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Driver development program

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A driver development program,[a] also known as a driver development team or driver academy, is a system or structure designed for young kart and race car drivers to learn and perfect their racing skills. These programmes are devised by racing teams, external companies and funded partnerships primarily to attract and develop future racing talent. Most programmes now employ a wide range of skilled coaches and technologies to train all of the physical and psychological abilities inherent in driving at the limit and winning races. Most racing teams will sign a driver to a multi-year contract in which they fund or part fund the driver in junior formulas (such as Formula 3 and Formula 2 in Europe, and Late models and ARCA in stock car racing) and gradually help them succeed to the highest levels of motorsport. Some teams have been criticized for unfair long-term and low-paying contracts for the talented drivers they find whilst also charging the less talented drivers very high fees for the use of their simulations and facilities. Companies that specialise in racing driver training or development programmes remain commercially viable through selling time in their simulators or gyms and generally speaking do not fund a drivers career. Funded partnerships, good driver management companies and driver search and development initiatives will fund or part fund a drivers development and will survive as long as the owners financial commitment and or success at recouping their investment. Be that a return from a talented drivers wages or a promotional exercise designed by a brand or corporation.

The following is a list of teams that currently have a driver development programs or are driver development teams.

Open-wheel racing

Formula One

Lewis Hamilton driving the McLaren MP4-23 (2008)
Sebastian Vettel driving the Red Bull RB6 (2010)
Max Verstappen driving the Red Bull RB16B (2021)
Three graduates of driver development programs have won the World Drivers' Championship: Lewis Hamilton of McLaren (2008), Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull (2010), and Max Verstappen (2021) of Red Bull

In 1998, McLaren became the first Formula One team to establish a driver development program, founding the McLaren-Mercedes Young Driver Support Programme; its initial cohort famously included 13-year-old kart racer Lewis Hamilton, who became the first driver development program alumnus in Formula One to win the World Drivers' Championship in 2008. The Red Bull Junior Team have graduated 14 members—and two former members—to Formula One, noted for their use of a second team to promote junior talent under the wing of Helmut Marko. As of 2024, Red Bull have coached two World Drivers' Champions, both winning their titles with Red Bull Racing: Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen.

Driver program Team Est Selected Driver(s)[b]
Alpine Academy France Alpine 2002 Finland Heikki Kovalainen (2007)
France Romain Grosjean (2009)
Australia Jack Doohan (2025)
AMF1 Driver Development Programme United Kingdom Aston Martin 2021 None
Ferrari Driver Academy Italy Ferrari 2009 Mexico Sergio Pérez (2011)
France Jules Bianchi (2013)
Monaco Charles Leclerc (2018)
Germany Mick Schumacher (2021)
United Kingdom Oliver Bearman (2024)
Haas Driver Development Program United States Haas 2016 Brazil Pietro Fittipaldi (2020)
Honda Formula Dream Project [ja] Japan Honda
Austria Red Bull Racing[c]
Italy RB[c]
2006 Japan Yuki Tsunoda (2021)[d]
McLaren Driver Development Programme United Kingdom McLaren 1998 Germany Nick Heidfeld (2000)
United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton (2007)
Denmark Kevin Magnussen (2014)
Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne (2016)
United Kingdom Lando Norris (2019)
Mercedes Junior Team Germany Mercedes 2014 Germany Pascal Wehrlein (2016)
France Esteban Ocon (2016)
United Kingdom George Russell (2019)
Italy Andrea Kimi Antonelli (2025)
Red Bull Junior Team Austria Red Bull Racing
Italy RB
2001 Austria Christian Klien (2004)
Italy Vitantonio Liuzzi (2005)
United States Scott Speed (2006)
Germany Sebastian Vettel (2007)
Switzerland Sébastien Buemi (2009)
Spain Jaime Alguersuari (2009)
Australia Daniel Ricciardo (2011)
France Jean-Éric Vergne (2012)
Russia Daniil Kvyat (2014)
Netherlands Max Verstappen (2015)
Spain Carlos Sainz Jr. (2015)
France Pierre Gasly (2017)
Japan Yuki Tsunoda (2021)[e]
New Zealand Liam Lawson (2023)
Sauber Academy Switzerland Sauber 2019 None
Williams Driver Academy United Kingdom Williams 2016 Canada Lance Stroll (2017)
Canada Nicholas Latifi (2020)
United Kingdom Jack Aitken (2020)
United States Logan Sargeant (2023)
Argentina Franco Colapinto (2024)
Former teams
Caterham Development Driver Program Malaysia Caterham 2012–2014 Netherlands Giedo van der Garde (2013)
United Kingdom Will Stevens (2014)
Force India F1 Team Academy India Force India 2011–2018 None
Marussia F1 Team Young Driver Program Russia United Kingdom Marussia 2012–2015 United Kingdom Max Chilton (2013)
Team Lotus Young Drivers Scheme Malaysia Team Lotus 2010–2011 None
Toyota Drivers Academy Japan Toyota 2003–2009 Japan Kazuki Nakajima (2007)
Japan Kamui Kobayashi (2009)

IndyCar Series

Super Formula

NASCAR

All of these teams have their own developmental driver programs and/or field cars/trucks on their team for developmental drivers.

Notes

  1. ^ British English: driver development programme
  2. ^ Drivers who have graduated to Formula One as members of the program, as of 2024. Bold indicates a World Drivers' Champion.
  3. ^ a b As an engine supplier.
  4. ^ Also a member of the Red Bull Junior Team.
  5. ^ Also a member of the Honda Formula Dream Project [ja].

See also

References

  1. ^ Motorsports, J. R. "JR Motorsports, GMS Racing Launch Drivers Edge Development". www.jrmracing.com. Retrieved 2019-02-17.