Marcus Ericsson

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Marcus Ericsson
File:Marcus Ericsson 2015 Malaysia.jpg
Ericsson in 2015.
Born (1990-09-02) September 2, 1990 (age 33)
Kumla, Sweden
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality Sweden Swedish
2016 team Sauber-Ferrari[1]
Car number 9
Entries 41 (41 starts)
Championships 0
Wins 0
Podiums 0
Career points 9
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 0
First entry 2014 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry 2016 Monaco Grand Prix
2015 position 18th (9 pts)
Previous series
201013
2009–102011
2009
200809
2007
GP2 Series
GP2 Asia Series
Japanese Formula Three
British Formula 3
Formula BMW UK
Championship titles
2009
2007
Japanese F3
Formula BMW UK
Awards
2009
2007
Swedish Junior Racer/Year
Swedish Junior Racer/Year

Marcus Ericsson (born September 2, 1990 in Kumla) is a Swedish race car driver currently racing for Chip Ganassi Racing in the Indy Racing League. He previously drove for Caterham F1 and Sauber in Formula One from 2014 to 2018.[1] After a successful début in car racing in 2007 which saw him take the British Formula BMW title with Fortec Motorsport, he moved up into the British team's British Formula 3 squad. After finishing as one of the top rookies in the category, Ericsson turned his attentions to the All-Japan Formula Three Championship where he won the championship in his debut year. In 2010, he moved up to the GP2 Series where he secured one victory during his maiden campaign for Super Nova Racing. Between 2011 and 2012, Ericsson drove for iSport. Ericsson completed the 2013 GP2 season with DAMS, and debuted in Formula One in 2014 with Caterham F1.

Career

Karting

Born in Kumla, Örebro County, Ericsson's first taste of motorsport came when he was nine years old racing in karts. "I got a call from Fredrik Ekblom, whom I ran in British Formula 3000 and Indy Lights. He now runs a kart circuit and he told me about a nine-year old kid who'd walked in off the street and nearly broke the lap record" recalled Richard Dutton, head of Fortec Motorsport.[2] Ekblom managed to convince Ericsson's father, Tomas, to buy his son a kart and the young Swede stayed in karting for the next four years, "I'd never really thought about racing as a career. My family didn't have the money for me to race formula cars so we never thought about it" Ericsson recalled.[2]

It was in 2006 that Ericsson's career got notable backing in the form of former Champ Car driver and 1999 Indianapolis 500 winner Kenny Bräck. "I spotted Marcus at a race in Gothenburg" Bräck says, "He didn't win the race because his engine blew up with two laps to go but he was clearly the best out there. He didn't get caught in any battles when passing – he'd just wait for the right opportunity, then he pounced and he was away. He has such patience but when he does go for it, it measures so perfectly. He reminded me of watching Alain Prost" Bräck added.[2]

File:Marcus Ericsson Brands Hatch 2007.jpg
Ericsson won his second Formula BMW race at Brands Hatch by six seconds.

Formula BMW

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Bräck had managed to convince Richard Dutton, who ran the Swede in British F3 in 1989, to race Ericsson for his Fortec Motorsport team's 2007 Formula BMW UK title challenge. Ericsson was realistic of his chances during the season, "I was thinking that I should be around top eight to start with, trying for podiums and maybe wins by the end of the year".[2] However, Ericsson's first win came earlier than expected at the first meeting of the series at Brands Hatch where he took third place in the first race and won from pole position in the second race. Following his win, Ericsson was hailed as "the best young talent" Bräck had ever seen.[3] The Swede was in the title race for the whole season, challenging Czech Josef Král and Brit Henry Arundel. In the end, the sixteen–year–old won the title by 40 points from Kral, becoming the final Champion of the British Formula BMW series prior to the series merge with the German series to make a European FBMW championship.

Formula Three

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Following his win of the Formula BMW title, Ericsson began aiming for a seat in Formula Three. Tests soon followed with British Formula 3 team Räikkönen Robertson Racing as part of his prize for winning the title that year. Soon afterwards the Swede had a test with frontrunning Formula Three Euroseries team ASM Formule 3, now ART Grand Prix. Despite an offer to join the French team, Ericsson opted to stay in England and join Fortec's British Formula 3 team. The Swede showed his pace to the F3 paddock with two pole positions and a handful of podium finishes, but no victories, which gave him fifth overall in the championship.

