Victor Martins (French pronunciation: [vik.tɔʁ maʁ.tɛ̃]; born 16 June 2001) is a French-Portuguese racing driver and member of the Alpine Academy, who is currently competing in the 2024 FIA Formula 2 Championship with ART Grand Prix.[1] He won the 2020 Formula Renault Eurocup and the 2022 FIA Formula 3 Championship.
Victor Martins | |
---|---|
Nationality | French |
Born | Quincy-sous-Sénart, France | 16 June 2001
FIA Formula 2 Championship career | |
Debut season | 2023 |
Current team | ART Grand Prix |
Car number | 1 |
Starts | 38 (38 entries) |
Wins | 2 |
Podiums | 10 |
Poles | 3 |
Fastest laps | 7 |
Best finish | 5th in 2023 |
Previous series | |
2021–2022 2018–2020 2018 2016–2017 | FIA Formula 3 Championship Formula Renault Eurocup Formula Renault NEC French F4 Championship |
Championship titles | |
2022 2020 2017 | FIA Formula 3 Championship Formula Renault Eurocup French F4 Junior Championship |
Awards | |
2023 | Anthoine Hubert Award |
Career
editKarting
editBorn in Quincy-sous-Sénart to a French mother and a Portuguese father,[2] Martins began karting in 2013 after a spell in gymnastics in which he became French gymnastics champion at the age of 10.[3][4] In 2016, he went on to win the CIK-FIA Junior World Karting Championship title in dominant fashion, leading pundits to liken Martins to Stoffel Vandoorne.[5] In December 2016, Motorsport.com listed Martins as one of the ten karting drivers to look out for, ranking him second to Logan Sargeant.[6] Throughout his karting career, Martins won many other major competitions.
Formula 4
edit2016
editWhilst karting in 2016, Martins partook as a guest driver in the fifth round of the French F4 Championship, in which he claimed two podiums.[7]
2017
editMartins stepped up to single-seaters in 2017, returning to contest the French F4 Championship full-time.[8][9] Martins won twice during the first weekend,[10] and won another in the next round, despite having a further win being excluded due to collision.[11] His fourth and final win came at the very final race, which was enough to be crowned junior champion and overall vice-champion.[12] He claimed nine poles, ten fastest laps and eleven podiums in total.
Formula Renault
edit2018
editAfter driving for them during post-season testing,[13] Martins signed to race with the R-ace GP outfit for the 2018 Formula Renault Eurocup.[14] Martins took his first Eurocup win during the midpoint of the season at the Red Bull Ring, and later another at Spa-Francorchamps.[15][16] Overall, he claimed two pole positions and six podiums, which placed him fifth in the overall standings.[17] Martins also contested the NEC championship, claiming his maiden Formula Renault victory at Monza.[18] Following the third round however, Martins was inellgible for points, which ranked him sixth.
2019
editMartins returned for the 2019 championship, switching to MP Motorsport, which had carried Martins' fellow Renault junior Christian Lundgaard to second in the championship the previous year.[19] Before the season, he participated in the final round of the 2019 Asian F3 Winter Series.[20] Martins had an average start to the first half of the season, scoring only one win but was level with leader Oscar Piastri at the halfway mark.[21][22] Martins recorded five wins in the last four rounds and finished runner-up to Piastri, with 7.5 points splitting the pair at the end of the year.[23][24] Martins won six races, achieving 14 podiums throughout the year, three more than rival Piastri.[25] In an article by Motorsport.com, Martins was ranked ninth of the top 20 junior single-seater drivers of 2019.[26]
2020
editMartins moved to ART Grand Prix for the 2020 season of the championship, partnering Grégoire Saucy and rookie Paul Aron.[27] Martins took his first two victories during the Nürburgring round, hauling himself into title contention.[28][29] There would be more success to come, with four wins coming from the next six races.[30] Martins won one more race in Imola.[31] In a hard-fought battle with Brazilian Caio Collet Martins came out on top, after a total of seven victories and a nine race long podium streak during the middle of the season, ending up 44 points ahead of Collet.[32][33]
FIA Formula 3 Championship
edit2021: Top rookie
editIn October 2020, Martins joined ART Grand Prix for the post-season test at Catalunya, which saw him finish in the top ten across all four sessions, with a highest placed finish of fifth on the first day.[34][35][36] He ended up signing for MP Motorsport for the 2021 Formula 3 season, alongside fellow Alpine junior and Formula Renault Eurocup title rival Caio Collet and Tijmen van der Helm.[37] The Frenchman's season started out positively, qualifying third in the opening round.[38] He took his first podium in second place in Race 2 after a last-lap battle with Olli Caldwell.[39] In Race 3, Martins moved up to second at the start but eventually slipped to fifth.[40] Martins qualified third again in his home race in Le Castellet,[41] and pushed himself into the lead of the race by lap 18, but was passed by Alexander Smolyar with just half a lap to go.[42][43] A second podium came in Race 2 where Martins again charged through the field, finishing third.[44] Martins concluded his podium-laden weekend with a fourth place in Race 3.[45] At the first race in Austria, Martins finished fifth, a post-race penalty depriving him of a podium.[46] A disappointing end to Race 2 followed, Martins lost power on the penultimate lap that saw him retire from second place, and tyre damage with Arthur Leclerc saw him end Race 3 with no points.[47][48] The Frenchman had a disastrous Budapest round, a poor qualifying was rewarded with zero points in all races.[49]
