in.[17] Because of the bronze status of Philippe Cimadomo and the platinum status of De Vries, the car was moved from Pro/Am to Pro.

On 20 November 2023, De Vries was announced as one of the primary drivers for the #7 Toyota Gazoo Racing Hypercar, replacing the outgoing José María López.[18]

Formula E

Mercedes–EQ Formula E Team (2019–2022)

2019–20 season

On 11 September 2019, De Vries was announced as a driver for the new Mercedes-Benz EQ Formula E Team for the 2019–20 Formula E season alongside Stoffel Vandoorne, after failing to find a seat in Formula One for the 2020 Formula One season.[19] The team finished the season with a 1–2, Vandoorne leading De Vries, who finished the season in 11th with 60 points.[20]

2020–21 season

For the 2020–21 season, De Vries continued at the renamed Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team with Stoffel Vandoorne.[21] He qualified on pole for the first race of the season-opening Diriyah ePrix double-header, proceeding to lead every lap en route to his first-ever victory in the series. Before the second race De Vries did not take part in qualifying as Mercedes and Venturi Racing, who were both using Mercedes powertrains, were suspended from the session following the crash of Edoardo Mortara during a practice start procedure. In the race, the Dutchman finished ninth after penalties were issued to multiple cars. At the round in Rome De Vries failed to score points in both races, having collided with his teammate Vandoorne and Sam Bird respectively in the two races. De Vries achieved his second victory of the season in Valencia, where he was one of the only drivers to not run out of usable energy before the end of the race.[22]

Nyck de Vries during the 2021 London ePrix

Following two rounds in which he only amassed a total of two points, De Vries fought for victory in both races of the London ePrix and finished in second place in both races, thus taking the lead in the championship before the final round.[23] In the first race in Berlin he did not score any points but managed to maintain his lead in the standings. Having qualified 13th for the final race of the season, De Vries was given an early advantage when title rivals Mitch Evans and Edoardo Mortara collided at the start, and fellow contender Jake Dennis was involved in a crash shortly after the restart.[24][25] De Vries finished the race in eighth place, thus winning his first ever World Championship in Formula E.[26] The Dutchman ended the campaign with a total of two wins, four podiums and 99 points, seven ahead of vice-champion Mortara.

2021–22 season

De Vries and Stoffel Vandoorne remained with Mercedes for their swansong season in Formula E.[27] De Vries won the first race of season 8 in Diriyah, and got pole the next day, but finished in 10th, and ended the championship in 9th with 106 points.[20] De Vries left at the end of the season, securing a contract to compete in Formula One.

Mahindra Racing (2024)

2023–24 season

After having his Formula One career cut short, Mahindra Racing announced that De Vries will team up with Edoardo Mortara, who moved from Maserati MSG Racing, for the 2023–24 season.[28]

Formula One career

De Vries driving for Mercedes during free practice for the 2022 French Grand Prix.

De Vries was signed to the McLaren Young Driver Programme in 2010,[29] and the Audi Sport Racing Academy in 2016. He left McLaren before the 2019 season to focus on his duties at Audi, where he stayed until September 2019.[30]

Test and reserve driver

In December 2020, De Vries and fellow Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team driver Stoffel Vandoorne performed their first Formula One test for the Mercedes team at the season-ending Young Driver Test.[31] The following year he became one of the two reserve drivers for the team, again partnered with his Mercedes-EQ teammate Stoffel Vandoorne.[32]

He made his Formula 1 practice debut at the 2022 Spanish Grand Prix, where he took Alex Albon's place at Williams for the hour-long session.[33] For the French Grand Prix, De Vries ran in another practice session at Mercedes, taking seven-time World Champion Lewis Hamilton's place.[34] De Vries then again drove a Mercedes in free practice for the Mexico City Grand Prix in place of George Russell.[35]

In September, De Vries tested the Alpine A521 at the Hungaroring, alongside Antonio Giovinazzi and Jack Doohan.[36]

For the 2022 São Paulo Grand Prix, De Vries was appointed as Lando Norris' replacement at McLaren in case Norris was unable to race, as the English driver was suffering from food poisoning after a meal on Thursday. De Vries even had a seat fitting with the McLaren car. However, Norris recovered the next day and was able to complete the Grand Prix.[37]

