Valerian Racing Engines: Difference between revisions

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The team started as a small club racing team, with very high ambitions, managing to get wins in several French championships. In 1995-1997 they participated in Rejects-1, with middling results, before the collapse of the series in 1997. In 1998, the debts that the R-1 operation gave to them became astronamical, and they withdrew from any racing in 2003. Then, in 2013, a businessman from France and amateur racing driver, Samuel de Sauveterre, revived the brand, with the goal to make it to Formula 1. The team eventually accomplished it's goal, and thanks to a fruitful partnership with Venturi Automobiles, they managed to finance an operation in it's rival, AutoReject World Series.
The team started as a small club racing team, with very high ambitions, managing to get wins in several French championships. In 1995-1997 they participated in Rejects-1, with middling results, before the collapse of the series in 1997. In 1998, the debts that the R-1 operation gave to them became astronamical, and they withdrew from any racing in 2003. Then, in 2013, a businessman from France and amateur racing driver, Samuel de Sauveterre, revived the brand, with the goal to make it to Formula 1. The team eventually accomplished it's goal, and thanks to a fruitful partnership with Venturi Automobiles, they managed to finance an operation in it's rival, AutoReject World Series.


However, as the team grew bigger and bigger, so too did Sauveterre's ambition, and by the end of 2018, the team ranked up huge debts. It sold off all of it's operations (apart from the ARWS team) to various other teams, and it struck a partnership with Winfield to sponsor their operations, thus keeping their ARWS team afloat, with the F1 project ditched because of a lack of potential. It also was able to keep it's driver program afloat and further expanding it.
However, as the team grew bigger and bigger, so too did Sauveterre's ambition, and by the end of 2018, the team ranked up huge debts. It sold off all of it's operations (apart from the ARWS team) to various other teams, sold off 25% of it's shares to Norwegian investors,  and it struck a partnership with Winfield to sponsor their operations, thus keeping their ARWS team afloat, with the F1 project ditched because of a lack of potential. It also was able to keep it's driver program afloat and further expanding it.


==Valerian Formula (2017-)==
==Valerian Formula (2017-)==

Revision as of 17:53, 1 December 2016

Valerian Racing Engines
ValerianLogo.png
Full Name Valerian Racing Engines
Base Paris,France
Founder(s) Mikael Valerian
Jean Valerian
Team Principal(s) Samuel De Sauveterre
Technical Director Jean-Marie Deschamps
Current Drivers Various
Other Noted Drivers Shad Griffith
Debut 1988
Races 0
Constructors' Championships 0
Drivers' Championships 0
Race Wins 0
Podiums 0
Points 0
Pole Positions 0
Fastest Laps 0


Valerian Racing Engines is an racing team formed by the end of 1987, formed by Mikael Valerian.

History

The team started as a small club racing team, with very high ambitions, managing to get wins in several French championships. In 1995-1997 they participated in Rejects-1, with middling results, before the collapse of the series in 1997. In 1998, the debts that the R-1 operation gave to them became astronamical, and they withdrew from any racing in 2003. Then, in 2013, a businessman from France and amateur racing driver, Samuel de Sauveterre, revived the brand, with the goal to make it to Formula 1. The team eventually accomplished it's goal, and thanks to a fruitful partnership with Venturi Automobiles, they managed to finance an operation in it's rival, AutoReject World Series.

However, as the team grew bigger and bigger, so too did Sauveterre's ambition, and by the end of 2018, the team ranked up huge debts. It sold off all of it's operations (apart from the ARWS team) to various other teams, sold off 25% of it's shares to Norwegian investors, and it struck a partnership with Winfield to sponsor their operations, thus keeping their ARWS team afloat, with the F1 project ditched because of a lack of potential. It also was able to keep it's driver program afloat and further expanding it.

Valerian Formula (2017-)

The first F1 car from Valerian: the F01.