The no points streak ended at Spa-Francorchamps, where Martins qualified second and scored fifth place in Race 1.[50] In Race 3, Martins battled with Jack Doohan for the feature race victory, eventually having to settle for second as the Frenchman overtook Doohan off-track, being forced to give the lead back.[51][52] In Zandvoort, Martins continued his qualifying success, securing third.[53] After a decent Race 1, Martins climbed up to the lead in Race 2, and duly took his first win in the series.[54][55] Late in the race during Race 3, Martins made a failed move on David Schumacher for second place, sending the German driver into the barriers. Martins was handed a ten-second penalty and was dropped to tenth place.[56] Martins qualified 12th for reverse pole during the Sochi finale.[57] He would lose the lead early on to Logan Sargeant, and then lost another position to claim third place.[58] In the last race, Martins concluded his season in eighth place.[59] Martins finished fifth in the drivers' standings with 131 points, scoring one win, five more podiums and four fastest laps, also becoming the best-placed rookie of the season.[60][61]
2022: Championship season
editHe tested for ART Grand Prix during the post-season testing and the following year, was announced in their line-up for the 2022 campaign.[62] In the opening Bahrain round, Martins had a disappointing start, colliding with teammate Grégoire Saucy, and Martins received a puncture which caused his retirement in the sprint race.[63] Martins took his first win of the season by winning the feature race over Arthur Leclerc, also having to overtake leader Franco Colapinto mid-race.[64] In Imola Martins qualified sixth. In the sprint race, after a great start, Martins took advantage of a last-lap collision to finish second.[65] During the feature race on a drying track, after starting on the wet tyre, Martins was forced to pit but managed to charge to ninth. At Barcelona, Martins qualified on the front row.[66] Martins would suffer a mechanical failure that led to a retirement on Saturday,[67] but during the feature race Martins would overtake polesitter Roman Staněk at the start and control the race for his third win overall.[68][69]
Martins qualified 11th in Silverstone. From second, he would pass reverse polesitter Reece Ushijima but on the penultimate lap, fell back to second when Isack Hadjar passed him from the lead of the sprint race.[70] In the feature race, Martins finished in seventh place, overtaking Jonny Edgar on the final lap.[71] Martins qualified second at the Red Bull Ring.[72] After achieving two points in the sprint race, he secured another second place in the feature race.[73] In Hungary, he scored sixth and tenth place in the sprint and feature races, in the latter race dropping two positions late in the race.[74][75]
After the summer break however, Martins experienced a shocking weekend in Belgium, qualifying lowly in 24th thanks to an error on his final flying lap during a mixed-weather session.[76] A jump start in the sprint race before being taken out of the feature race by Kush Maini summed up the disastrous weekend, and also lost the standings lead.[77] He came back fighting in Zandvoort, once again missing out on pole and settling for second.[78] A great start saw him jump four places in the sprint race, and finished seventh. In the feature race, he snatched the lead from Zane Maloney at the start, but lost out to him at the halfway mark. His second placed feature race podium put himself into the lead of the championship with one round remaining.[79]
Before the Monza finale, Martins stated that he "[didn't] want to think, [he] just [wanted] to do".[80] Martins qualified fourth, but in the sprint race he tumbled down the order at the start after making contact with Leclerc. However, he climbed back to tenth place.[81] The feature race ended in under dramatic circumstances due to a crash, with Martins receiving a five-second post-race penalty due to track limits. He took advantage of numerous penalties for other rivals, which demoted Martins only to P4, thus securing the championship victory and also becoming the first drivers' champion for a team other than Prema in the category.[82][83] His closest title rival Zane Maloney, who finished a mere five points behind the Frenchman, commented after Martins' title had been confirmed that there was "no one better to win the championship".[84] Overall, Martins achieved two wins, four podiums and 139 points.
