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Jos Verstappen

Jos Verstappen Nationality  DutchFormula OneWorld Championship career Active years 1994-1998, 2000-2001, 2003Teams Benetton, Simtek, Footwork, Tyrrell, Stewart, Arrowsand MinardiRaces 107 Championships0 Wins 0 Podium finishes    2 Career points 17 Pole positions0 Fastest laps0 First race 1994 Brazilian Grand PrixLast race 2003 Japanese Grand Prix

Johannes Franciscus "Jos" Verstappen (born 4 March 1972, Montfort) is a Dutch racing driver. He is married to the Belgian ex-kart driver Sophie Kumpen, with whom he has two children: Max and Victoria.

Contents

Early career

Verstappen began karting at the age of 8, and was participating in national competitions not long after. In 1984 he became Dutch junior champion. He remained successful, and won two European titles and a large number of international races in 1989.

At the end of 1991 he made the transition to car racing. He drove in Formula Opel Lotus, a class in which identical cars compete against each other. He won the European championship in his first year, and got an offer to drive in Formula 3 with Van Amersfoort Racing, who also developed other drivers such as Christijan Albers, Tom Coronel and Bas Leinders. During that European winter season, he raced in New Zealand Formula Atlantic. Subsequently, in German Formula 3, he won several international competitions, including the 1993 Marlboro Masters and the German Formula 3 championship.

Verstappen in Formula One

1994 Season

Jos Verstappen driving the Benetton B194 at the 1994 British Grand Prix.

In 1994 he was hired as a test and backup driver in the Benetton F1 team. After a crash in pre-season testing by regular driver J.J. Lehto (who broke a neck vertebra), Verstappen drove in the first two races of the season as a substitute, partnering Michael Schumacher. Verstappen made his Formula One debut at the 1994 Brazilian Grand Prix. During the race he collided with Eddie Irvine, which triggered a multiple accident also involving Éric Bernard and Martin Brundle. Verstappen's car somersaulted, but he emerged unharmed. Irvine was judged to be responsible for the incident and was banned from the next race, increased to three after an unsuccessful appeal by his Jordan. At the Pacific Grand Prix, Verstappen looked set for a points finish but spun off on cold tyres immediately after a pit stop. Lehto was fit for the next race at Imola, but his performances in subsequent races were disappointing and he was rested by Benetton following the Canadian, allowing Verstappen to return to the race seat.

One of the most dramatic incidents affected Verstappen at the German Grand Prix. During his first scheduled pitstop during the race, fuel leaked onto the car after the fuel hose was disconnected, setting the car, with Verstappen in it, ablaze for a brief period. As was usual at the time, Verstappen had slightly opened the visor of his helmet for the pit stop, and he walked away with slight burns to his nose.

A high point in this season was Verstappen's third place during the next Grand Prix in Hungary, Schumacher having allowed Verstappen to unlap himself on the final lap to pass Martin Brundle's stricken McLaren-Peugeot. He took another third place at the Belgian Grand Prix due to Schumacher's post-race disqualification from victory, and a fifth place at the Portuguese Grand Prix. A curiosity was his accident during a training session for the French Grand Prix at Magny-Cours, in which Verstappen rammed his car into the pit wall causing debris to fly up and destroy a TV installation. Due to this accident, this equipment is now protected from the race track by acrylic glass.[1]

For the last two races of the season, Verstappen was replaced by the more experienced Johnny Herbert in a bid to win the Constructors' Championship for Benetton. The team was unsuccessful in this aim and the prize went to the rival Williams team.

1995-2003

In 1995 he was stationed at Simtek by Benetton team principal Flavio Briatore. Despite some strong showings Verstappen only finished once in the five races he drove for the team. The team had financial troubles and went bankrupt after the Grand Prix of Monaco. After the Simtek debacle, Verstappen did some test driving with Benetton and Ligier.