Race debut on loan to Williams (2022)

At the Italian Grand Prix, De Vries took part in first practice in place of Sebastian Vettel at Aston Martin.[38] De Vries then replaced Alex Albon at Williams for each of third practice, qualifying, and the race, after Albon suffered appendicitis and was ruled out on Saturday morning.[39] He managed to advance to Q2 and qualify thirteenth, ahead of his Williams teammate Nicholas Latifi. He started eighth after penalties were applied to multiple drivers.[40] He finished the race in ninth position, scoring points on his race debut and was rewarded with Driver of the Day by fans.[41]

AlphaTauri (2023)

De Vries at the 2023 Austrian Grand Prix

De Vries was signed by Scuderia AlphaTauri for the 2023 season, replacing Alpine-bound Pierre Gasly.[42]

De Vries qualified 19th and finished 14th for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix[43] and followed that result by qualifying 18th and finishing 14th at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

He qualified 15th making Q2 for the first time at the Australian Grand Prix but he retired from a chaotic race after Logan Sargeant crashed into the back of him taking both cars out and he was classified in 15th. De Vries crashed in qualifying for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. He qualified last for the sprint and finished the shorter race 14th. He crashed out of the main race on lap 10 after clipping the wall at turn 5. In both the races that he retired from, teammate Tsunoda had scored points putting pressure on de Vries for his results to improve.

De Vries qualified 15th in the Miami Grand Prix, out-qualifying teammate Tsunoda for the first time that year. In the race he drove into the back of Lando Norris' McLaren at the start ending his chance of a good result. He finished the race 18th and 24 seconds behind Tsunoda.

De Vries qualified 12th in Monaco and finished the race where he started in 12th but he beat Tsunoda for the first time that year in a race. De Vries qualified 14th in Spain out qualifying Tsunoda for the second time that year but he finished the race in 14th behind Tsunoda. De Vries Qualified and finished the race 18th in Canada whilst coming under criticism for forcing Kevin Magnussen off the road on lap 35.

De Vries qualified last for the Austrian Grand Prix but qualified 14th for the sprint and finished the shorter race 17th. He finished 17th in the main race after receiving a 15-second time penalty for numerous track limit infringements and another 5-second penalty for forcing Magnussen off track for the second race in a row. After the race, Magnussen said De Vries was driving like a desperate man. De Vries qualified 18th and finished 17th and last at the British Grand Prix. With 10 races of the season completed, de Vries was 20th and last in the drivers championship having scored 0 points whilst teammate Tsunoda had scored 2 points.

Two days after the Silverstone race, De Vries was released by AlphaTauri with Daniel Ricciardo replacing him for the rest of the season.[44][45] Prior to his dismissal, De Vries was criticised for his performance, most notably by Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko.[46][47] The decision to dismiss De Vries halfway through his rookie season was criticised by several Dutch and Formula E racing drivers.[48]

IndyCar Series

De Vries took part in an IndyCar test with Meyer Shank Racing at Sebring International Raceway on 6 December 2021,[49] alongside his Formula E teammate Stoffel Vandoorne, who tested for Arrow McLaren SP, Callum Ilott and Jack Aitken. Four-time Indianapolis 500 winner Helio Castroneves helped familiarize De Vries with the Dallara DW12. He set the fastest times in the test amongst the four drivers.[50]

