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Winfield Racing School
French racing school From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Winfield Racing School (formal name: École de Pilotage Winfield[a]) is a French school for racing drivers at Paul Ricard in France.

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History
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Winfield Racing School was established as École de Pilotage Jim Russell by Bill Knight, Arthur Owen and Jim Russell with help from Gérard Crombac at Magny-Cours, France in 1963. The name was changed to École de Pilotage Winfield (Winfield Driver School)[a] in 1964 when Bill Knight, a successful land speed records campaigner from Jersey island, who owned a karting circuit in Mallorca among other ventures named Winfield,[1][2] decided to make the new project independent from Jim Russell.[1]
At the time, Magny-Cours circuit (also called the Jean Behra circuit)[3] was just built in 1960 by the local owner/farmer, Jean Bernigaud,[4] whom Gérard 'Jabby' Crombac[b] knew about, and the school became the main user of the otherwise under-utilized local racing course. There were many aspiring young drivers in France, where an open-wheel racing school did not exist,[c] and the school enjoyed initial success attracting many talented students including Jean-Pierre Jaussaud, François Cevert, Patrick Depailler, Jacques Laffite and Patrick Tambay.
Bill Knight's son Mike, aged 19, finished 2nd after Peter Warr (Lotus 23, 1650cc Cosworth one-off pre-crossflow push-rod) in the inaugural FIA-sanctioned Japan Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit in May 1963 driving a Lotus 23 with a 1098cc Cosworth Mk.IV. He won the 2nd Japan Grand Prix[d] the next year in 1964[e] driving a Brabham BT9,[f] against Peter Warr (Lotus 27), Arthur Owen (Cooper T67), F. Francis (Lotus 22), M. Evans (Lola Mk.3) and others.[5] He acted as the instructor at the school together with Renato 'Tico' Martini, who initially was the Chief Mechanic of the school (Arthur Owen was the Chief Instructor initially. Tico also started his own racing car constructor, Automobiles Martini in 1965,[g] and went on to campaign an F1 Martini with René Arnoux as the driver in 1978).
Mike Knight and his brother Richard took over the ownership of the school in 1966 when Bill Knight went back to the UK. Mike managed the school with Tico Martini until 1973 when Mike moved back to the UK and Richard came over to run the business for the next 10 years until 1983 when Mike returned after running the DYMAG racing wheels venture.[1]
Shell Oil became the sponsor of the school from 1963 until 1973 when François Cevert died of injuries in a practice accident at Watkins Glen in October. René Arnoux was the last of the Volant Shell Competition Scholarship drivers coming out of the school, who were given a gratis season of Formula France. Shell terminated the sponsorship in the middle of the first oil crisis in 1973, but the French oil giant, Elf filled the spot and added the second school venue at Paul Ricard (previously called the Circuit du Castellet) at Le Castellet near Marseille by entrusting the management of École de pilotage Renault-Elf Circuit Paul Ricard (Renault-Elf Paul Ricard Circuit Driving School) and changing its name to Winfield Racing School (École de pilotage Renault-Elf-Winfield).[a]
Over the course of 35 years, 30 of the school graduates became a Formula One driver, including Damon Hill.[1] (At least 24 according to the Notable Students section below.)
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Volant Elf scholarship (Volant Elf-Winfield)
From 1974, Elf took over the scholarship and it became Volant Elf Scholarship offered at the school in addition to the Formula Renault and Formula 3 team the school operated to offer "Prize Drive" spots for the qualified students as a strong incentive. At the end of each season, shoot-out sessions are organized by the racing school to determine the five best students. The final winner is granted the full financing of a season in French Formula Renault Championship for the following year.[6] One of the qualified students, Alain Prost, won 12 of the 13 races in the 1976 Formula Renault season.
With the realization that there are some exceptional talents among the non-winners, Trophée Winfield was also created to offer second chances for recognition, as well as for the winners of shorter-term programs at the school.[1]
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Rebirth
In March 2015, Frédéric Garcia and Anne-Charlotte Rémy invested and bought the Winfield Racing School brand. Adding Historic Racing, brought in by Laurent Fort (Winfield Héritage) to the line of activities, the school offers a Formula 1 driving experience day to wealthy enthusiasts in addition to the traditional schooling for young racing drivers, occupying the modern facilities at Paul Ricard circuit previously used by Renault F1 and Toyota F1 teams.[7]
Notable students
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- In parentheses in the following list, YEAR is the year attended.