In 1996 he drove for the Footwork team, and drove pretty well, running 5th in Interlagos and finishing 6th in Buenos Aires, but engine troubles prevented him from making a splash on the stage. During the GP of Belgium, a part of the suspension of Verstappen's car broke off, causing him to hit the railing. He ended up with a prolonged neck injury.

In 1997 he went to the Tyrrell-Ford team, but did not score, though he briefly ran 5th in the Canadian Grand Prix. He and his friend and teammate Mika Salo were dropped by the team at the end of the season after Tyrrell's new owners, British American Racing, opted for Ricardo Rosset and Tora Takagi instead. However, Stewart Grand Prix came to the rescue and Verstappen was drafted for the last 9 races of the 1998 season after Jan Magnussen had been shown the door. He was a test driver for the Benetton team earlier on in that same year, but the latter would not hire him as a permanent test driver for lack of sponsors.

For 1999 everything seemed to be going in the right direction for Verstappen. Near the end of 1998 he became the testdriver for the Honda Formula One project. He teamed up with old Tyrrell friends Rupert Manwaring and Harvey Postlethwaite, testing in 1999 and participating from the year 2000. All went well for the Honda test team until Harvey Postlethwaite died of a heart-attack. Not long after, Honda changed their plans from becoming a fully factory team to just an engine supplier, and Verstappen was again without a Formula One seat. He tested for the Jordan team in case Damon Hill decided to retire before the end of the season, but this came to nothing.

In 2000 he returned to Arrows (formerly known as Footwork), at that moment a promising team. He produced very strong results, moving up to 5th from nowhere in the Canadian Grand Prix, and finishing 4th in Monza whilst battling for the podium with Ralf Schumacher. But the many technical problems plagued Verstappen and his teammates Pedro de la Rosa (most notably when after the 2000 Austrian Grand Prix first corner shenanigans he and Verstappen ran 3rd and 4th) and Enrique Bernoldi. During the 2001 season Verstappen had some very good races, like in Sepang where he ran 2nd having started 18th, or at the A1Ring, finishing 6th, but he also blotted his copybook with an incident at the Brazilian Grand Prix, which put him and Juan Pablo Montoya, who was leading at the time, out of the race. The Arrows proved to be fast, but quite unreliable. Verstappen finished the season with a contract for the next season, but ultimately it was put aside in favour of the better funded Heinz-Harald Frentzen.

Verstappen started looking for another team in 2002. He had almost signed a test contract with Sauber, but he turned out to be physically too large for the Sauber C21, which was smaller than its predecessor.[2]

In 2003 Verstappen drove for European Minardi, a team which rarely scored points. He made an impression several times with the reliable but relatively slow Minardi, but left the Italian team because he did not feel like driving in the rear-guard for another year.[3] His most impressive feats were topping Friday qualifying in France after a rain-hit session,and running 7th in the wet Interlagos, where judging from all retirements he could have finished in the top 5. He looked to get a contract with Jordan, but it was never realised.

Verstappen participated in 107 Grands Prix. He achieved two podium places, and scored a total of 17 championship points. His highest qualifying position was 6th at the 1994 Belgian Grand Prix.

