|
| Team |
Toyota |
| Nationality |
French |
| Podiums |
0 |
| Points |
0 |
| Grand Prix entered |
0 |
| World Championships |
0 |
| Highest race finish |
0 |
| Highest grid position |
0 |
| Date of Birth |
28/10/1979 |
| Place of Birth |
Le Mans |
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Sebastien Bourdais arrives in Formula 1 as the all-conquering, four-time champion of the US-based Champ Car World Series.
Ironically he had just resigned himself to being overlooked by F1 when Toro Rosso came calling in late 2006, offering a series of tests, and ultimately a 2008 race deal.
It was unfortunate for Bourdais that F1's brief love affair with Champ Car talent ended as he arrived in the series.
By the mid-2000s Champ Car was a shadow of its former self, with the fields short on both quantity and quality.
Bourdais' dominant, record-breaking, form therefore attracted little interest in the F1 paddock.
US luminaries such as Mario Andretti were baffled by this, insisting that Bourdais was good enough to excel in any era and deserved an F1 opportunity.
Now he has been given that chance at long last, the Frenchman is determined to show the F1 paddock what it has been missing during his American exile.
Career log
Bourdais seemed destined for F1 when he won the Formula 3000 title and tested for Arrows and Renault in 2002.
But his unwillingness to sign a management contract with Flavio Briatore ended his association with Renault, and Arrows collapsed just weeks after his impressive test.
Champ Car's mighty Newman/Haas squad threw Bourdais a lifeline, and he set the tone for his US sojourn by securing pole on his debut.
A very strong rookie season saw him take three wins and fourth in the standings, as he interspersed sparkling performances with some lower-key races and the odd error.
But that was just a rehearsal for what followed, as Bourdais proceeded to take Champ Car by the throat from 2004 to 2007.
He won just over half the races held in those four seasons, and swept to an unprecedented run of championships.
There were occasions in all four years when Bourdais' rivals closed in and threatened to create a genuine title contest, but the Frenchman always managed to step up a gear and charge to the crown.
He may have been driving for the best team, but most agreed that a major part of Newman/Haas' advantage was in the cockpit of its lead car.
While Bourdais' on-track achievements in America won universal admiration, his off-track conduct was not always so praiseworthy.
His quest for perfection was such that his rare defeats often resulted in lengthy diatribes against rivals or officialdom, prompting rivals to accuse Bourdais of poor sportsmanship and whinging.
Ultimately, however, the moaning and the dominance were both symptoms of Bourdais' thirst for success and his distaste for defeat.
The early years
After winning the 1999 French Formula 3 title, Bourdais had a promising F3000 debut season with Prost's junior arm in 2000, highlighted by pole at Monaco.
He was punted out at the first corner however, in an incident that typified his rookie season.
He switched to the once-mighty DAMS team for 2001 and secured its first win in five seasons, before becoming a title contender with Super Nova the following year.
Bourdais led the championship at mid-season, only to be overhauled by Tomas Enge in the closing rounds.
It looked like the Czech driver had snatched the title, until Enge's failed drugs test saw Bourdais crowned as champion a fortnight after the finale.
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