After landing a major sponsorship deal with Pepsi, the team decided to enter F1. This was not easy though, and the team were on the lower midfielder for most of the year, though they eventually managed to beat Red Bull Racing for 9th place in the WCC. The team had a lot of problems, ranging from the underpowered Ferrari engine to some unlucky races. Before Australia took place, Perez was having minor health issues and was declared unavailable for the next 4 rounds. In Australia they signed local driver Daniel Melrose, who scored a respectable 8th in the second race. However, in the Sonoma race, they did a completely unexpected move and they bringed in former F1 and R-1 driver Shad Griffith, who has only done testing since 2007. He was on the pace with the competition, but struggled to compete with his teammate. In the China race, Sato decided to bring some cash and he was elected for a one-off, where he outperformed Valsecchi, but it still wasn't enough to get points. For 2018, the team was forced to renew Valsecchi and Perez, after Marciello rejected one of the seats.

Venturi Formula (2018-)

The first ARWS car of Venturi; the V2-001.

The team had expressed interest on entering F1RWRS since their inception on F1. On the fall of the 2017, the team announced a partnership from Venturi to jointly manage an F1RWRS team on the near-future. However, the unexpected happened: CWG withdrew its plans for entering the newly named ARWS for 2018. The team was shocked, and due to the many new entries in ARWS, the team was the one to enter in their place. Due to the lack of time and preparation unlike other new teams, the V2-001, was in fact the car that won the past WDC; the VGPOne and the team landed a deal for the powerful Yamaha engines. For their first year they signed former F1RWRS race winner Shinobu Katayama, who came from driving part-time in Rob Lomas Racing and Nurminen Grand Prix in 2017, and Jean-Vincent Albertini, who was in his first full-time year in ARWS, and its rumored to bring a lot of cash.


Shinobu Katayama running 6th in the 2018 Japanese Grand Prix. She would eventually finish 5th - her best finish that season.

Venturi AR2.0 Racing (2018-)

When the deal with Venturi was announced, the team thought on one thing: feeder series. And with the kickout of Team Echtofen of AR2.0E, the team fielded a team there. The team hired, for their debut season, Masami Karai, a promising talent from Japan, who finished 2nd in All-Japan F3. The other seat was for Carmen Alvarez Torrente, who formerly competed in AR2.0NA with Hunter Autosport, but looking for a team in Europe, she found Venturi.

Valerian Motorsport IPC (2017-)

The team originally wasn't planning to enter IPC. But after the death of ACO LMC and the hiatus of GT-R, the team saw it as the only viable way to promote tin-top talent. The team fielded a 'test car' for the last Privateer Race in 2017, a SEAT Ibiza drived by Shad Griffith. The team saw the Ibiza to be way off-pace, and the team had a disastrous weekend. Nevertheless, the team gathered enough data for 2018, and the team entered Josue Alburqueque, a well-known talent from Stock Car Brazil and TC2000, and Jonas Soderstrom, a driver who competed in Rick Miller Racing in the last few races of 2017. The team started off the right foot, with a spectacular 5th from Soderstrom and a respectable 16th from Alburqueque, who started all the way back from 35th. In Bathurst, the team finished an eventful weekend with a sensational 4th from Alburqueque, and a unlucky 17th from Soderstrom. Before the Treviso race, the team announced a deal with Chloe O'Sullivan to drive the remaining rounds, while Alburqueque does them in a customer Skoda run by Triq il Malta. In Treviso Chloe O'Sullivan surprised with a 2nd and Soderstrom finished on a 17th after climbing for the back, where he also got extra points. In Montpeiller the team got their first win hand of Chloe O'Sullivan, after starting from 12th. Soderstrom finished the dream weekend of Valerian with a 3rd. On La Colina, O'Sullivan won again, and on the A-Class race she was running 1st until Jasper Lerby blocked her way and she could only master 2nd. Soderstrom finished 7th, and his involment in crashes led him to get a 10-grid penalty in the Rockingham race. In that race, the lack of oval experience from the team showed: the team only mastered 9th and 10th place from Soderstrom and O'Sullivan. On Brands Hatch, O'Sullivan finished 4th, and Soderstrom retired halfway due to a big crash.

