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Heikki Kovalainen
File:Heikki Kovalainen.png
Driver Details
Nationality Flag of Finland Finnish
P.o.B. Flag of Finland Suomussalmi, Kainuu, Finland
D.o.B. 19 October 1981
Date of Death
Début Flag of San Marino 2005 Imola Feature Race
Last Race Unknown
Best Finish 2nd (2005)
GP2 Series Career
Entries 23 (23 Starts)
No. 22
Wins Points Poles
5 105 2
Fastest Laps 0
First Win Flag of San Marino 2005 Imola Feature Race
Last Win Flag of Italy 2005 Monza Feature Race
Only Win
Teams Flag of the United Kingdom Arden International

Heikki Johannes Kovalainen (born 19 October 1981 in Suomussalmi, Kainuu, Finland) is a Finnish racing driver, who finished as runner-up to Nico Rosberg in the inaugural 2005 FIA GP2 Series.[1] Notable as the first driver to win a GP2 Series race, Kovalainen would leave GP2 at the end of 2005, becoming a test/reserve driver for Renault F1.[2]

Kovalainen signed with Arden International for the 2005 season, and was noted as one of the favourites after pre-season testing.[1] The Finn would go on to lead the Championship for most of the season, winning the season opening Imola Feature Race, only to slip behind Rosberg in the final three rounds, finishing second.[3]

After leaving GP2, Kovalainen would enjoy a seven year career in Formula One, becoming the 100th Grand Prix winner with his one and only victory.[4] After losing his race seat in 2013 the Finn would go on to race in Super GT in Japan, winning the 2016 championship in partnership with Kohei Hirate.[4]

Background[]

Kovalainen began his career in karting in his native Finland, racing from the age of nine until his late teens.[4] Winning the Nordic Championship in 2000, Kovalainen moved into Formula Renault 2.0 UK for 2001, following fellow Finn Kimi Räikkönen who had won the 2000 Championship.[4] A strong rookie season saw Kovalainen claim two wins and fourth overall in the Championship, with the Finn also taking part in the Macau Grand Prix.[4]

Renault Reinforcement: 2002 - 2004[]

After his FR exploits Kovalainen was signed to the Renault Driver Development Programme, who placed Kovalainen in the British Formula 3 Championship for 2002.[4] A strong season saw Kovalainen finish third overall and the best placed rookie in the field, while also claiming second in the Macau Grand Prix.[4] For 2003 Renault moved the Finn into the w:c:motorsport:World Series by Nissan, placing Kovalainen alongside fellow Renault supported driver Franck Montagny.[4]

Montagny went on to claim his second WS title in 2003, while Kovalainen claimed a single victory to finish as a distant runner-up.[4] A change of team for 2004 saw Kovalainen again emerge as a title pretender, with the Finn ultimately going on to claim his first major junior title with six victories.[4]

GP2 Series History[]

Kovalainen's WS triumph in 2004 saw the Finn get formally adopted into the Renault F1 team, becoming a reserve driver alongside Montagny.[4] The Finn would also take a seat in the inaugural 2005 FIA GP2 Series, with Arden International signing him up alongside Nicolas Lapierre in two Red Bull liveried cars.[1] Assigned with #22 as his race number, Kovalainen was considered a pre-season favourite for the inaugural GP2 title, and would duly go on to claim an impressive debut victory at the first race in Imola.[5]

Post GP2 Series Career[]

Kovalainen was promoted to serve as Renault's main test/reserve driver for the 2006 season, meaning he would move away from GP2 at the end of 2005.[2] In 2007 the Finn would be promoted into a full race seat, although he was dropped at the end of the season to be replaced by Fernando Alonso.[4] He would, however, replace Alonso at McLaren for 2008, and duly supported Lewis Hamilton as the Brit claimed his maiden F1 Championship.[4]

2008 would also see Kovalainen make history as the 100th driver to win a Grand Prix in F1 history, claiming his only career win at the Hungarian Grand Prix.[4] Retained for 2009, Kovalainen would not match the heights of 2008, and duly left the team to join the new Lotus Racing entry in 2010.[4] The Finn remained with Lotus through its evolution into Caterham, until the end of 2012, with the Finn failing to score a point at all in his final three seasons.[4]

