Diego Álvarez Torrente: Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Active Driver
{{Infobox Driver Small
| name          = Diego Álvarez Torrente
| name          = Diego Álvarez Torrente
| nationality    = [[File:Flag of Spain svg.png]] Spanish
| nationality    = {{ESP}} Spanish
| birth date    = 4th July 1996 (age 21)
| birth date    = 4th July 1996 (age 23)
| dec            = Ataxia
| birth place    = Granada, Spain
| birth place    = Granada, Spain
| current team  = [[Jones Racing ARWS Team|National Jones Ford Team]] (F1RWRS)
| current series = [[2019 Alternate Formula One season|Formula One]]
| car number    = 4
| current team  = TRILUX AMG Precision Motorsport
| former teams  = [[Dofasco Racing]], [[Plus One Racing Engineering]] (F2RWRS)
| car number    = 63
| races          = 34 (34 starts)
| former teams  = N/A
| championships  = 0
| wins          = 2
| podiums        = 6
| points        = 70
| poles          = 0
| fastest laps  = 0
| first race    = 2017 F1RWRS Australian Grand Prix
| first win      = 2017 F1RWRS New South Wales Grand Prix
| last win      = 2017 F1RWRS Austrian Grand Prix
| last race      = 2018 ARWS Chinese Grand Prix
| best finish    = 5th (2017)
|}}
|}}


'''Diego Álvarez Torrente''' (born 4th July 1996 in Granada, Spain) is a Spanish racer currently contracted to [[Astro Racing Group|Astro Racing Stars]]. He won the [[F2RWRS]] championship in [[2016 F2RWRS season|2016]] for [[Plus One Racing Engineering]], and will race for [[Jones Racing ARWS Team|Jones Racing]] in F1RWRS.. His brother [[Jorge Álvarez Torrente|Jorge]] races in [[AR3.5]] for [[Peak Aeroracing Engineering]] whilst his younger sister [[Carmen Álvarez Torrente|Carmen]] drives for [[Valerian Racing Engines|Venturi Formula]] in [[AutoReject 2.0]].
'''Diego Álvarez Torrente''' (born 4th July 1996 in Granada, Spain) is a Spanish [[Formula One]] driver who races for [[Precision Motorsport]]. He won the [[F2RWRS]] championship in [[2016 F2RWRS season|2016]] for [[Plus One Racing Engineering]], and raced for [[Jones Racing ARWS Team|Jones Racing]] in F1RWRS. His brother [[Jorge Álvarez Torrente|Jorge]] races in [[AR3.5]] for [[Peak Aeroracing Engineering]] whilst his younger sister [[Carmen Álvarez Torrente|Carmen]] drives for [[Valerian Racing Engines|Venturi Formula]] in [[AutoReject 2.0]].


== Early life ==
== Early life ==


[[File:Diegoalvareztorrente_copy.png|150px|thumb|left|Torrente in his Dofasco racesuit.]]
Diego was born to [[José Álvarez]], a former racing driver, and Ximena who was a store manager in Granada. He first tried karting at the age of 9, and won various Spanish and European titles.
Diego was born to [[José Álvarez]], a former racing driver, and Ximena who was a store manager in Granada. He first tried karting at the age of 9, and won various Spanish and European titles.