Complete Formula One Results

Year Entrant Chassis Engine # Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 WCC Points
2017 Eni Valerian Formula Ferrari Valerian F01 Ferrari Type 059 USA JPN IND BAH CYP HUN GER GBR AUS PAC MEX AUT ITA EUR ESP ABU RUS BRA CHI 9th 48 (56)
9 Flag of Italy svg.png Davide Valsecchi 13 16 Ret Ret 11 Ret 8 11 Ret 8 15 15 13 10 12 Ret Ret 11 8 Ret 10 19 10 13 13 Ret Ret 16 18 Ret 10 16 C C 14 21 22* 21
10 Flag of Mexico svg.png Sergio Pérez 16 11 11 Ret 2 12 8 7 Ret Ret Ret 13 Ret Ret 10 12 11 11 8 11 10 12 9 15 16 13 15 Ret C C 12 15
Template:AUS Daniel Melrose Ret 8 C C
Template:USA Shad Griffith 20 20 C C
Flag of Japan svg.png Takuma Sato C C 11 20
2018 Emi Valerian Formula Ferrari Valerian F02 Ferrari Type 060 USA JPN BAH TUR CYP MED GER FIN RUS SIN AUS GBR FRA NED HUN ABU CHI MEX BRA 10th* 20*
42 Flag of Italy svg.png Davide Valsecchi Ret Ret Ret Ret 21 19 Ret 9 4 Ret Ret 13 10 Ret 18 10
43 Flag of Mexico svg.png Sergio Pérez 12 Ret 17 Ret Ret Ret Ret 23 Ret Ret
Template:FRA Sebastien Bourdais Ret Ret 12 9 5 20

Complete SANDWICH results

Year Entry Chassis Engine Driver # FUJ SUG MOT MOT YEO OKY SEN AUO SUZ Pos Points
2018 Mitsuri Motor Engineering Dome Honda 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
Flag of Japan svg.png Kyoko Katayama 4 22 5 Ret 19 Ret 8 Ret DNQ 9 12 4 4 7 12 11 Ret Ret Ret 7 220
Flag of Grenada svg.png John Bovy 3 14 23 12 11 11 11 Ret DNQ Ret Ret 12 Ret
Flag of Japan svg.png Shinobu Katayama 2 Ret 6 2 Ret 2

International Procar Championship

Season Car Class # Drivers Points TC
2018 Mazda B 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 165/313 10th/1st
AUS BAT ITA FRA SPA GBR EUR ILL WIS NY CAN RSA FIN GER PAR HUN CZE PAC JAP HKG
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
077 Flag of Sweden svg.png Jonas Söderström 5 19 16* 3 7 9 30 29 9 29 39
42 Flag of Brazil svg.png Josue Alburqueque 16 4
Flag of Ireland svg.png Chloe O'Sullivan 2 1 1 10 4 6 2 8 11

*Season in progress

GBRC

Year Chassis # Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Points CC
2018 Skoda 130LR USA GER SWE FIN NED CZE FRA GBR 0 13th*
980 Flag of Croatia svg.png Jozo Vlahovic DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ
997 Flag of the Czech Republic svg.png Andrej Benes DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ
6 Flag of Montenegro svg.png Nikola Jovanovic DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ DNQ

AR2.0

Year Engine # Drivers TC Pts
2018 Cosworth 2.0L V6 ITA FRA SPA GBR AUT NED GER BEL HUN 8th 35
F S F S F S F S F S F S F S F S F S
24 Flag of Japan svg.png Masami Karai Ret 12 12 20
Flag of the United States svg.png Riley Griffith Ret 22 17 8
25 Flag of Spain svg.png Carmen Alvarez Torrente 22 5 21 13 6 4 2 25