Bertrand Gachot Explained

Bertrand Gachot
Nationality: Belgian (–)
French (–)
Birth Date:23 December 1962
Birth Place:Luxembourg, Luxembourg
Years:–, –
Team(S):Onyx, Rial, Coloni, Jordan, Lola, Larrousse, Pacific
Races:84 (47 starts)
Championships:0
Wins:0
Podiums:0
Points:5
Poles:0
Fastest Laps:1
First Race:1989 Brazilian Grand Prix
Last Race:1995 Australian Grand Prix

Bertrand Jean Gachot (pronounced as /fr/; born 23 December 1962)[1] is a Belgian-French former racing driver. Gachot enjoyed some success in the junior formulae, winning titles in Formula Ford before progressing through Formula 3 and Formula 3000, reaching Formula One in 1989. After winning the 1991 24 Hours of Le Mans, Gachot was sentenced to 18 months in prison for an aggravated assault that had occurred the previous December. He was released after two months on appeal, but his enforced absence enabled Michael Schumacher to make his Grand Prix debut.

Career

Gachot was born in Luxembourg on 23 December 1962, the son of a French European Commission official and a German mother. He began karting at the age of 15. In 1983 he attended the Winfield School, a racing driving school based at the Paul Ricard circuit where Gachot competed with fellow future F1 drivers Damon Hill, Jean Alesi, and Eric Bernard for the Volant Elf; a prize of a season in Formula Renault backed by Elf. Although Bernard won the lucrative prize, Gachot subsequently dropped out of university to focus on his racing career. In 1984 he competed in Formula Ford 1600, and finished third at the Formula Ford Festival, and then won the European series in 1985 driving for Pacific Racing. In 1986 he moved up to Formula Ford 2000 and had a fierce rivalry with Mark Blundell, with Gachot winning the British series and Blundell winning the European series.

Gachot joined the British Formula Three series in 1987, finishing second in the championship for the West Surrey Racing team behind Johnny Herbert. He switched to the Formula 3000 series in 1988, and met with some success, taking pole position at the Silverstone round, and finishing second to Roberto Moreno who went on to win the championship; Gachot finishing fifth in the final standings.

Formula One

By this stage Gachot was considered one of the sport's most promising young drivers. He was signed by the newly formed Onyx team, having played a role in attracting the team's Moneytron sponsorship from businessman Jean-Pierre Van Rossem, and was partnered with the experienced Stefan Johansson. The team was well funded, but late in getting its car prepared. As a new entrant it was obliged to pre-qualify, and it was not until the French Grand Prix that Gachot made it onto the grid. He started 11th (two places ahead of Johansson) and ran in the points until battery problems dropped him to an eventual 13th and last. Despite qualifying for four of the next five events, he was then fired by van Rossem after complaining about his lack of testing time; his private grievances were publicly aired in an Onyx press release, and he was replaced with JJ Lehto. In early October he tested with Arrows at Silverstone, as he was being considered for a drive in 1990 which did not materialize. Gachot then found employment with the struggling Rial team for the final two races of the season, failing to qualify its ageing chassis for either race. The team folded over the winter.

1990 was initially more promising, as he switched to the Coloni team. The small Italian outfit had signed an exclusive deal with Subaru to use its new Carlo Chiti-designed and Motori Moderni-built 1235 flat-12 engine, and Gachot was selected to drive the sole entry. However, the engine was overweight and underpowered, resulting in a poorly-handling car that rarely ran for more than a few laps; he appeared to have little prospect of getting out of pre-qualifying. At the season opener in Phoenix, his gear selector rod broke on his first flying lap and he was unable to set a representative time.[2] Subaru withdrew entirely after the British Grand Prix. After that the car ran with a Cosworth DFR engine, and performances improved; the withdrawal of Onyx ironically promoted Gachot to the main qualifying sessions, but the car still was not quick enough and he failed to make the grid all season.

Despite this, Gachot was still highly regarded, both as a driver and a marketeer,[3] and was signed to lead the new Jordan Grand Prix team, sponsored by 7-Up and using Ford HB engines. The Gary Anderson-designed 191 was competitive, and after some initial reliability problems became a regular points-scorer; Gachot finished 5th in Canada and 6th twice. The season started off well as he gathered considerable acclaim for his Grand Prix performances, and also won the 1991 24 Hours of Le Mans driving a Mazda 787B. He then set the fastest lap at the Hungarian Grand Prix after a late tyre change but his then fortunes took a dramatic turn.

1991 prison sentence

On 10 December 1990[4] Gachot was due to meet with Jordan and representatives of 7-Up but, on the way and running late, he became involved in a road rage incident with a taxi driver at Hyde Park Corner in London. His car collided with the back of the taxi, but caused no damage to either car. Later, Gachot said the taxi driver pulled him by the tie and raised his fist, at which point Gachot sprayed the taxi driver with CS gas to defend himself.[5] Gachot hid the CS gas canister in a toilet cistern in a nearby building,[6] and was arrested and charged with actual bodily harm (ABH) and possession of a prohibited weapon.