FIA Formula 2 Championship
edit2023: Top rookie
editAt the conclusion of the 2022 F2 season, Martins drove for ART Grand Prix during the post-season test at the Yas Marina Circuit.[85] In January 2023, Martins was announced to be stepping up to Formula 2 with ART alongside fellow Frenchman Théo Pourchaire.[86] Martins qualified second on his debut in Bahrain,[87] and he made an overtake masterclass to take third and his maiden F2 podium.[88] His feature race ended early as he was taken out in a collision on the opening lap.[89] In Jeddah, Martins took pole, 0.7 seconds faster than everyone else.[90][91] In the sprint race, the Frenchman made an electric charge to second place, passing car after car.[92] In the feature race, Martins was leading and put under pressure Frederik Vesti when he spun out on lap 16, stalling the car and retiring out of the race.[93]
Martins had a disappointing weekend in Melbourne, qualifying third but crashing out at the end of qualifying.[94] A gamble for wet tyres did not pay off in the sprint race, and whilst running third in the feature race, he slammed into the back of Dennis Hauger during the final stages of the race. Martins received a penalty and dropped to P18.[95] In Baku, having qualified eighth, Martins ran second in the sprint race having started third.[96] However after a late safety car restart, he had no grip in his cold tyres and crashed out with a handful of laps left.[97] In the feature race, Martins pitted early and it paid off, finishing fourth, but was disqualified post-race due to a technical infringement.[98] In the Monaco feature race, Martins was given a drive-through penalty for failing to slow down under yellow flags where he came close to crashing into track marshals tending to Jack Doohan's burning car. Martins finished the race in eighth as a result of the drive-through penalty.[99][100]
In Barcelona, Martins qualified in seventh. He moved to second place in the early part of the race, before losing a position to teammate Pourchaire in the last laps, nevertheless it was his first podium since Jeddah.[101] Running the alternate strategy in the feature race, he would emerge around the same position he started, and marched all the way to third place, even nearly pipping Enzo Fittipaldi off second place.[102][103] Martins secured his second pole of the year in Austria.[104][105] In the sprint race, he made the right gamble in unpredictable conditions to fit soft tyres, and was rewarded with yet another podium in second place.[106] Martins would lose the lead from pole and fall to fifth, before a late safety car meant drivers on fresher tyres were able to pass him, and he eventually wounded in ninth place.[107]
For a third time, Martins would claim a third pole, in Silverstone.[108][109] In the sprint race, he was embroiled in a side-by-side battle with Fittipaldi, in which Brazilian won out and Martins finished in seventh.[110] In the feature race, Martins again had a slow start, but would reclaim the lead at the end of sector 1 after passing Ayumu Iwasa off-track. This resulted in a five-second penalty, in which he eventually built a gap over Zane Maloney following the safety car, and finally take his maiden Formula 2 victory by two seconds with the penalty applied.[111][112] In Budapest, Martins qualified in second.[113] Having ended seventh in the sprint, Martins would lose a position at the start to Vesti, eventually finishing in third.[114][115] In Spa-Francorchamps, Martins continued his excellent qualifying streak, doing so in third.[116] Martins made up positions during the sprint race, ending in fourth place.[117] Martins again had a slow start during the feature race, but crept back up to third, where he was demoted to fifth place due to a five-second penalty for speeding in the pit lane.[118]
Martins qualified eighth for the Zandvoort Round. He was classified second in the aborted sprint race.[119] In the feature race he went off at the start but he continued. Later, Martins tried to overtake Oliver Bearman into turn 3 but collided with him sending the Prema driver into the barrier. This would earn Martins a 10 second time penalty which would drop him from fifth to ninth in the final classification. Despite that, he was the only driver in the top 6 in the standings to score points.[120]
