Pedro De La Rosa

So after the news yesterday that Pedro will once again be on the drivers list - this time at HRT - I thought I'd put a thread up to discuss his exploits.

Spain's second greatest racing driver - unless Jamie Alguersauri finishes above 9th in Brazil on Sunday - in which case Spain's 3rd greatest racing driver!

Started out as test driver for Jordan back in 1998 before getting a race seat with the Arrows team in 1999. He joined the exclusive 'scoring points on your debut' club by finishing 6th in his first race in Australia. Back then points only went down to 6th so it really was an achievment. He did benifit from both Mclaren's breaking down and Schumacher getting a puncture and ending up a lap down. Having said that he was running as high as 4th at one point before having to take a late pitstop.The rest of the season did not go quite so well as he scored no more points and failed to finish 11 of the 16 races. Arrows kept him on for the following season and he scored 2 more 6th places with 2 very handy drives at the European and German Grand Prix's.

Arrows dropped De La Rosa for money reason for the 2001 season and he looked to be without a seat until the management at Jaguar had a falling out with the great Luciano Burti and kicked him out after 4 races and De La Rosa was in the car in time for the Spanish Grand Prix and he pretty much kept pace with team leader Eddie Irvine for rest of the season scoring two further point scoring finishes with a 6th in Canada and a 5th in Italy. De La Rosa stayed on for the 2002 season but failed to score any more points and when the management changed after the failed Adrian Newey coup Pedro lost favour and his seat.

It was the following season that he started his long stint as Mclaren test driver and seemed to fit in well with the whole get up. It wasn't until 2005 he finally got an outing in the race seat in place of Montoya who was injured 'playing tennis' - he actually did pretty well - winning the most overtakes award and scoring a pretty reasonable 5th place. It was probably this performance that made Mclaren decide to give him the rest of the 2006 season after Montoya sulked off with 8 races left. He scored 5 points finishes in those 8 races and had 2 none finishes the highlight of that stint was a 2nd place at Hungary in the same race Jenson Button took his first Grand Prix win. It was a mixed up race and actually an excellent drive by Pedro to take the 2nd place which I'm sure he wuld love us to remember him best for. Of course we don't!

Come 2007 Mr De La Rosa was back to Mclaren Test Driver again after the introduction of a certain Lewis Hamilton. This was the year Pedro made himself front page news without even driving in a race as the contents of his e-mail were examined at a high court and led to Mclaren's massive fine and losing all his constructor points. Despite being wildly blamed on the net for Mclaren's fall Mclaren themselves obviously didn't think so as they kept him on for another 2 years. He even became head of the GPDA in 2008.

2010 saw Pedro make an shock return to F1 driving for Sauber. His season was largly dissapointing except for a 7th place in Hungary and with 5 races to go he was dropped in favour of Nick Heidfeld.

2011 saw him resign for Mclaren as a tester - strangely just after Ron Dennis has his driving licence taken off him brining about rumours Pedro was acting as his personal chauffer. He briefly had a break from this role to be the emergency stand in at Sauber in this years Canadian Grand Prix gettng himself a fairly respectable 12th place finish

Then came yesterdays news Pedro De La Rosa has signed for Spanish team HRT with a 2 year contract. At 41 years of age you have to say he's been signed for his development skills and hopefully that will work out. Pedro seem's especially keen as the team is Spanish and feels he's bringing something back to the nation. The thing you have to ask though is that De La Rosa has not completed a full season since 2002 and with HRT currently avereging 3.5 drivers a season you have to wonder whether he'll make it until the end of 2013.

87 Grand Prix's and officially the most experience test driver ever. Thoughts on Pedro?
 
Moving from absolutely crap to very crap should not be a cause for celebration.

I don't think anyone's popping the champagne corks and if you read what Pedro says about it he's not either but at least they've moving forward race to race even if they are still painfully off the pace.
 
After Nico's win last weekend we now have a new holder of the Andre De Cessaris belt for most races without a win - Take a bow Pedro you've finally the best at something. 88 starts and no wins!

Timo Glock will be relieved you came out of retirement.
 
hats off to Pedro for a good job in quai today - in front of a Marussia and a Caterham and pretty much on the pace of the only 2 so-called new teams in front of him.
 
Don't forget, Jen, if they're faster than anyone then all they'll need is one good performance. If Grosjean takes out a group at the start, Maldonado and Schumacher punt another one each off, Hamilton and Massa collide, two Renault alternators fail along with a McLaren gearbox and Senna has a moment and they could take a nigh on unassailable 1 point lead for 10th.
 
Jen - no, my situation is exaggerated (and probably eliminates far too many drivers), but the name of the game for these bottom teams is to simply finish highest, once, when there's high attrition.

It gives them all a chance - had Button collected Vettel in that SC restart at Singapore, Glock would have scored a point.
 
Back
Top Bottom