Complete Formula One results

(key)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 WDC Points 1994Mild SevenBenetton FordBenettonB194FordV8BRA
Ret PAC
Ret SMR
MON
ESP
CAN
FRA
Ret GBR
8 GER
Ret HUN
3 BEL
3 ITA
Ret POR
5 EUR
Ret JPN
AUS
10th 10 1995MTVSimtek FordSimtekS195 FordV8BRA
Ret ARG
Ret SMR
Ret ESP
12 MON
Ret CAN
FRA
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
POR
EUR
PFC
JPN
AUS
- 0 1996Footwork HartFootworkFA17HartV8AUS
Ret BRA
Ret ARG
6 EUR
Ret SMR
Ret MON
Ret ESP
Ret CAN
Ret FRA
Ret GBR
10 GER
Ret HUN
Ret BEL
Ret ITA
8 POR
Ret JPN
11 16th 1 1997TyrrellTyrrell025FordV8AUS
Ret BRA
15 ARG
Ret SMR
10 MON
8 ESP
11 CAN
Ret FRA
Ret GBR
Ret GER
10 HUN
Ret BEL
Ret ITA
Ret AUT
12 LUX
Ret JPN
13 EUR
16 - 0 1998Stewart FordStewartSF2 FordV10AUS
BRA
ARG
SMR
ESP
MON
CAN
FRA
12 GBR
Ret AUT
Ret GER
Ret HUN
13 BEL
Ret ITA
Ret LUX
13 JPN
Ret - 0 2000Arrows F1 TeamArrowsA21SupertecV10AUS
Ret BRA
7 SMR
14 GBR
Ret ESP
Ret EUR
Ret MON
Ret CAN
5 FRA
Ret AUT
Ret GER
Ret HUN
13 BEL
15 ITA
4 USA
Ret JPN
Ret MAL
10 12th 5 2001OrangeArrowsAsiatechArrowsA22AsiatechV10AUS
10 MAL
7 BRA
Ret SMR
Ret ESP
12 AUT
6 MON
8 CAN
10 EUR
Ret FRA
13 GBR
10 GER
9 HUN
12 BEL
10 ITA
Ret USA
Ret JPN
15 18th 1 2003EuropeanMinardi CosworthMinardiPS03CosworthV10AUS
11 MAL
13 BRA
Ret SMR
Ret ESP
12 AUT
Ret MON
Ret CAN
9 EUR
14 FRA
16 GBR
15 GER
Ret HUN
12 ITA
Ret USA
10 JPN
15 - 0

2005 and beyond

Verstappen driving for A1 Team The Netherlands.

After two years of not participating in races, Jos Verstappen was confirmed in July as driver of the A1 Netherlands team managed by seatholder Jan Lammers's Racing for Holland, for the A1 Grand Prix series. They won the feature race at Durban.

On 27 September 2006 Jos Verstappen split with A1 Team Netherlands after failing to secure payment guarantees. This resulted from Verstappen only being paid for the 2005/06 season a few weeks before the next season started. He was replaced by Jeroen Bleekemolen for the first race of the 2006/07 season at the team's home race at Zandvoort.

Verstappen has been recently been linked to a drive for the newly-christened Minardi Team USA Champ Car team, but he turned it down.

In December of 2007, Verstappen announced that he would take part in the 2008 24 Hours of Le Mans. He will drive a Porsche RS Spyder fielded by Van Merksteijn Motorsport by Equipe Verschuur. Verstappen will be partnered by Jeroen Bleekemolen and team owner Peter van Merksteijn. The team will also enter the 1,000 kilometer races in the Le Mans Series.

Complete A1 Grand Prix results

(Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (sr = sprint race, fr = feature race)

Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 WDC Points 2005-06NetherlandsGBR
sr: dnf
fr: 7 GER
sr: dnf
fr: 7 POR
sr: 4
fr: dnf AUS
sr: 7
fr: 4 MAL
sr: 5
fr: 16 UAE
sr: 11
fr: 9 ZAF
sr: 16
fr: 1 IND
sr: 7
fr: 6 MEX
sr: 4
fr: 2 USA
sr: 14
fr: dnf CHI
sr: dnf
fr: 17 7th 69


References

  1. ^ Jos Verstappen. f1db.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-18.
  2. ^ "Sauber in the spotlight", grandprix.com, 2002-07-29. Retrieved on 2007-08-18
  3. ^ "Jos Verstappen will not be driving for Minardi", verstappen.nl, 2003-12-18. Retrieved on 2007-08-18

External links

Sporting positions Preceded by
Pedro LamyFormula Three Masters winner
1993 Succeeded by
Gareth Rees Preceded by
Pedro LamyGerman Formula Three champion
1993 Succeeded by
Jörg Müller
Categories: Dutch racecar drivers | Dutch Formula One drivers | 1972 births | Living people | A1 Team Netherlands drivers | German Formula Three Championship drivers | Minardi Formula One drivers

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