Karting record

Karting career summary

Season Series Team Position
2004 Open Belgian Championship — Mini 10th
2005 Championnat de France — Minimes 20th
2006 Belgian Championship — Cadet 2nd
Dutch Championship — ICA Junior 3rd
2007 Chrono Rotax Max Winter Cup — Junior 2nd
Dutch KNAF Championship — KF3 2nd
Chrono Dutch Rotax Max Challenge — Junior 2nd
Rotax Max Challenge Belgium — Junior 2nd
Belgian Championship — KF3 2nd
2008 South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 De Vries Competition 7th
Trofeo Andrea Margutti — KF3 6th
German Karting Championship — Junior 1st
WSK International Series — KF3 1st
Tom Trana Trophy — KF3 4th
Championnat de France — KF3 16th
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF3 Chiesa Corse NC
CIK-FIA Monaco Kart Cup — KF3 10th
Bridgestone Cup European Final — KF3 2nd
2009 South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 Chiesa Corse 28th
Trofeo Andrea Margutti — KF3 2nd
Belgian Championship — KF3 18th
German Karting Championship — Junior De Vries Competition 1st
CIK-FIA European ChampionshipKF3 Chiesa Corse 1st
CIK-FIA World CupKF3 5th
CIK-FIA Monaco Kart Cup — KF3 4th
WSK International Series — KF3 1st
2010 South Garda Winter Cup — SKF Chiesa Corse 14th
CIK-FIA World CupSKF 3rd
WSK Euro SeriesSKF 2nd
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipSKF 1st
WSK World Series — SKF 2nd
2011 South Garda Winter Cup — KZ2 15th
WSK Euro SeriesKF1 Chiesa Corse 1st
CIK-FIA World ChampionshipKF1 1st

Racing record

Racing career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2012 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 R-ace GP 14 0 0 1 2 78 5th
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC 11 1 1 2 4 166 10th
2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 Koiranen GP 14 2 1 2 5 113 5th
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps 6 0 0 0 2 68 8th
2014 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 Koiranen GP 14 5 6 5 10 254 1st
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps 14 9 9 10 12 300 1st
2015 Formula Renault 3.5 Series DAMS 17 1 1 1 6 160 3rd
2016 GP3 Series ART Grand Prix 18 2 1 1 5 133 6th
2017 FIA Formula 2 Championship Rapax 13 1 0 0 4 114 7th
Racing Engineering 8 0 0 2 1
2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship Pertamina Prema Theodore Racing 24 3 2 4 6 202 4th
2018–19 FIA World Endurance Championship - LMP2 Racing Team Nederland 6 0 0 2 0 64 9th
2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship ART Grand Prix 22 4 5 3 12 266 1st
24 Hours of Le Mans - LMP2 Racing Team Nederland 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 15th
2019–20 Formula E Mercedes-Benz EQ Formula E Team 11 0 0 0 1 60 11th
FIA World Endurance Championship - LMP2 Racing Team Nederland 6 1 0 2 2 99 10th
FIA World Endurance Championship - LMP1 Toyota Gazoo Racing Reserve driver
2020 European Le Mans Series G-Drive Racing 3 1 0 1 2 43 5th
Formula One Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team Test driver
2020–21 Formula E Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team 15 2 1 2 4 99 1st
2021 European Le Mans Series G-Drive Racing 5 1 2 0 2 67 5th
FIA World Endurance Championship - LMP2 1 0 0 0 0 0 NC†
Racing Team Nederland 1 0 0 0 1 15 19th
Formula One Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team Reserve driver
FIA World Endurance Championship - Hypercar Toyota Gazoo Racing Reserve driver
2021–22 Formula E Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team 16 2 1 1 3 106 9th
2022 Formula One Williams Racing 1 0 0 0 0 2 21st
Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team Reserve/Third driver
McLaren F1 Team Reserve driver
Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant Formula One Team Test driver
24 Hours of Le Mans - LMP2 TDS Racing x Vaillante 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 4th
FIA World Endurance Championship - Hypercar Toyota Gazoo Racing Reserve driver
2023 Formula One Scuderia AlphaTauri 10 0 0 0 0 0 22nd
2023–24 Formula E Mahindra Racing 3 0 0 0 0 0* 17th*
2024 FIA World Endurance Championship - Hypercar Toyota Gazoo Racing

As De Vries was a guest driver, he was ineligible for championship points.

Complete Formula Renault 2.0 North European Cup 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 17 18 19 20 Pos Points
2012 R-ace GP HOC
1

32
HOC
2

6
HOC
3

22
NÜR
1

4
NÜR
2

2
OSC
1
OSC
2
OSC
3
ASS
1

2
ASS
2

1
RBR
1

5
RBR
2

3
MST
1
MST
2
MST
3
ZAN
1
ZAN
2
ZAN
3
SPA
1

8
SPA
2

14
10th 166

Complete Formula Renault 2.0 NEC 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 Pos Points
2012 R-ace GP ALC
1