Japanese Dreams: 2014 - 2020[]

After a couple of one-off races in F1 in 2013 at the confusingly named Lotus F1 Team, Kovalainen ended his F1 career, instead taking a test/reserve role in the DTM with BMW.[4] In 2015 the Finn joined the factory Lexus team in Super GT in Japan, who partnered him with fellow GP2 graduate Kohei Hirate.[4] After spending a season getting used to the series, Kovalainen would rediscover his pre-2010 form, with himself and Hirate going on to claim the 2016 Super GT title in the GT500 class.[4]

Kovalainen continued on in Super GT after his title winning campaign, and would transfer to the factory Toyota team when they replaced Lexus in the series in 2020.[4]

Full GP2 Series Record[]

Shown below are a series of tables outlining Heikki Kovalainen's career in the GP2 Series in statistical form.

GP2 Series Entries[]

The list below includes all of the teams and cars, as well as overall finishing positions for Heikki Kovalainen during their GP2 career:

Heikki Kovalainen's Overall GP2 Series Record
Year Entrant No. Car Pos. Pts. Livery
2005 Flag of the United Kingdom Arden International[1] 9 Dallara GP2/05 2nd 105 File:KOV 05 Livery.png

Career Results[]

Below is a table showing Heikki Kovalainen's full GP2 Series record.

FIA GP2 Series Record
Year Rounds Pos. Pts.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
2005 Flag of San Marino Flag of Spain Flag of Monaco Flag of Europe Flag of France Flag of the United Kingdom Flag of Germany Flag of Hungary Flag of Turkey Flag of Italy Flag of Belgium Flag of Bahrain 2nd 105
F S F S F F S F S F S F S F S F S F S F S F S
1st 3rd 3rd Ret 5th 1st Ret 1st 3rd 2nd 3rd 5th 6th 2nd 5th 10th 1st 1st 5th 15th 9th 3rd Ret

References[]

Videos and Images:

References:

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named HKov05A
  2. 2.0 2.1 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named HKov06A
  3. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Bhr05SR
  4. 4.00 4.01 4.02 4.03 4.04 4.05 4.06 4.07 4.08 4.09 4.10 4.11 4.12 4.13 4.14 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18 4.19 'Heikki Kovalainen', driverdb.com, (Driver Database, 2020), https://www.driverdb.com/drivers/heikki-kovalainen/, (Accessed 19/09/2020)
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Imo05FR
2005 FIA GP2 Series
Entrants
Arden InternationalART Grand PrixBCN CompeticiónCampos RacingColoni MotorsportDAMSDavid Price RacingDurangoHitech/Piquet RacingiSport InternationalRacing EngineeringSuper Nova Racing
Manufacturers
DallaraRenault
Car/engine
Dallara GP2/05Renault V8108 4.0l V8
Drivers
1 Scott Speed2 Can Artam3 Nelson Piquet Jr.4 Alexandre Negrão5 Ernesto Viso6 Hiroki Yoshimoto7 Giorgio Pantano8 Adam Carroll9 Nico Rosberg10 Alexandre Prémat11 Olivier Pla12 Ryan Sharp/Giorgio Mondini14 José María López15 Fairuz Fauzy16 Mathias Lauda17 Gianmaria Bruni/Toni Vilander/Ferdinando Monfardini18 Neel Jani19 Borja García20 Juan Cruz Álvarez21 Sergio Hernández22 Heikki Kovalainen23 Nicolas Lapierre24 Clivio Piccione25 Ferdinando Monfardini/Gianmaria Bruni
Races
Imola FeatureImola SprintBarcelona FeatureBarcelona SprintMonaco FeatureNürburgring FeatureNürburgring SprintMagny Cours FeatureMagny-Cours SprintSilverstone FeatureSilverstone SprintHockenheimring FeatureHockenheimring SprintHungaroring FeatureHungaroring SprintIstanbul FeatureIstanbul SprintMonza FeatureMonza SprintSpa FeatureSpa SprintBahrain FeatureBahrain Sprint
Tests
2005 Pre-Season Test2005 Paul Ricard Test2005 Paul Ricard Winter Test 12005 Jerez Winter Test2005 Paul Ricard Winter Test 2
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