File:Marcus Ericsson 2009 Macau F3.jpg
Ericsson driving for TOM'S at the 2009 Macau Grand Prix, where he finished fourth.

During the winter of 2008, Ericsson signed a contract with the Japanese F3 team TOM'S to compete full-time in the championship for the upcoming season. The Swede reasoned that he could was more likely to gain the experience needed to win the Macau Grand Prix in comparison to competing further in the British championship.[4] Ericsson won the Japanese F3 championship, and also won races when making guest appearances back in British F3. He consequently participated in the Macau Grand Prix where he qualified in pole position and finished the main race in fourth position.

GP2 Series

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Ericsson moved into the GP2 Asia Series for the 2009–10 GP2 Asia Series season, driving originally for the ART Grand Prix team.[5] However, it was later confirmed that Ericsson would drive for Super Nova Racing in the 2010 GP2 Series season.[6] He had been expected to complete the rest of the Asian series with the team, but Jake Rosenzweig was signed to replace Ericsson for the final two rounds.[7] Ericsson returned to Super Nova for the 2010 season, partnering Josef Král and later Luca Filippi. He took his first series victory at Valencia, but only scoring points on two further occasions restricted him to seventeenth place in the drivers' championship.

File:M Ericsson Monza 2011.jpg
Ericsson driving for iSport at the Monza round of the 2011 GP2 Series season.

Ericsson switched to the iSport International team for 2011, alongside Sam Bird. He finished sixth in the Asia series championship, and tenth in the main series championship. He remained with iSport for 2012, alongside Jolyon Palmer. After a relatively disappointing start to the year, his fortunes improved with a victory at Spa, kickstarting a run of six consecutive points finishes to the end of the season, including two podium finishes. This late flourish lifted him to eighth in the championship.

In 2013, he got the chance to drive for the reigning champions DAMS. Despite showing great pace in qualifying, taking pole position in Spain and Great Britain, he was very unlucky in the races. A turning point came in Germany, where he won the sprint race, and he continued with podium positions in Hungary, Belgium, Singapore and Abu Dhabi to finish sixth in the championship.

Formula One

Ericsson drove for Brawn GP at the young driver test at Circuito de Jerez over three days, on 1–3 December 2009. He tested alongside IndyCar Series driver Mike Conway.[8] Conway had the edge by three tenths of a second, however team principal Ross Brawn commended Ericsson for his performance, saying that he had "performed very well showing exceptional maturity in his approach and feedback".[9]

Caterham (2014)

It was announced on 21 November 2013 that Ericsson was a candidate to drive for the Caterham F1 Team in 2014 with Kamui Kobayashi as teammates.[10] On 21 January 2014, the team announced that Ericsson and Kobayashi would be their race driver line up for the forthcoming season, with Robin Frijns as reserve.[11]

File:Ericsson 2014 Monaco Grand Prix.jpg
Ericsson during the 2014 Monaco Grand Prix where he wore a special helmet in tribute to famous Swedish racing driver Ronnie Peterson.

Ericsson qualified 20th in his debut race – the 2014 Australian Grand Prix and made a very good beginning to the race, running 11th before he fell back with oil pressure problems. In Malaysia, he qualified last, but improved in the race, finishing 14th in front of main rival Max Chilton. In Spain, he outqualified Kobayashi for the first time of his career, but he was behind both Marussia cars. He finished the race in 20th position, the last classified finisher. In the next race, the Monaco Grand Prix, he was involved in a collision with Williams driver Felipe Massa during qualifying, which resulted in Massa not advancing to the second part of the qualifying session. Ericsson was penalised with two penalty points and had to start from the pit lane. He drove a good race and took advantage of bad luck for other drivers to finish in 11th place, just missing out on his and Caterham's first points.

After this, Ericsson had some tough races in the slow Caterham. The only notable thing was a crash he suffered in the rain in Hungary, when he lost control of his car on the exit of turn 3 and hit the barriers very hard. He was fine, but the car was completely destroyed and it took him until the Belgian Grand Prix where he could match the Marussias again, losing 16th place to Chilton on the very last lap. In Singapore, he did a good job saving his tyres and was able to keep both Marussias behind him to finish in 15th place and in Japan, he out-qualified both Marussias and Kobayashi for 19th position. He started 17th, but spun behind the safety car in heavy rain, and had to fight back from last place. He finished 17th after some really fast laps, in front of both Marussias and Kobayashi, but his great performance was overshadowed by the crash of Bianchi. At the inaugural Russian Grand Prix, he qualified in a career-best 17th position and this time, he was only 0.15 seconds from making it into Q2. During the race, he started 16th but fell back as expected, finishing 19th overall but in front of his main rivals – the other Caterham and the sole Marussia of Chilton, who eventually retired from the race.