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An off-day at Istanbul Park saw the Plus One team fail to pre-qualify; neither Torrente or team-mate [[Martyn Rietacher]] had enough pace to haul themselves into qualifying proper. However, Torrente's arrival saw Plus One rise out of pre-qualifying for the next three rounds, to which they wouldn't return for the rest of the season. A strong 4th place at Long Beach helped Torrente climb up the table, before a maiden victory came for the Spaniard at the notoriously tricky Norisring; Torrente was on a crucial one-stop strategy which saw him recoup the places he'd lost at the start and put him on top of the F2RWRS championship. After a rare accident at Zandvoort, a strong pair of races at Monaco and Belgium saw Torrente begin to assert himself at the top of the standings. A second win came at Mexico later in the season, ensuring he was the first repeat winner of 2016. After another pair of strong points finishes in China and Japan which gave the Plus One driver a 25-point lead, Torrente went into the Tropico rounds with the 2016 championship in the bag.
An off-day at Istanbul Park saw the Plus One team fail to pre-qualify; neither Torrente or team-mate [[Martyn Rietacher]] had enough pace to haul themselves into qualifying proper. However, Torrente's arrival saw Plus One rise out of pre-qualifying for the next three rounds, to which they wouldn't return for the rest of the season. A strong 4th place at Long Beach helped Torrente climb up the table, before a maiden victory came for the Spaniard at the notoriously tricky Norisring; Torrente was on a crucial one-stop strategy which saw him recoup the places he'd lost at the start and put him on top of the F2RWRS championship. After a rare accident at Zandvoort, a strong pair of races at Monaco and Belgium saw Torrente begin to assert himself at the top of the standings. A second win came at Mexico later in the season, ensuring he was the first repeat winner of 2016. After another pair of strong points finishes in China and Japan which gave the Plus One driver a 25-point lead, Torrente went into the Tropico rounds with the 2016 championship in the bag.


===2017-: F1RWRS===
===2017-2018: F1RWRS/ARWS===


After showing plenty of potential during 2016, Torrente was a man in demand. He signed a contract with [[Jones Racing ARWS Team|Jones Racing]] for 2017, partnering three-time world champion [[Mark Dagnall]] at the British team. Despite obvious testing pace, Torrente had an inauspicious start to like in F1RWRS after making multiple errors at the first race at Adelaide, breaking a number of front wings. Although the Spaniard was still on course for points, his errors exacerbated a suspension issue causing him to retire. After some coaching from team principal [[Sammy Jones]], Torrente drove a more measured race at the following Bathurst round, watching [[Fredo Mestolio]] ahead of him push too hard and lose his front wing. After leader [[Alexey Buyvolov]] suffered technical issues that put him out of the race with three laps to spare, Torrente took his first F1RWRS victory, having barely put a foot wrong all afternoon. Torrente won again at the Austrian Grand Prix, and briefly led the World Championship in the early rounds. He eventually finished 5th overall in his debut season.
After showing plenty of potential during 2016, Torrente was a man in demand. He signed a contract with [[Jones Racing ARWS Team|Jones Racing]] for 2017, partnering three-time world champion [[Mark Dagnall]] at the British team. Despite obvious testing pace, Torrente had an inauspicious start to like in F1RWRS after making multiple errors at the first race at Adelaide, breaking a number of front wings. Although the Spaniard was still on course for points, his errors exacerbated a suspension issue causing him to retire. After some coaching from team principal [[Sammy Jones]], Torrente drove a more measured race at the following Bathurst round, watching [[Fredo Mestolio]] ahead of him push too hard and lose his front wing. After leader [[Alexey Buyvolov]] suffered technical issues that put him out of the race with three laps to spare, Torrente took his first F1RWRS victory, having barely put a foot wrong all afternoon. Torrente won again at the Austrian Grand Prix, and briefly led the World Championship in the early rounds. He eventually finished 5th overall in his debut season.


Torrente remained at Jones for 2018, with the team retaining both he and Dagnall for a second consecutive season.
Torrente remained at Jones for 2018, with the team retaining both he and Dagnall for a second consecutive season. The season was a lot more difficult, and Jones was saddled with an uncompetitive Ford engine. Torrente's best results were a pair of 2nd place finishes, scoring 24 points overall.
 
=== 2019-: Formula One ===
 
In the middle of 2018, Torrente signed a contract with Formula 1 team [[Precision Motorsport]] to replace the departing [[Dave Cassidy]] for 2019. Partnering Jules Bianchi at the works-Mercedes team, Torrente enjoyed a dream start to life in F1 by winning the second race of the opening [[United States Grand Prix]] round at Las Vegas.





