Naoki Yamamoto (racing driver) explained

Naoki Yamamoto
Nationality: Japanese
Birth Date:11 July 1988
Birth Place:Utsunomiya, Japan
Current Series:Super GT GT500
First Year:2010
Current Team:Team Kunimitsu
Car Number:100
Former Teams:Dome Racing
Starts:113
Championships:2 (2018, 2020)
Wins:7
Poles:5
Podiums:32
Fastest Laps:6
Embed:yes
Current Series:Super Formula
First Year:2010
Current Team:Nakajima Racing
Car Number:64
Former Teams:Team Mugen, Dandelion Racing
Starts:110 (113 entries)
Championships:3 (2013, 2018, 2020)
Wins:9
Podiums:20
Poles:13
Fastest Laps:4
Best Finish:1st
Year:2013, 2018, 2020
Prev Series:All-Japan Formula Three
Prev Series Years:2008–2009
Titles:Super Formula
Super GT
All-Japan Formula Three National Class
Title Years:201320182020
20182020
2009

is a Japanese racing driver for Honda Racing Corporation, currently driving in Super GT with Team Kunimitsu and in Super Formula with Nakajima Racing. He is a three-time champion in Super Formula and a two-time champion in the GT500 class of Super GT. Yamamoto is also the only driver to have won both the Super Formula and GT500 championships in the same season multiple times, a feat which he accomplished in 2018 and 2020.

Career

Early career

Yamamoto started karting in 1994,[1] and won the All-Japan Kart Championship FA class title in 2002.[2] In 2006, he graduated from the Suzuka Circuit Racing School Formula (SRS-F) with a scholarship to compete in Formula Challenge Japan (FCJ). In 2007, he joined the Honda Formula Dream Project (HFDP) academy, and finished second in the Formula Challenge Japan championship with two wins in his first season in single-seaters. He moved up to the Japanese Formula 3 Championship with Honda Team Real in 2008, finishing fifth in the championship class with one win. In 2009, he moved to the National Class with HFDP Racing (also managed by Real Racing), and won the class title with eight wins in sixteen races.

Super GT

Yamamoto debuted in the Super GT Series in 2010, driving a Honda HSV-010 GT for Team Kunimitsu alongside co-driver Takuya Izawa. He scored a podium on his debut at Suzuka, and took another third place at the Suzuka endurance round. During the following two seasons, he scored three more podium finishes. Yamamoto was fifth in the drivers' standings in 2012, the best result for a Honda driver that season.

In 2013, Yamamoto transferred to the Weider Modulo Dome Racing team, and took his first Super GT victory at the Suzuka 1000km endurance race. He and co-driver Frédéric Makowiecki finished fourth in the championship, a career best for Yamamoto. In 2014 he won the summer race at Fuji to take the first win for the new Honda NSX Concept-GT car. Yamamoto, who shared the car with Makowiecki, Izawa, and Jean-Karl Vernay during the season, finished fourth in the drivers' championship for the second consecutive season.

Yamamoto returned to Team Kunimitsu in 2015, reuniting with Izawa. He won at Sugo that season, and finished a career-best third in the championship. Over the following two seasons, Yamamoto would score three more podium finishes, including a third place in the 2017 Suzuka 1000km.

Ahead of the 2018 season, 2009 Formula One world champion Jenson Button joined Team Kunimitsu as Yamamoto's co-driver. In their first race together at Okayama, Yamamoto and Button finished second. They finished second again at Suzuka in May, then won at Sportsland Sugo and finished third at Motegi to clinch the GT500 Drivers' and Teams' Championships. It was the first JGTC/Super GT title for Team Kunimitsu, and having won Super Formula earlier that year, Yamamoto became the first driver to win both titles in the same year in fourteen years.[3]

Yamamoto and Button finished the 2019 season in eighth with two podiums. After the season, Button left Super GT, and Yamamoto was joined by Tadasuke Makino for the 2020 season. Yamamoto scored seven top-six finishes in eight races in 2020, including three podium finishes. In the final round at Fuji, Yamamoto was running in second place on the final lap, until race leader Ryo Hirakawa of TGR Team KeePer TOM's ran out of fuel coming out of the final corner. Yamamoto was able to overtake Hirakawa to take the victory and clinch his and Team Kunimitsu's second set of GT500 titles in three years.[4]

In 2021, after winning the third race of the year at Motegi with Makino, Yamamoto established a points lead as high as 16 points before the penultimate round.[5] He was in position to win his third GT500 title in four years at the final race at Fuji, but was taken out of contention after being hit by GT300 class Honda driver Ren Sato.[6] Yamamoto finished the year third in the championship.