Due to Caterham F1 falling into administration on 21 October 2014, neither team driver was able to compete at the United States Grand Prix. Despite this, Ericsson flew to Texas to commentate the race for Swedish television and, as it transpired, to secure a new drive for 2015. Ericsson terminated his contract with Caterham on 12 November.[12] He eventually finished the season in 19th position, highest of the Caterham drivers that took part in 2014.

Sauber (2015–)

Ericsson (centre) leading Felipe Massa and Sebastian Vettel at the 2015 Canadian Grand Prix

At the 2014 United States Grand Prix, Sauber announced that it had signed Ericsson for 2015,[13] due in part to his substantial financial backing, but also for his strong last races of the 2014 season and the fact that he stayed cool despite 2014 being a frustrating season for him.[14] In his first race with the team in Australia, Ericsson finished in eighth position, recording the first points-scoring finish by a Swedish driver since Stefan Johansson finished third at the 1989 Portuguese Grand Prix.[15][16]

Malaysia was the first time that Ericsson made it into Q3, qualifying 10th but being promoted to 9th spot on the grid. He made a good start, but spun only on the fourth lap after an unsuccessful overtaking attempt on Force India's Nico Hülkenberg which resulted in a DNF. In China Marcus once again made it into Q3 in qualifying, once again being 10th at the grid. He finished the race in the same position, scoring one point after that Max Verstappen's engine blew up with only a few laps remaining. In Bahrain he qualified outside the top 10, but made a good start and held 8th position when a pit stop failure caused him to fall down the field, sabotaging his chances to bring some new points in the bag. He eventuelly finished the race in 14th position, one place below where he had started.

The first European leg of the season started poorly, finishing 14th in Spain and 13th in Monaco. He was running in the points for a long time in Britain, but took the wrong tyre decision during his pitstop and finished 11th - just outside the points. He only scored one more point before the summer break, with a 10th-place finish in Hungary, followed by another 10th position in Belgium. At the Italian Grand Prix Ericsson qualified into Q3, where he finished 10th – but he was penalised and taken down to 12th spot on the grid after blocking Nico Hülkenberg in Q1. Ericsson eventually showed great pace during the race and finished 9th – taking his fifth points position for the year and once again being in front of teammate Felipe Nasr.

During the summer break Sauber announced that Ericsson along with team mate Felipe Nasr had both extended their deals with the team for the 2016 season.[1]

Racing record

Career summary

Season Series Team Name Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2007 Formula BMW UK Fortec Motorsport 18 7 11 6 13 676 1st
2008 British Formula 3 Fortec Motorsport 20 2 1 0 3 65 5th
Macau Grand Prix Carlin Motorsport 1 0 0 0 0 N/A NC
2009 British Formula 3 Räikkönen Robertson Racing 6 2 1 0 3 65 11th
Japanese Formula Three TOM'S 16 5 5 9 11 112 1st
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 1 0 0 N/A 4th
2009–10 GP2 Asia Series ART Grand Prix 4 0 0 0 0 0 24th
Super Nova Racing
2010 GP2 Series Super Nova Racing 20 1 0 0 1 11 17th
2011 GP2 Series iSport International 18 0 0 0 2 25 10th
GP2 Asia Series 4 0 0 0 1 9 6th
GP2 Final 2 0 0 0 1 10 2nd
2012 GP2 Series iSport International 24 1 0 1 5 124 8th
2013 GP2 Series DAMS 22 1 2 3 5 121 6th
2014 Formula One Caterham F1 Team 16 0 0 0 0 0 19th
2015 Formula One Sauber F1 Team 19 0 0 0 0 9 18th
2016 Formula One Sauber F1 Team 6 0 0 0 0 0* 20th*

* Season still in progress.