Revision as of 18:28, 20 August 2017

Diego Álvarez Torrente
Nationality Flag of Spain svg.png Spanish
Born 4th July 1996 (age 23)
Granada, Spain
DEC Holder Ataxia
Current Series Formula One
Current Team TRILUX AMG Precision Motorsport
Car Number 63
Former Teams N/A


Diego Álvarez Torrente (born 4th July 1996 in Granada, Spain) is a Spanish Formula One driver who races for Precision Motorsport. He won the F2RWRS championship in 2016 for Plus One Racing Engineering, and raced for Jones Racing in F1RWRS. His brother Jorge races in AR3.5 for Peak Aeroracing Engineering whilst his younger sister Carmen drives for Venturi Formula in AutoReject 2.0.

Early life

Diego was born to José Álvarez, a former racing driver, and Ximena who was a store manager in Granada. He first tried karting at the age of 9, and won various Spanish and European titles.

While his father was employed as a consultant to the Epsilon Euskadi racing team, he suggested to them that they try a then 14-year-old Diego out in a Eurocup Formula Renault car and would pay out of his wages. The team agreed, and became impressed by his natural affinity with the car and his technical feedback after an argument with the race engineers, who initially refused to make the setup changes that Diego requested. They waived the fee that José had volunteered to pay, and promptly signed Diego up.

Racing Career

As Epsilon Euskadi renamed to EPIC Racing, Torrente joined the team for the new-in-2012 Formula Renault 2.0 España series and managed to win 3 races in his first season on his way to 4th in the championship. He stayed for another season and managed to win the competition overall with an impressive 7 victories in all.

He was then signed by Fusion Motorsports in early 2014, who loaned him out to AV Formula to race the second half of the 2014 Formula Renault 3.5 season.

2015: Rejects of LFS

As Fusion got an entry into the 2015 RoLFS season, Torrente became their driver after electing to become a one-car operation. After proving he was more than capable in preseason testing, Torrente made a good start in Blackwood by qualifying 1st in his heat. He was leading that heat, before the erratic driving of Martin McGovern put paid to those chances as he was about to be lapped. However, he managed to get a 3rd place in the feature race.

Westhill was also quite successful and saw Torrente take his first heat win. He also took another 3rd place in the feature race at a circuit that suited the Goodyear-Zytek combination.

However, the next two races were a disappointment. Although the race at Fern Bay had potential, Torrente was caught up behind traffic and only managed 4th. He retired from the feature race after an accident that involved Dean Melville. The same results occurred at South City; 4th in the heat was followed by another feature race retirement.

As the lower power Zytek engine began to become a drawback, it was obvious that Fusion's good pace had come to an end, resulting in Torrente managing not to qualify for the Kyoto feature race. In the Nippon 200 final, it was not expected that Torrente would qualify, but due to his natural one-lap pace he managed to get in despite many of his adversaries using jokers to get into the race. However, Nathan McKane hit Cave Johnson early on in the race, and the latter took Torrente into the wall; the Spaniard requiring a pitstop to sort out the damage to his car. This put him a lap down and out of the running for points.

2016: F2RWRS

Having got some decent backing from KH-7 and El Corte Inglés, Torrente had a budget ready to secure an F2RWRS drive. He got a seat to replace Alexey Buyvolov at Dofasco, as the Polish team signed a deal with leading engine company Lancia. He will be partnered by fellow Spaniard Judd McAllister. After failing to pre-qualify for the first two races, Torrente managed to take 2nd at Brands Hatch, partnering fellow Astro Racing Star Marko Jantscher on the podium. After a poor race at Monza which only saw him take home the point for fastest lap, Torrente became disillusioned with the Dofasco setup and moved to the new Plus One operation. It was immediately successful, as he clocked up another 2nd place at Austria having started on pole.

An off-day at Istanbul Park saw the Plus One team fail to pre-qualify; neither Torrente or team-mate Martyn Rietacher had enough pace to haul themselves into qualifying proper. However, Torrente's arrival saw Plus One rise out of pre-qualifying for the next three rounds, to which they wouldn't return for the rest of the season. A strong 4th place at Long Beach helped Torrente climb up the table, before a maiden victory came for the Spaniard at the notoriously tricky Norisring; Torrente was on a crucial one-stop strategy which saw him recoup the places he'd lost at the start and put him on top of the F2RWRS championship. After a rare accident at Zandvoort, a strong pair of races at Monaco and Belgium saw Torrente begin to assert himself at the top of the standings. A second win came at Mexico later in the season, ensuring he was the first repeat winner of 2016. After another pair of strong points finishes in China and Japan which gave the Plus One driver a 25-point lead, Torrente went into the Tropico rounds with the 2016 championship in the bag.