2
ALC
2

16
SPA
1

Ret
SPA
2

16
NÜR
1

4
NÜR
2

Ret
MSC
1

Ret
MSC
2

4
HUN
1

4
HUN
2

2
LEC
1

7
LEC
2

13
CAT
1

22
CAT
2

27
5th 78
2013 Koiranen GP ALC
1

9
ALC
2

7
SPA
1

Ret
SPA
2

8
MSC
1

10
MSC
2

16
RBR
1

15
RBR
2

12
HUN
1

3
HUN
2

1
LEC
1

3
LEC
2

12
CAT
1

1
CAT
2

2
5th 113
2014 Koiranen GP ALC
1

1
ALC
2

4
SPA
1

2
SPA
2

3
MSC
1

Ret
MSC
2

2
NÜR
1

1
NÜR
2

4
HUN
1

3
HUN
2

7
LEC
1

1
LEC
2

1
JER
1

1
JER
2

2
1st 254

Complete Formula Renault 2.0 Alps 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 Pos Points
2014 Koiranen GP IMO
1

1
IMO
2

1
PAU
1

1
PAU
2

1
RBR
1

3
RBR
2

3
SPA
1

1
SPA
2

1
MNZ
1

4
MNZ
2

6
MUG
1

1
MUG
2

1
JER
1

2
JER
2

1
1st 300

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
2015 DAMS ALC
1

7
ALC
2

2
MON
1

11
SPA
1

9
SPA
2

2
HUN
1

11
HUN
2

9
RBR
1

3
RBR
2

5
SIL
1

4
SIL
2

Ret
NÜR
1

2
NÜR
2

3
BUG
1

7
BUG
2

10
JER
1

4
JER
2

1
3rd 160

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 17 18 Pos Points
2016 ART Grand Prix CAT
FEA

9
CAT
SPR

5
RBR
FEA

3
RBR
SPR

4
SIL
FEA

5
SIL
SPR

8
HUN
FEA

20
HUN
SPR

13
HOC
FEA

2
HOC
SPR

8
SPA
FEA

3
SPA
SPR

8
MNZ
FEA

7
MNZ
SPR

1
SEP
FEA

13
SEP
SPR

6
YMC
FEA

1
YMC
SPR

11
6th 133

Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of the top ten finishers)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 DC Points
2017 Rapax BHR
FEA

10
BHR
SPR

6
CAT
FEA

10
CAT
SPR

Ret
MON
FEA

7
MON
SPR

1
BAK
FEA

2
BAK
SPR

Ret
RBR
FEA

13
RBR
SPR

16†
SIL
FEA

DNS
SIL
SPR

7
HUN
FEA

3
HUN
SPR

3
7th 114
Racing Engineering SPA
FEA

5
SPA
SPR

2
MNZ
FEA

18
MNZ
SPR

12
JER
FEA

13
JER
SPR

6
YMC
FEA

4
YMC
SPR

9
2018 Pertamina Prema
Theodore Racing
BHR
FEA

6
BHR
SPR

5
BAK
FEA

Ret
BAK
SPR

2
CAT
FEA

2
CAT
SPR

Ret
MON
FEA

Ret
MON
SPR

9
LEC
FEA

5
LEC
SPR

1
RBR
FEA

Ret
RBR
SPR

14
SIL
FEA

7
SIL
SPR

6
HUN
FEA

1
HUN
SPR

7
SPA
FEA

1
SPA
SPR

4
MNZ
FEA

9
MNZ
SPR

17
SOC
FEA

3
SOC
SPR

4
YMC
FEA

4
YMC
SPR

5
4th 202
2019 ART Grand Prix BHR
FEA

6
BHR
SPR

7
BAK
FEA

2
BAK
SPR

4
CAT
FEA

5
CAT
SPR

1
MON
FEA

1
MON
SPR

7
LEC
FEA

1
LEC
SPR

10
RBR
FEA

3
RBR
SPR

3
SIL
FEA

6
SIL
SPR

3
HUN
FEA

2
HUN
SPR

6
SPA
FEA

C
SPA
SPR

C
MNZ
FEA

3
MNZ
SPR

3
SOC
FEA

1
SOC
SPR

2
YMC
FEA

13
YMC
SPR

13
1st 266

Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.