In the first race for Team Kunimitsu since the death of founder Kunimitsu Takahashi, Yamamoto and Makino finished second at Okayama to start the 2022 season. They ended the year with a win at Motegi from pole position, as Yamamoto finished third in the championship for the second consecutive season. After the race, Yamamoto, Makino, and team principal Kazuhiro Kojima carried a portrait of Takahashi with them to the post-race interviews.[7]

Yamamoto suffered a violent crash during the sixth round of the 2023 season at Sugo, when his car hit the guardrail and flipped over after colliding with a GT300 car along the frontstretch. He was diagnosed with a neck injury which forced him to miss the rest of the Super GT and Super Formula seasons.[8] He returned in time to start the 2024 season, and Yamamoto and Makino finished third in the opening round at Okayama.

Super Formula

Yamamoto entered the Super Formula Championship (then known as Formula Nippon) in 2010, driving a Honda-powered car for Nakajima Racing. He scored seven top-seven finishes in the eight races of 2010, finishing seventh in the overall standings in his first year while also claiming Rookie of the Year honours.[9] He moved to Team Mugen in 2011 and took pole position at Suzuka in his first race with the team, but did not finish after being involved in a first lap incident.[10]

The 2013 season saw him score five podiums and a maiden series victory. He finished the 2013 tied with the same number of points as André Lotterer, who also had more wins on the season. However, the championship tiebreaker in Super Formula at the time went to the driver that scored the most points at the last race meeting of the season at Suzuka. Yamamoto's win and third-place finish in the double-header finale at Suzuka were enough to win the championship ahead of Lotterer, who missed the finale due to his commitments in the FIA World Endurance Championship with Audi.

After the introduction of the new Dallara SF14 in 2014, Yamamoto took five pole positions, four podiums and two wins (both at Suzuka) from 2014 to 2017, and was the leading Honda driver in the standings in 2014 and 2015. He won his second championship in 2018, with three wins on the season including the first and last rounds at Suzuka, the latter of which clinched his second title ahead of Nick Cassidy.

Yamamoto switched teams to Dandelion Racing for the 2019 season. He began the year with three podiums and a win in the first three races of the season, but went on to finish runner-up in the championship behind Cassidy. He won the championship for the third time in 2020, by just two points over Ryo Hirakawa (whom he had also defeated to win the GT500 title earlier that year). This made him the first driver to win both the GT500 and Super Formula championships in the same year on multiple occasions.[11] It also made him only the fourth driver to win three or more Japanese Top Formula championships, joining six-time champion Kazuyoshi Hoshino, five-time champion Satoru Nakajima, and four-time champion Satoshi Motoyama.

With his third championship and second 'double championship' secured, Yamamoto moved back to Nakajima Racing for the 2021 season. For the first time since 2014, Yamamoto failed to win a race or record a podium finish, slumping to a career-worst 13th place in the championship.

Yamamoto's winless drought came to an end during the seventh round of the championship at Motegi when he won a wet race from pole position.[12] His 2023 season ended prematurely after the Super GT crash at Sportsland Sugo. He recorded three top-ten finishes and was 12th in points at the time of the accident. However, he recovered in time to start the 2024 season, and finished third in his return at the opening race at Suzuka.

Formula One

After winning the GT500 and Super Formula titles in 2018, Yamamoto had accumulated the requisite 40 points required to attain an FIA Super License and compete in Formula One.[13] Yamamoto would get his first chance to drive a Formula One car in 2019, when he drove for Scuderia Toro Rosso-Honda in the first practice session of the Japanese Grand Prix. He completed the most laps in the session and set a fastest lap time just 0.1s off the pace of regular driver Daniil Kvyat.[14] [15] This participation made him the first Japanese driver to drive during a Formula One Grand Prix session since Kamui Kobayashi in 2014.[16]

Despite the impressive performance, Yamamoto was not selected by Toro Rosso (who had changed their name to Scuderia AlphaTauri) or Red Bull Racing for an F1 race seat in 2020.