2017-2018: F1RWRS/ARWS

After showing plenty of potential during 2016, Torrente was a man in demand. He signed a contract with Jones Racing for 2017, partnering three-time world champion Mark Dagnall at the British team. Despite obvious testing pace, Torrente had an inauspicious start to like in F1RWRS after making multiple errors at the first race at Adelaide, breaking a number of front wings. Although the Spaniard was still on course for points, his errors exacerbated a suspension issue causing him to retire. After some coaching from team principal Sammy Jones, Torrente drove a more measured race at the following Bathurst round, watching Fredo Mestolio ahead of him push too hard and lose his front wing. After leader Alexey Buyvolov suffered technical issues that put him out of the race with three laps to spare, Torrente took his first F1RWRS victory, having barely put a foot wrong all afternoon. Torrente won again at the Austrian Grand Prix, and briefly led the World Championship in the early rounds. He eventually finished 5th overall in his debut season.

Torrente remained at Jones for 2018, with the team retaining both he and Dagnall for a second consecutive season. The season was a lot more difficult, and Jones was saddled with an uncompetitive Ford engine. Torrente's best results were a pair of 2nd place finishes, scoring 24 points overall.

2019-: Formula One

In the middle of 2018, Torrente signed a contract with Formula 1 team Precision Motorsport to replace the departing Dave Cassidy for 2019. Partnering Jules Bianchi at the works-Mercedes team, Torrente enjoyed a dream start to life in F1 by winning the second race of the opening United States Grand Prix round at Las Vegas.


Complete Results

Rejects of LFS

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 DC Pts

2015

Fusion Motorsports

Scaven S15 Toyota-Zytek 3.0 V8 BLA
HEA

5
BLA
FEA
3
WES
HEA

1
WES
FEA

3
FER
HEA

4
FER
FEA
Ret
SOU
HEA
4†
SOU
FEA
Ret
AST
HEA
4
AST
FEA
14
KYO
HEA
13
KYO
FEA
DNQ
KYO
300
20
10th 16.5

F2RWRS

Year Team Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 DC Pts
2015 Dofasco Racing Audi AF2-1 TAS
RSA
TUR
MON
FRA
GBR
GER
BEL
AUT
ITA
NDS
SIN
JPN
USA
DNPQ
100
44th 0
2016 Dofasco Racing Chrysler 016/2 AUS
DNPQ
PAC
DNPQ
GBR
2
ITA
12
AUT
TUR
USA
GER
NDS
MON
BEL
MEX
CHN
JPN
100
100
1st 64
Plus One Racing Engineering Maserati 016/2 AUS
PAC
GBR
ITA
AUT
2
TUR
DNQ
USA
4
GER
1
NDS
Ret
MON
5
BEL
3
MEX
1
CHN
4
JPN
5
100
16
100
Ret

F1RWRS/ARWS

Year Team Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 DC Pts
2017 National Jones Ford Team Jones 109 Ford XR8C AUS
Ret
NSW
1
GBR
Ret
ITA
4
AUT
1
CAN
5
SUS
7
NUS
4
GER
Ret
NDS
4
BEL
3
MON
Ret
MAR
4
ARG
Ret
JPN
3
CHN
5
5th 46
2018 National Jones Ford Team Jones 114 Ford XR8D AUS
8
NSW
Ret
ITA
Ret
MAR
Ret
CAL
Ret
USA
5
CAN
2
GBR
Ret
AUT
9
GER
Ret
SCA
5
BEL
Ret
MON
6
SAF
5
BRA
2
ARG
4
JPN
Ret
CHN
Ret
8th 24