Complete GP2 Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 DC Points
2010 Super Nova Racing ESP
FEA

11
ESP
SPR

Ret
MON
FEA

12
MON
SPR

9
TUR
FEA

Ret
TUR
SPR

Ret
VAL
FEA

7
VAL
SPR

1
GBR
FEA

12
GBR
SPR

18
GER
FEA

6
GER
SPR

Ret
HUN
FEA

12
HUN
SPR

10
BEL
FEA

13
BEL
SPR

7
ITA
FEA

Ret
ITA
SPR

11
ABU
FEA

11
ABU
SPR

Ret
17th 11
2011 iSport International TUR
FEA

9
TUR
SPR

8
ESP
FEA

5
ESP
SPR

3
MON
FEA

Ret
MON
SPR

Ret
VAL
FEA

Ret
VAL
SPR

11
GBR
FEA

3
GBR
SPR

4
GER
FEA

5
GER
SPR

16
HUN
FEA

5
HUN
SPR

16
BEL
FEA

Ret
BEL
SPR

12
ITA
FEA

14
ITA
SPR

8
10th 25
2012 iSport International MYS
FEA

13
MYS
SPR

Ret
BHR1
FEA

13
BHR1
SPR

16
BHR2
FEA

7
BHR2
SPR

7
ESP
FEA

13
ESP
SPR

22
MON
FEA

2
MON
SPR

4
VAL
FEA

2
VAL
SPR

Ret
GBR
FEA

21
GBR
SPR

7
GER
FEA

11
GER
SPR

15
HUN
FEA

18
HUN
SPR

Ret
BEL
FEA

1
BEL
SPR

4
ITA
FEA

3
ITA
SPR

7
SGP
FEA

7
SGP
SPR

2
8th 124
2013 DAMS MYS
FEA

Ret
MYS
SPR

13
BHR
FEA

13
BHR
SPR

Ret
ESP
FEA

Ret
ESP
SPR

20
MON
FEA

Ret
MON
SPR

18
GBR
FEA

11
GBR
SPR

8
GER
FEA

1
GER
SPR

13
HUN
FEA

2
HUN
SPR

4
BEL
FEA

2
BEL
SPR

15
ITA
FEA

Ret
ITA
SPR

23
SGP
FEA

7
SGP
SPR

2
ABU
FEA

3
ABU
SPR

6
6th 121

Complete GP2 Asia Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 DC Points
2009–10 ART Grand Prix ABU1
FEA

11
ABU1
SPR

12
24th 0
Super Nova Racing ABU2
FEA

17
ABU2
SPR

12
BHR1
FEA
BHR1
SPR
BHR2
FEA
BHR2
SPR
2011 iSport International ABU
FEA

4
ABU
SPR

3
ITA
FEA

10
ITA
SPR

16
6th 9

Complete Formula One results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 WDC Points
2014 Caterham F1 Team Caterham CT05 Renault Energy F1‑2014 1.6 V6 t AUS
Ret
MAL
14
BHR
Ret
CHN
20
ESP
20
MON
11
CAN
Ret
AUT
18
GBR
Ret
GER
18
HUN
Ret
BEL
17
ITA
19
SIN
15
JPN
17
RUS
19
USA BRA ABU 19th 0
2015 Sauber F1 Team Sauber C34 Ferrari 059/4 1.6 V6 t AUS
8
MAL
Ret
CHN
10
BHR
14
ESP
14
MON
13
CAN
14
AUT
13
GBR
11
HUN
10
BEL
10
ITA
9
SIN
11
JPN
14
RUS
Ret
USA
Ret
MEX
12
BRA
16
ABU
14
18th 9
2016 Sauber F1 Team Sauber C35 Ferrari 059/5 1.6 V6 t AUS
Ret
BHR
12
CHN
16
RUS
14
ESP
12
MON
Ret
CAN EUR AUT GBR HUN GER BEL ITA SIN MAL JPN USA MEX BRA ABU 20th* 0*

* Season still in progress.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Interview with Marcus Ericsson. Autosport Magazine, Vol. 188, No. 4, pp. 59, Haymarket Publications. 26 April 2007.
  3. National News > Rookie Hailed 'Best Ever'. Autosport Magazine, Vol. 188, No. 1, pp. 90, Haymarket Publications. 5 April 2007.
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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by Formula BMW UK
Champion

2007
Succeeded by
Series merged into
Formula BMW Europe
Preceded by Japanese Formula Three
Champion

2009
Succeeded by
Yuji Kunimoto