Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
I thought the only F3000 race-winning, non-Le Mans-winning, post-1995 reject team veteran was Vitantonio Liuzzi. However, his debut was at Imola and he was a reject so it's not him. So I did more digging:
Pedro de la Rosa never raced in IF3000.
Ricardo Zonta meets all of those criteria, aside from the bit about driving for a reject team, so he's out.
Juan Pablo Montoya is similar - he never drove for a reject team, and he also won Grands Prix.
Nick Heidfeld never drove for a reject team, and was also far better than his stats suggest.
Allan McNish was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Justin Wilson was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Antonio Pizzonia was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Riccardo Rosset was a reject.
Marc Gene never won a F3000 race.
Nor did Christian Klien.
Tiago Monteiro never won a F3000 race, and was also a God amongst men (unlike his stats).
By the time we get to Kazuki Nakajima, we've gone too far: it's no longer the F3000 era.
So my question is: Have you made a mistake answering one of the previous questions?
Aislabie wrote:I thought the only F3000 race-winning, non-Le Mans-winning, post-1995 reject team veteran was Vitantonio Liuzzi. However, his debut was at Imola and he was a reject so it's not him. So I did more digging:
Pedro de la Rosa never raced in IF3000.
Ricardo Zonta meets all of those criteria, aside from the bit about driving for a reject team, so he's out.
Juan Pablo Montoya is similar - he never drove for a reject team, and he also won Grands Prix.
Nick Heidfeld never drove for a reject team, and was also far better than his stats suggest.
Allan McNish was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Justin Wilson was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Antonio Pizzonia was a reject, driving for a non-reject.
Riccardo Rosset was a reject.
Marc Gene never won a F3000 race.
Nor did Christian Klien.
Tiago Monteiro never won a F3000 race, and was also a God amongst men (unlike his stats).
By the time we get to Kazuki Nakajima, we've gone too far: it's no longer the F3000 era.
So my question is: Have you made a mistake answering one of the previous questions?
Ok, according to this data, yes, i made a mistake, i was considering Superformula in Japan part of IF3000 (i think he was referring to a general series, like if you say F3)
So, i'm sorry for this. The driver was Pedro de la Rosa. If anyone was thinking in Pedrito, that's the winner and choose another driver.
I actually feared that there would be a misunderstanding with my F3000 question and I thought about clarifying it more to mean the FIA sanctioned international series, but didn't in the end. It's a shame there was a misunderstanding.
Shall Aguvazk come up with another driver? Who goes next?
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.
Murray Walker at the 1997 Austrian Grand Prix wrote:The other [Stewart] driver, who nobody's been paying attention to, because he's disappointing, is Jan Magnussen.