Gachot's trial at Southwark Crown Court was scheduled the week before the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix, a circuit where he expected the Jordan to "fly".[7] Gachot had claimed self-defence, and expected a fine or suspended sentence; he was due to test at Monza after the trial. Instead he was sentenced to 18 months in HMP Brixton and, later, HMP Northeye in Bexhill-on-Sea after an unsuccessful appeal.[8]

The situation prompted a campaign of support organised by Belgian racing driver Pascal Witmeur. This campaign involved flags, T-shirts worn by members of the public and racing drivers, graffiti in several locations of the Spa-Francorchamps track during the 1991 Belgian Grand Prix, and prominent sponsorship on Witmeur's Formula 3000 car. Team owner Eddie Jordan replaced him with Michael Schumacher, whose performance at Spa led to a drive with Benetton. Gachot subsequently said that prison was "a fantastic human experience" and he had about 10,000 letters of support.[9]

Return to F1

After two months in prison Gachot's sentence was reduced by the Court of Appeal and he was released. Having missed four Grands Prix, he returned to the F1 paddock at Suzuka to try and retake his Jordan seat from Alessandro Zanardi. The team refused, though Gachot found employment with Larrousse, replacing the injured Éric Bernard for the Australian Grand Prix. He failed to qualify the unfamiliar car, but impressed the team enough to be offered the seat for the following season.

The team ran a Robin Herd-designed Venturi chassis with V12 Lamborghini engines, but suffered reliability and financial problems throughout the season. Gachot and teammate Ukyo Katayama only managed 6 classified finishes between them from 31 starts, colliding with each other twice. Gachot scored the team's only point of the year with 6th place at Monaco. He also finished 4th for Mazda at Le Mans.

1993 saw him out of Formula 1. He raced for Dick Simon Racing in CART, placing 12th at the Molson Indy Toronto in a one-off drive, and raced in Japanese touring car series for Honda while helping Keith Wiggins' Pacific team prepare to enter Formula One the following season. After becoming a shareholder in the team, Gachot was signed to drive as number 1 alongside pay driver Paul Belmondo for the 1994 season. The PR01 was initially designed as the car for Reynard's proposed entry into the series, used 1992-spec Ilmor V10 engines and was not competitive. After Gachot outqualified Roland Ratzenberger to give the team its debut at the opening round, the Pacifics never again beat fellow newcomers Simtek to the grid; although a series of accidents in the sport led to several reduced entries and Gachot starting a further four races, he failed to finish any. While he had the upper hand over Belmondo after the Canadian Grand Prix, he did not make the grid again that season.

Gachot stayed with Pacific for 1995, with the new PR02 chassis, Cosworth ED engines and an influx of experienced personnel after a merger with the remains of Team Lotus. There were only 26 entrants; hence, he was a guaranteed starter, and the reliable package meant the car could at least finish races, though Gachot and teammate Andrea Montermini were largely left battling at the back of the grid. The team's finances were tight, and Gachot stood down mid-season so that pay drivers Giovanni Lavaggi and Jean-Denis Délétraz could take his seat and bring some money to Pacific. After Délétraz's sponsors defaulted on payments, the team planned to rent the drive to Formula Nippon driver Katsumi Yamamoto for the two races in Japan, but he was not granted a superlicence, so Gachot retook the seat. Gachot also intended to hand the car over to the team's test driver Oliver Gavin for the season finale in Australia; however, the Englishman was also refused a superlicence and the Frenchman was forced back into the car, equalling the team's best result with 8th place after much of the field had retired. It was Gachot's final Grand Prix, for Pacific folded at the end of the season.

Gachot formed his own sports car team with the aim of participating in the 1996 24 Hours of Le Mans. The team entered a Welter Racing LM94 with factory support and engine from SsangYong, in what was a rare motorsport outing for the South Korean automotive manufacturer. The car participated in the pre-qualifying session but did not qualify for the race. It was again entered in the Coupes d'Automne Automobile Club de l'Ouest, a four-hour sports car race held at the Le Mans Bugatti circuit later in the 1996 season, where it qualified 3rd but did not finish.

Gachot later drove in occasional sports car and GT races for a variety of manufacturers and privateers.

