Miloš Pavlović (racing driver) explained

Miloš Pavlović
Nationality: Serbia
Birth Date:8 October 1982
Birth Place:Belgrade, Yugoslavia
Racing Licence: FIA Gold
Current Series:Lamborghini Super Trofeo
First Year:2014 Lamborghini Super Trofeo
Current Team:Bonaldi Motorsport
Car Number:3
Starts:14
Wins:5
Poles:1
Fastest Laps:4
Best Finish:1
Year:2014
Titles:Lamborghini Super Trofeo World
Lamborghini Super Trofeo Europe
World Series Lights
Italian Formula 3 Championship
Title Years:2014
2014
2004
2002

Miloš Pavlović (Serbian: Милош Павловић; born 8 October 1982) is a Serbian professional racing driver.

Biography

Karting

Pavlović was born in Belgrade. His career began in 1991 in go-karts, winning two national titles the following year. He went in 1993 to Italy, where in his first season, Miloš became regional champion of Italy and reached second place in the Winter Cup. He became vice-champion of Europe in Portugal (Braga), and he came third in the World Championship in Italy (Ugento), and was named Yugoslav Driver of the Year.

In 1996, Pavlović became the youngest-ever winner of the Karting World Cup, winning the "Ayrton Senna Trophy”, and was awarded in 2003 a prize for his contribution to the development of the sport by the governing body of karting, the CIK.

Formula Vauxhall

During 1997, he tested in various formulas and completed the Jim Russell Racing Drivers School in Formula Vauxhall in England, winning at Donington Park.

In 1998, Pavlović competed in the Formula Vauxhall Junior Championship. However, lack of finance meant that he took part in 12 out of the 16 races in the season, and finished in 10th. Staying in the championship for 1999, he achieved two pole positions, two wins and three podium finishes. His gearbox failed at Thruxton, leaving him fourth in the standings at seasons' end.

Formula Three

He moved up to British Formula Three in 2000, debuting with new team RC Motorsport. He finished 11th in the standings with two top-five finishes, and moved back to Italy having struggled to find funding for 2002. Despite this, he found a drive at Target Racing in Italian Formula Three, and won five races on his way to the title, and becoming the first driver from any of the former Yugoslav states to gain an FIA Super License.

World Series by Nissan/Renault

Pavlović competed in the World Series Lights championship in 2003, driving for Epsilon by Graff, finishing third. He won the title at his second attempt with Italian team Vergani Racing having won seven out of sixteen races, and moved on to the main series. Finishing 17th and 11th in his first two seasons, he managed two wins with Draco Racing to finish third in the championship.

GP2 Series

Pavlović competed in GP2 for 2008 with BCN Competicion, but was dropped after three rounds in favour of Brazilian Carlos Iaconelli.

FIA Formula Two Championship

For 2009, Pavlović moved into the reborn FIA Formula Two Championship. Pavlović finished in ninth place overall despite retiring from a third of the races.

FIA GT1 World Championship

Pavlović debuted in the FIA GT1 World Championship in 2011, driving for Belgian Racing alongside Czech Martin Matzke. The team scored two 12th places in Abu Dhabi and 11th place at Zolder before he was replaced with Frenchman Antoine Leclerc. He returned with Sunred Engineering in 2012, with a best result of 9th in Portugal.

Lamborghini Blancpain Super Trofeo

In 2014, Pavlović joined the Italian racing team Bonaldi Motorsport in the Lamborghini Super Trofeo series. Sharing a drive with Edoardo Piscopo, Pavlović won both the Pro Division of the European and World Championships, becoming the first duo to win the title. He competed in the Pro-Am class of the European Division in 2015, winning at Circuit Paul Ricard.

ADAC GT Masters

In 2016, Pavlović joined the Bonaldi team's ADAC GT Masters assault. Driving with Patrick Kujala,[1] the entry scored a total of seven points with three points-paying finishes.

Results

Complete Formula Renault 3.5 Series results

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

YearEntrant1234567891011121314151617DCPoints
2005GD RacingZOL
1

ZOL
2

MON
1

VAL
1

VAL
2

LMS
1
LMS
2
BIL
1

BIL
2

OSC
1

OSC
2

DON
1

DON
2

EST
1

EST
2

MNZ
1

MNZ
2

17th19
2006Cram CompetitionZOL
1

ZOL
2

MON
1

IST
1

IST
2

MIS
1

MIS
2

11th41
EuroInternationalSPA
1

SPA
2

NÜR
1

NÜR
2

Draco RacingDON
1

DON
2

LMS
1
LMS
2
CAT
1

CAT
2

2007Draco RacingMNZ
1

MNZ
2

NÜR
1

NÜR
2

MON
1

HUN
1

HUN
2

SPA
1

SPA
2

DON
1

DON
2

MAG
1

MAG
2

EST
1

EST
2

CAT
1

CAT
2

3rd96

Complete GP2 Series results

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

Complete GP2 Asia Series results

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

Complete FIA Formula Two Championship results

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

Complete GT1 World Championship results

YearTeamCar1234567891011121314151617181920PosPoints
2011Belgian RacingMatech Ford GT1ABU
QR

12
ABU
CR

12
ZOL
QR

Ret
ZOL
CR

11
ALG
QR
ALG
CR
SAC
QR
SAC
CR
SIL
QR
SIL
CR
NAV
QR
NAV
CR
PRI
QR
PRI
CR
ORD
QR
ORD
CR
BEI
QR
BEI
CR
SAN
QR
SAN
CR
38th0
2012SunredFord GT GT3NOG
QR

15
NOG
CR

14
ZOL
QR

DNS
ZOL
CR

16
NAV
QR

Ret
NAV
QR

Ret
SVK
QR

7
SVK
CR

12
ALG
QR

7
ALG
CR

9
SVK
QR
DNS
SVK
CR
Ret
MOS
QR
MOS
CR
NUR
QR
NUR
CR
DON
QR
DON
CR
22nd2
* Season still in progress.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bonaldi Motorsport: ADAC GT Masters came to an end. October 4, 2016.