Racing record

Career summary

SeasonSeriesTeamRacesWinsPolesF/LapsPodiumsPointsPosition
2007Formula Challenge Japan1824281582nd
2008Japanese Formula 3 ChampionshipHonda Team Real1810021385th
2009Japanese Formula 3 Championship - NationalHFDP Racing16866121211st
2010Formula NipponNakajima Racing8000020.57th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu70002408th
2011Formula NipponTeam Mugen70110511th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu70001379th
2012Formula NipponTeam Mugen80000411th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu70002435th
2013Super FormulaTeam Mugen71025371st
Super GTDome Racing81021564th
2014Super FormulaTeam Mugen9020014.59th
Super GTDome Racing81023644th
2015Super FormulaTeam Mugen81202265th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu81003603rd
2016Super FormulaTeam Mugen8110115.58th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu800012014th
2017Super FormulaTeam Mugen7000110.59th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu80112457th
2018Super FormulaTeam Mugen63203381st
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu81104781st
2019Super FormulaDocomo Team Dandelion Racing71103332nd
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu80022378th
Formula OneRed Bull Toro Rosso HondaTest driver
2020Super FormulaDocomo Team Dandelion Racing71123621st
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu81003691st
2021Super FormulaTCS Nakajima Racing700001313th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu81102603rd
2022Super FormulaTCS Nakajima Racing1011113210th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu81103623rd
2023Super FormulaTCS Nakajima Racing700001413th
Super GTTeam Kunimitsu601013111th
2024Super GTStanley Team Kunimitsu40002372nd*
Super FormulaPONOS Nakajima Racing30011216th*

Complete Japanese Formula 3 Championship results

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

YearTeam EngineClass123456789101112131415161718DCPts
2008nowrapHonda Team RealnowrapMugenFUJ
1

5
FUJ
2

7
AUT
1

5
AUT
2

5
SUZ
1

Ret
SUZ
2

4
MOT
1

5
MOT
2

Ret
OKA
1

1
OKA
2

4
SUZ
1

3
SUZ
2

4
MOT
1

5
MOT
2

5
FUJ
1

6
FUJ
2

6
SUG
1

5
SUG
2

7
5th138
2009nowrapHFDP RacingnowrapToyotaNFUJ
1

12
FUJ
2

8
OKA
1

Ret
OKA
2

6
SUZ
1

8
SUZ
2

7
FUJ
1

7
FUJ
2

8
SUZ
1

12
SUZ
2

7
MOT
1

8
MOT
2

8
AUT
1

8
AUT
2

8
SUG
1

12
SUG
2

5
1st121

Complete Super GT results

YearTeamCarClass12345678DCPoints
2010nowrapTeam KunimitsunowrapHonda HSV-010 GTGT500SUZ
3
OKA
8
FUJ
10
SEP
5
SUG
8
SUZ
3
FUJ
C
MOT
6
8th40
2011nowrapTeam KunimitsunowrapHonda HSV-010 GTGT500OKA
2
FUJ
12
SEP
7
SUG
7
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
5
AUT
14
MOT
4
9th37
2012Team KunimitsuHonda HSV-010 GTGT500OKA
2
FUJ
2
SEP
6
SUG
8
SUZ
11
FUJ
12
AUT
8
MOT
9
5th43
2013Dome RacingHonda HSV-010 GTGT500OKA
5
FUJ
10
SEP
4
SUG
Ret
SUZ
1
FUJ
5
AUT
5
MOT
7
4th56
2014Dome RacingHonda NSX Concept-GTGT500OKA
5
FUJ
10
AUT
7
SUG
8
FUJ
1
SUZ
3
BUR
5
MOT
3
4th64
2015Team KunimitsuHonda NSX Concept-GTGT500OKA
2
FUJ
Ret
CHA
Ret
FUJ
5
SUZ
5
SUG
1
AUT
11
MOT
3
3rd60
2016Team KunimitsuHonda NSX Concept-GTGT500OKA
10
FUJ
Ret
SUG
10
FUJ
3
SUZ
7
CHA
10
MOT
10
MOT
12
14th20
2017Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
Ret
FUJ
6
AUT
3
SUG
9
FUJ
8
SUZ
3
CHA
7
MOT
5
7th45
2018Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
SUZ
CHA
FUJ
SUG
AUT
MOT
1st78
2019Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
SUZ
CHA
FUJ
AUT
SUG
MOT
8th37
2020Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500FUJ
FUJ
SUZ
MOT
FUJ
SUZ
MOT
FUJ
1st69
2021Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
MOT
SUZ
SUG
AUT
MOT
FUJ
3rd60
2022nowrapTeam KunimitsunowrapHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
SUZ
FUJ
SUZ
SUG
AUT
MOT
3rd62
2023Team KunimitsuHonda NSX-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
SUZ
FUJ
SUZ
SUG
AUTMOT11th31
2024Stanley Team KunimitsuHonda Civic Type R-GTGT500OKA
FUJ
SUZ
FUJ
SUZ
SUG
AUT
MOT
2nd*37*
Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.