Complete Formula E results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Team Chassis Powertrain 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Pos Points
2019–20 Mercedes-Benz EQ Formula E Team Spark SRT05e Mercedes-Benz EQ Silver Arrow 01 DIR
6
DIR
16
SCL
5
MEX
Ret
MRK
11
BER
4
BER
Ret
BER
18
BER
4
BER
14
BER
2
11th 60
2020–21 Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team Spark SRT05e Mercedes-EQ Silver Arrow 02 DIR
1
DIR
9
RME
Ret
RME
Ret
VLC
1
VLC
16
MCO
Ret
PUE
9
PUE
Ret
NYC
13
NYC
18
LDN
2
LDN
2
BER
22
BER
8
1st 99
2021–22 Mercedes-EQ Formula E Team Spark SRT05e Mercedes-EQ Silver Arrow 02 DRH
1
DRH
10
MEX
6
RME
Ret
RME
14
MCO
10
BER
10
BER
1
JAK
Ret
MRK
6
NYC
8
NYC
7
LDN
6
LDN
3
SEO
Ret
SEO
Ret
9th 106
2023–24 Mahindra Racing Formula E Gen3 Mahindra M9Electro MEX
15
DRH
17
DRH
15
SAP
TOK
MIS
MIS
MCO
BER
BER
SIC
SIC
POR
POR
LDN
LDN
19th* 0*

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 20 21 22 WDC Points
2022 Williams Racing Williams FW44 Mercedes-AMG F1 M13 E Performance
1.6 V6 t
BHR SAU AUS EMI MIA ESP
TD
MON AZE CAN GBR AUT ITA
9
SIN JPN USA 21st 2
Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 Team Mercedes-AMG F1 W13 FRA
TD
HUN BEL NED MXC
TD
SAP ABU
Aston Martin Aramco Cognizant F1 Team Aston Martin AMR22 ITA
TD
2023 Scuderia AlphaTauri AlphaTauri AT04 Honda RBPTH001 1.6 V6 t BHR
14
SAU
14
AUS
15†
AZE
Ret
MIA
18
MON
12
ESP
14
CAN
18
AUT
17
GBR
17
HUN BEL NED ITA SIN JPN QAT USA MXC SAP LVG ABU 22nd 0

Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.

Complete FIA World Endurance Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Class Car Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Rank Points
2018–19 Racing Team Nederland LMP2 Dallara P217 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 SPA LMS SIL
5
FUJ
7
SHA
5
SEB
5
SPA
5
LMS
5
9th 64
2019–20 Racing Team Nederland LMP2 Oreca 07 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 SIL FUJ
1
SHA
5
BHR
5
COA
5
SPA LMS
6
BHR
3
10th 99
2021 G-Drive Racing LMP2 Aurus 01 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 SPA
Ret
ALG NC† 0
Racing Team Nederland Oreca 07 MNZ
3
LMS BHR BHR 19th 15
2024 Toyota Gazoo Racing Hypercar Toyota GR010 Hybrid Toyota 3.5 L Turbo V6 (Hybrid) QAT IMO SPA LMS SÃO COA FUJ BHR * *

As De Vries was a guest driver, he was ineligible for championship points.

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

Year Team Co-Drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
2019 Netherlands Racing Team Nederland Netherlands Giedo van der Garde
Netherlands Frits van Eerd [nl]
Dallara P217-Gibson LMP2 340 26th 15th
2020 Netherlands Racing Team Nederland Netherlands Giedo van der Garde
Netherlands Frits van Eerd [nl]
Oreca 07-Gibson LMP2 349 19th 15th
2021 G-Drive Racing Roman Rusinov
Argentina Franco Colapinto
Aurus 01-Gibson LMP2 358 12th 7th
2022 France TDS Racing x Vaillante Switzerland Mathias Beche
Netherlands Tijmen van der Helm
Oreca 07-Gibson LMP2 368 8th 4th

Complete European Le Mans Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; results in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Class Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rank Points
2020 G-Drive Racing LMP2 Aurus 01 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 LEC
2
SPA LEC MNZ
Ret
ALG
1
5th 43
2021 G-Drive Racing LMP2 Aurus 01 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 CAT
4
RBR
2
LEC
1
MNZ SPA
Ret
ALG
5
5th 67

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