Business interests

Following his F1 career Gachot began to develop his business portfolio, he signed a distribution agreement with Hype Energy Drinks in 1997.[10] The company had been started in 1994 by the founder of Hard Rock Cafe, Brian Cox,[10] and had been sponsoring motorsports including F1. Gachot had aimed to introduce the brand into France but by 2000 had taken a leadership role within Hype Energy; he began restructuring the company, simplifying the product portfolio, keeping only four flavours on the market. Growth had followed shortly after and by 2014 he was able to put Hype Energy back into the F1 Paddock with sponsorship of André Lotterer.[11] 2015 saw Gachot come full circle as Hype Energy announced a sponsorship deal with Force India F1 Team, the team who had previously been Jordan F1 and for whom Gachot had raced. Gachot utilised this and other sponsorships to push the brand into new markets, announcing sales in the USA later that year.[12] By 2017 Gachot had been pushing the brand further into the music industry, working with Migos,[13] Mike WiLL Made It[14] and Prince Royce.[15] He still continues to fill the role of CEO at the company.[16]

Gachot also owns F1i.com, a Formula 1 news site.[17]

Nationality

Gachot raced under more than one flag during his career. He initially competed with a Belgian FIA Super Licence, despite carrying a French passport.[18] From the 1992 season onwards he changed to a French licence.[19] [20] [21]

Gachot is a supporter of the unification of Europe. In a 1991 interview, Gachot said that "I am not really one nationality. I feel very much a European, but today I have to accept that a united Europe is not yet a reality. Certainly from a legal point of view."[18] His helmet design features the circle of yellow stars on a blue background from the flag of Europe.[18]

Racing record

Career summary

SeasonSeriesTeamRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPodiumsPointsPosition
1984Formula Ford Festival100?1N/A3rd
1985British Formula Ford Championship?4?1?601st
British Formula ThreeIntersport Racing100000NC
Formula Ford 1600 Great BritainPacific Racing?????0NC
1986Formula Ford 2000 Great BritainPacific Racing?????01st
Formula Ford 2000 Europe?????1212nd
1987British Formula ThreeWest Surrey Racing183328642nd
European Formula Three Cup10001N/A3rd
Macau Grand Prix10000N/ADNF
1988International Formula 3000Spirit/TOM's Racing110102215th
European Touring Car ChampionshipEggenberger Motorsport100000NC
Macau Grand PrixMarlboro Theodore Racing10000N/ADNF
1989Formula OneMoneytron Onyx Formula One500000NC
Rial Racing
World Sportscar ChampionshipRichard Lloyd Racing100000NC
Macau Grand PrixFederal Express Intersport Racing10000N/ADNF
1990Formula OneSubaru Coloni Racing000000NC
Coloni Racing Srl
24 Hours of Le MansMazdaspeed Co. Ltd.10000N/ADNF
1991Formula OneTeam 7UP Jordan100010413th
Larrousse F1
All-Japan Sports Prototype ChampionshipMazdaspeed Co. Ltd.100001024th
24 Hours of Le Mans11001N/A1st
1992Formula OneCentral Park Venturi Larrousse160000119th
24 Hours of Le MansMazdaspeed Co. Ltd.10000N/A4th
Oreca
1993PPG Indy Car World SeriesDick Simon Racing10000134th
1994Formula OnePacific Grand Prix Ltd500000NC
24 Hours of Le MansKremer Honda Racing10000N/A14th
1995Formula OnePacific Team Lotus1100000NC
Belgian Procar ChampionshipHonda Team Vzm300000NC
24 Hours of Le MansHonda Motor Co. Ltd.10000N/ADNF
1996All Japan Grand Touring Car ChampionshipFET Racing Team300001413th
1997All Japan Grand Touring Car ChampionshipPower Craft600001215th
Ryowa House Pacific Team Cerumo
24 Hours of Le MansKremer Racing10000N/ADNF

Complete British Formula 3 results

(key)

Complete International Formula 3000 results

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

Complete Formula One results

(key)

YearEntrantChassisEngine1234567891011121314151617WDCPoints
1989Moneytron Onyx Formula OneOnyx ORE-1Ford DFR 3.5 V8BRA
SMR
MON
MEX
USA
CAN
FRA
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
PORESPNC0
Rial RacingRial ARC2Ford DFR 3.5 V8JPN
AUS
1990Subaru Coloni RacingColoni C3BSubaru 1235 F12USA
BRA
SMR
MON
CAN
MEX
FRA
GBR
NC0
Coloni Racing SrlColoni C3CFord DFR 3.5 V8GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
POR
ESP
JPN
AUS
1991Team 7UP JordanJordan 191Ford HB4 3.5 V8USA
BRA
SMR
MON
CAN
MEX
FRA
GBR
GER
HUN
BELITAPORESPJPN13th4
Larrousse F1Lola LC91Ford DFR 3.5 V8AUS
1992Central Park Venturi LarrousseVenturi Larrousse LC92Lamborghini 3512 3.5 V12RSA
MEX
BRA
ESP
SMR
MON
CAN
FRA
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
POR
JPN
AUS
19th1
1994Pacific Grand Prix LtdPacific PR01Ilmor 2175A 3.5 V10BRA
PAC
SMR
MON
ESP
CAN
FRA
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
POR
EUR
JPN
AUS
NC0
1995Pacific Team LotusPacific PR02Ford EDC 3.0 V8BRA
ARG
SMR
ESP
MON
CAN
FRA
GBR
GERHUNBELITAPOREURPAC
JPN
AUS
NC0

