Team Aguri Explained

Team Aguri, formerly Amlin Aguri and officially the Team Aguri Formula E Team, was an international motor racing team founded by former Formula One and 24 Hours of Le Mans driver Aguri Suzuki (Executive Chairman) and Mark Preston (Team Principal) to compete in the FIA Formula E Championship for electric cars. The team was based in Tokyo, Japan, and was in a technical partnership with McLaren. At the end of the 2015–16 season, the team was sold to China Media Capital and renamed Techeetah.

Team history

Team Aguri was the creation of Suzuki and Preston, who previously created the Super Aguri F1 team in just 100 days, which competed in Formula One between 2006 and 2008. On 1 November 2013, Team Aguri reached an agreement with the FIA to become the sixth of ten teams to sign up to race in the inaugural season of the Formula E series.[1]

2014–15 season

It was announced on 27 June 2014 that the first female driver to drive in Formula E would be Katherine Legge from Great Britain. The team also announced an agreement with Amlin for the insurance company to become the title sponsor of the team, which would compete as "Amlin Aguri".[2] On 2 July 2014, António Félix da Costa from Portugal was confirmed as the second driver. It was announced that Takuma Sato would fill in for the team at the first round in Beijing, due to Félix da Costa having previous commitments in the DTM series.[3] Salvador Durán replaced Legge from the Punta del Este round. Félix da Costa took the team's first win in Buenos Aires, and the team ultimately finished in seventh place in the teams' championship.

2015–16 season

On 24 June 2015 ahead of the London ePrix, Team Principal Mark Preston confirmed that team would continue to use the McLaren powertrain from the inaugural Formula E season in the 2015–16 season, to focus development on other areas of the car. In doing so they became the first team to take this approach, in the hope that the older powertrains would provide greater reliability than their rivals while exploring other areas where performance gains could be made, such as software.

Speaking to Current E, Preston commented: "We're going to stay with the current car. Because the battery is not changing (it's going to be refreshed), that means that we've only got the same amount of power in the race and therefore there is no real difference in the race mode. And the gearbox is fine. There's 170kW that we can use, but the calculation says that if you can only just do the race at 150kW, then you're not going to be able to suddenly do the whole race at 170kW. You're going to have to mix and match. At McLaren myself and Peter actually carried over one of the cars one year and came second in the championship by one point from Ferrari, so we know it's possible".[4]

The team would be renamed to "Team Aguri", Amlin having terminated their sponsorship of the team after the conclusion of the first season.[5]

Ultimately, the team struggled to compete against its rivals with new powertrains, failing to score any podium finishes and slipping to eighth in the teams' championship. At the end of the season, the team was sold to China Media Capital and renamed Techeetah; several key management figures would remain at the team, but Aguri Suzuki would step down.[6] At the time of its purchase, the team was in talks with Renault e.Dams to secure a customer powertrain supply for the upcoming season.[7]

Testing

On 10–11 August 2015, Aguri had its first official test in the series' second season at Donington Park with Salvador Durán and Formula Renault 3.5 driver Tom Dillmann driving the Team Aguri car. On day one, Durán ended up fifth fastest with a time of 1:32.549 whereas Dillmann only completed two laps. On day two, only Dillmann set a time – tenth with a lap time of 1:32.369. On 17–18 August 2015, the second test took place with WEC driver Nicolas Lapierre driving the first day and GP2 driver Nathanaël Berthon on day two. Lapierre managed ninth with a lap time of 1:32.694, 2.5 seconds slower than the fastest time, set by Abt driver Daniel Abt. Berthon set a time of 1:31.185, good enough for eighth place on the day.

Results

YearChassisPowertrainTyresNo.Drivers1234567891011Points
Amlin Aguri
2014–15Spark SRT01-eSRT01-eBEIPUTPDEBUEMIALBHMCOBERMSCLON667th
55 Takuma SatoRet
António Félix da Costa8Ret1679117
Sakon YamamotoRetRet
77 Katherine Legge1515
Salvador Durán16DSQ10RetRet166178
Team Aguri
2015–16Spark SRT01-eSRT01-eBEIPUTPDEBUEMEXLBHPARBERLON328th
55 António Félix da CostaRet66RetRetRet8611
René RastNC
77 Nathanaël Berthon81514
Salvador DuránRet1514
Ma QinghuaRet141112
2016–17

Techeetah

Notes:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Super Aguri joins FIA Formula E Championship as sixth team. FIA FormulaE. 1 November 2013. 7 December 2015. 23 January 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180123072308/http://www.fiaformulae.com/en/news/2013/november/super-aguri-joins-fia-formula-e-championship-as-sixth-team.aspx. dead.
  2. Web site: Formula E: Super Aguri signs title sponsor and female driver. 30 June 2014 . SportsPro Media. 14 December 2016.
  3. Web site: Formula E: Sato gets Aguri seat for Beijing. racer.com. Racer Special Projects. 29 June 2015. 24 September 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924110735/http://www.racer.com/latest-stories/item/108450-formula-e-sato-gets-aguri-seat-for-beijing. dead.
  4. Web site: Exclusive: Aguri to retain S1 powertrain in S2. Current E. 24 June 2015.
  5. Web site: Biesbrouck. Tim. Amlin and Aguri to split ways. ElectricAutosport.com. 14 December 2016. 24 June 2015.
  6. Web site: Mitchell. Scott. Owner Aguri Suzuki to leave his Formula E team after season two. Autosport.com. 14 December 2016.
  7. Web site: Renault to supply customer Formula E power in season three. Motorsport.com. 14 December 2016.
  8. News: Exclusive: Team Aguri's Mark Preston on season two and beyond. Biesbrouck. Tim. 8 July 2015. Electric Autosport. Formula Blue Media. 13 July 2015.