- Volant Shell(up to 1973) or Volant Elf(from 1974) are the top graduate for the year by winning the Volant qualifier race.
- Volant (from 2015) are the top graduate for the year selected by a jury.[h]
- 'finalist' are the winners of shoot-out sessions who proceeded to the final Volant qualifier.
- Trophée Winfield is awarded to an exceptional driver in the loser pool, or for winners in short-term programs.[1]
- Jean-Pierre Jaussaud (1963 Volant Shell)[1]
- Johnny Servoz-Gavin (1963)[8]
- Roby Weber (1964 Volant Shell)[8]
- Claude Vigreux (1965 Volant Shell)[8]
- Jean-Pierre Jarier (1965)[9]
- François Cevert (1966 Volant Shell)[1]
- Patrick Depailler (1966)[10]
- François Mazet (1967 Volant Shell)[11]
- Jean-Luc Salomon (1968 Volant Shell)[12][i]
- Jacques Laffite (1968 Trophée Winfield)
- José Dolhem (1969 Volant Shell)[13]
- Graham Stoker[1]
- Guy Dhotel (1970 Volant Shell)[8]
- Patrick Tambay (1971 Volant Shell)[14]
- Gérard Camili (1971 Volant Shell finalist)[2]
- Didier Pironi (1972 Volant Shell)[14]
- René Arnoux (1973 Volant Shell)[1]
- Bruno Saby (1973 Volant Shell finalist)
- Serge Meynard (1974 Volant Elf)[1]
- Patrick Gaillard (1974 Volant Elf finalist)[15]
- Alain Prost (1975 Volant Elf)[14]
- Jean-Louis Schlesser[2]
- Gérard Choukroun (1976 Volant Elf)[16]
- Alain Ferté (1977 Volant Elf)[17]
- Pascal Fabre (1978 Volant Elf)[16]
- François Chauche (1978 Volant Elf finalist)[16]
- Philippe Renault (1979 Volant Elf)[16]
- Christian Danner[2]
- Philippe Paoli (1980 Volant Elf)[16]
- Olivier Grouillard (1981 Volant Elf)[18]
- Paul Belmondo (1982 Volant Elf)[19]
- Éric Bernard (1983 Volant Elf)[14]
- Jean Alesi (1983 Volant Elf finalist)[14]
- Jeffrey E Schwartz (1983 Volant Elf finalist)[20]
- Jeremy Dale (1983)
- Damon Hill (1983)[2]
- Bertrand Gachot (1983)[1]
- Érik Comas (1984 Volant Elf)[16]
- Alain Menu (1984 Volant Elf finalist)[16]
- Ron Emmick (1985 Volant Elf)[16]
- Ludovic Faure (1986 Volant Elf)[16]
- Olivier Panis (1987 Volant Elf)[14]
- Yvan Muller (1987 Volant Elf finalist)[2]
- Guillaume Gomez (1988 Volant Elf)[16]
- Stéphane Ortelli (1989 Volant Elf)[21]
- Richie Hearn (1990 Volant Elf)[16]
- Mark Hotchkis (1990)[22]: This source claims "top of class"
- Jason Engle (1991 Volant Elf)[16]
- Steeve Hiesse (1992 Volant Elf)[16]
- Narain Karthikeyan (1992 Volant Elf finalist)
- Michel Disdier (1992)[8]
- Sébastien Boulet (1993 Volant Elf)[j][16]
- Sébastien Alberto (1993 Volant Elf)[j][16]
- Marcel Fässler[2] (1993 Volant Elf finalist)[23]
- Renaud Malinconi (1994)[16]
- Jeff Shafer (1995)[1]
- Masaki Kano (1995)
- Shinya Nakazawa (1996 Volant Elf finalist)
- Harold Primat
- Julien Beltoise (Volant finalist)[24]
- Caio Collet (2018 Volant)[7]
- Théo Pourchaire (2018 Trophée Winfield)[7]
- Jules Mettetal (2019 Volant)[7]
- Above entries in bold became a Formula One driver.
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References
Explanatory notes
External links
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