Complete Super Formula results

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

YearEntrantEngine12345678910DCPoints
2010nowrapNakajima RacingHondaSUZ
7
MOT
5
FUJ
7
MOT
4
SUG
Ret
AUT
5
SUZ
6
SUZ
5
7th20.5
2011nowrapTeam MugenHondaSUZ
Ret
AUT
5
FUJ
9
MOT
14
SUZ
C
SUG
11
MOT
12
MOT
Ret
11th5
2012Team MugenHondaSUZ
7
MOT
7
AUT
9
FUJ
12
MOT
Ret
SUG
14
SUZ
15
SUZ
Ret
11th4
2013Team MugenHondaSUZ
4
AUT
3
FUJ
3
MOT
8
SUG
3
SUZ
1
SUZ
3
1st37
2014Team MugenHondaSUZ
11
FUJ
Ret
FUJ
5
FUJ
5
MOT
15
AUT
7
SUG
7
SUZ
7
SUZ
6
9th14.5
2015Team MugenHondaSUZ
15
OKA
4
FUJ
12
MOT
8
AUT
7
SUG
2
SUZ
14
SUZ
1
5th26
2016Team MugenHondaSUZ
1
OKA
5
FUJ
Ret
MOT
8
OKA
10
OKA
6
SUG
14
SUZ
19
SUZ
Ret
8th15.5
2017Team MugenHondaSUZ
2
OKA
5
OKA
8
FUJ
Ret
MOT
13
AUT
16
SUG
18
SUZ
C
SUZ
C
9th10.5
2018Team MugenHondaSUZ
AUT
SUG
FUJ
MOT
OKA
SUZ
1st38
2019nowrapDocomo Team Dandelion RacingHondaSUZ
AUT
SUG
FUJ
MOT
OKA
SUZ
2nd33
2020Docomo Team Dandelion RacingHondaMOT
OKA
SUG
AUT
SUZ
SUZ
FUJ
1st62
2021TCS Nakajima RacingHondaFUJ
SUZ
AUT
SUG
MOT
MOT
SUZ
13th13
2022TCS Nakajima RacingHondaFUJ
FUJ
SUZ
AUT
SUG
FUJ
MOT
MOT
SUZ
SUZ
10th32
2023TCS Nakajima RacingHondaFUJ
FUJ
SUZ
AUT
SUG
FUJ
MOT
SUZSUZ13th14
2024PONOS Nakajima RacingHondaSUZ
AUT
SUG
FUJ
MOT
FUJ
FUJ
SUZ
SUZ
6th*21*
Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.

Complete Formula One participations

(key)

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2020 Driver Profile (English). dandelion-racing.com.
  2. Web site: Naoki Yamamoto SUPER FORMULA. 2022-01-26. Honda.Racing. en-US.
  3. Web site: O'Connell. R. J.. 2019-01-13. 2018 Super GT World Awards: GT500 Driver of the Year. 2021-01-06. Super GT World. en.
  4. Web site: 1 December 2020. Super GT Wrap-Up, GT500: The Final Battle At Fuji. 25 January 2022. Dailysportscar.
  5. Web site: Super GT Round 7 at Motegi Preview: First Championship Point dailysportscar.com. 2022-02-02. www.dailysportscar.com.
  6. Web site: 28 November 2021. Victory And GT500 Championship Glory For TGR Team au TOM's at Fuji. 25 January 2022. Dailysportscar.
  7. Web site: Calsonic Team Impul & Kondo Racing Secure Championship Double For Nissan . 2023-10-02 . www.dailysportscar.com.
  8. Web site: Naoki Yamamoto To Miss Remainder Of 2023 With Neck Injury . 2023-10-02 . www.dailysportscar.com.
  9. Web site: 2011 Formula Nippon Point Standings . 2024-04-12 . superformula.net.
  10. Web site: Formula NIPPON official website. 2021-01-06. superformula.net.
  11. Web site: 2021-01-02. SEASON REVIEW: 2020 Super Formula - Yamamoto Denies Hirakawa To Take Third Title. 2021-01-06. The Checkered Flag. en-GB.
  12. Web site: 2022-08-20 . Motegi Super Formula: Yamamoto holds off Fenestraz for victory . 2023-10-02 . us.motorsport.com . en.
  13. Web site: Yoshita. Tomohiro. Thukral. Rachit. 2 December 2018. Jenson Button: Super GT team-mate Yamamoto should be in F1. 7 October 2019. Autosport.com.
  14. Web site: 7 October 2019. 2019 Japanese Grand Prix: Toro Rosso to field Naoki Yamamoto in FP1. 7 October 2019. www.formula1.com.
  15. Web site: Japanese GP: Bottas leads Mercedes 1-2 in FP1. 2019-10-11. www.motorsport.com. en.
  16. Web site: 8 October 2019. Super GT Champion Yamamoto Given F1 Practice Run At Japanese Grand Prix. 5 July 2020. www.dailysportscar.com.