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

YearTeamCo-DriversCarClassLaps
1990 Mazdaspeed Co. Ltd. Volker Weidler
Johnny Herbert
Mazda 787GTP148DNFDNF
1991 Mazdaspeed Co. Ltd. Volker Weidler
Johnny Herbert
Mazda 787BC23621st1st
1992 Mazdaspeed Co. Ltd.
Oreca
Johnny Herbert
Volker Weidler
Maurizio Sandro Sala
Mazda MXR-01C13364th4th
1994 Kremer Honda Racing Armin Hahne
Christophe Bouchut
Honda NSXGT225714th6th
1995 Honda Motor Co. Ltd. Armin Hahne
Ivan Capelli
Honda NSX GT1GT17DNFDNF
1997 Kremer Racing Christophe Bouchut
Andy Evans
Porsche 911 GT1GT1207DNFDNF

American Open Wheel racing results

(key)

CART

Complete JGTC results

(key)

YearTeamCarClass123456DCPts
1996FET Racing TeamToyota SupraGT500SUZFUJSENFUJ
4
SUG
14
MIN
7
13th14
1997Power CraftToyota SupraGT500SUZ
11
FUJ
Ret
15th12
Ryowa House Pacific Team CerumoSEN
8
FUJ
5
MIN
Ret
SUG
11

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bertrand Gachot. oldracingcars.com. 25 December 2021.
  2. Book: Walker, Murray. Murray Walker's 1990 Grand Prix Year. 1990. Hazleton. 0905138821.
  3. Book: Jordan, Eddie . Eddie Jordan . 2007 . An Independent Man . Orion Books. 978-0-7528-7534-7.
  4. Grand Prix driver is jailed for gas attack . 16 August 1991 . 3 . Michael Horsnell .
  5. Driver used CS gas 'in defence' . 15 August 1991 . 5 .
  6. Grand Prix driver denies CS attack on cabbie . 14 August 1991 . 6 . Richard Duce .
  7. Dodgins . Tony . October 1998 . Bertrand Gachot: You're nicked, son . 100 . F1 Racing . Haymarket Publishing.
  8. News: Kiss with a fist: Bertrand Gachot // How one small event can change Formula One forever. Sidepodcast. 2018-07-21. en.
  9. Gachot starts out on long road back . 10 December 1993 . 42 . Oliver Holt .
  10. Web site: Hype Energy drinks. hype.com. 26 October 2018.
  11. Web site: lotterer f1 dream a reality. hype.com. 26 October 2018. 8 December 2014.
  12. Web site: Kim Kardashian West wows crowds at U.S. launch party with Aryana Sayeed, Craig David and Sergio Perez. hype.us. 26 October 2018. 25 October 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20181025190054/https://www.hype.us/news/kim-kardashian-west-wows-crowds-at-u-s-launch-party/. dead.
  13. Web site: Migos and Hype Energy Team up for Motorsport Video. hype.com. 26 October 2018. 5 December 2017.
  14. Web site: Mike WiLL Made-It ft Big Sean Release On The Come Up!. hype.com. 26 October 2018. 4 April 2017.
  15. Web site: Prince Royce Hypes It Up with New Single 'Ganas Locas'. hype.com. 26 October 2018. 18 July 2017.
  16. Web site: Bertrand Gachot . LinkedIn.
  17. Web site: Breakfast with … Bertrand Gachot - Page 2 of 2 - F1i.com. 24 May 2015. f1i.com. 26 October 2018.
  18. Web site: Saward. Joe. Joe Saward. Interview: Bertrand Gachot. Inside F1. grandprix.com. 1991-10-01. 2009-07-10. https://web.archive.org/web/20090424074411/http://www.grandprix.com/ft/ft00094.html. 24 April 2009. dead. dmy-all.
  19. Book: Henry, Nick . F1 Drivers' Statistics . Autocourse 1992-93 . Hazleton Publishing . 0-905138-96-1 . 248 . 1992.
  20. Book: Henry, Nick . 1994 FIA World Championship . Autocourse 1994-95 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-95-0 . 246 . 1994.
  21. Book: Henry, Nick . 1995 FIA World Championship . Autocourse 1995-96 . Hazleton Publishing . 1-874557-36-5 . 232 . 1995.
  22. Web site: Bertrand Gachot – 1993 CART Results. Racing-Reference. NASCAR Digital Media, LLC. August 16, 2023.