Martins qualified fifth in Monza. During the sprint race he made his way up to second place six seconds behind race leader Vesti, and despite being faster, he was forced to settle for second.[121] The feature race however was a disaster as he was forced to retire due to engine problems from collision damage earlier in the race ending his top 10 finishing streak since Monaco.[122] It knocked him out of contention, and sat fifth, a point ahead of Bearman in the battle for the Anthoine Hubert Award.[123]
Martins qualified second for the season finale in Yas Marina.[124] The sprint race wouldn't yield any points as he received front wing damage from Juan Manuel Correa spinning into him. Despite that, he bounced back with second place and the fastest lap in the feature race securing him the Anthoine Hubert Award.[125][126] He finished fifth in the drivers championship with 150 points. During the season he took one win, nine podiums, three pole positions and six fastest laps, whilst helping his team secure its first teams title in Formula 2 history.[127]
2024
editIn January 2024, ART Grand Prix announced Martins would continue with the team for the 2024 Formula 2 Championship partnering 2023 FIA Formula 3 runner-up and Williams junior Zak O'Sullivan.[128] He experienced an atrocious start to the season in Bahrain, finishing 11th in the sprint and failing to score points as he suffered an engine failure in the feature race.[129] He qualified fourth in Jeddah, but crashed out on the first lap after hitting the wall at Turn 2. In the feature race, Martins would cross the line tenth but received a penalty for colliding with Paul Aron on the penultimate lap dropping him to 11th, marking a disappointing start to the season for the Frenchman.[130][131] After crashing in qualifying in Melbourne which confined him to 21st for both races, Martins charged through the sprint to seventh place, scoring his first points of the season.[132] He then improved to eighth in the feature race in another comeback drive.[133]
Martins qualified last again in Imola but managed to charge through to ninth meaning on an alternate strategy in the feature race.[134] Banishing woes from previous rounds, Martins secured second in Monaco.[135] He crashed out on the opening lap of the sprint race, and an awful start in the feature race left him languishing him at the back, before recovering to ninth place in another disappointing weekend.[136] In Spain, Martins got a brilliant start from second in the sprint and took the lead from Kush Maini into turn 1. Controlling the lead, he eventually won by four seconds, securing his first win and podium of the year.[137][138] The feature race was a complete contrast, as Martins was clipped by Dennis Hauger on the opening lap and taken out into the gravel at turn 2.[139]
A pointless weekend in Austria followed,[140] For the next round in Silverstone Qualifying second again in Silverstone,[141] his sprint was a disaster as teammate O'Sullivan would tip him into a spin, putting him out of the race.[142] In the feature race, a battle for the lead with Isack Hadjar saw him lose places running off-track, and was eventually forced to settle with fifth.[143] Qualifying fifth for Hungary, Martins surprisingly managed to take his soft tyres to the end of the race to finish third during the sprint, which became second when winner Richard Verschoor was disqualified.[144][145] He stomed into the lead at the start of the feature race, but dropped behind Andrea Kimi Antonelli late in the race on softer tyres. Nevertheless, Martins managed to finish second, marking his best weekend of the season.[146] A miserable weekend followed in Belgium as an engine issue in qualifying confined him to last for both races.[147] In the feature race, his woes continued as he was clipped by a spinning Rafael Villagómez on lap 4.[148]
Qualifying fifth for Monza, he gained places to move and finished in second place after losing a battle to Oliver Bearman.[149] He concluded the feature race in sixth after a ferocious battle with the two Prema cars.[150] In Baku, Martins qualified third.[151] Martins would barely miss out on a sprint race podium after missing out on pipping Gabriele Minì by 0.020s.[152] In the feature race, Martins overcame Antonelli and Verschoor to take the lead early on, but lost out to them both during the pit stops. He moved to second after Antonelli collided with Zane Maloney, thus securing Martins' fifth podium of 2024.[153]
Formula One
editIn January 2018, Martins was inducted into the Renault Sport Academy.[14] After the 2019 season the French driver was released from the program. Martins rejoined the newly formed Alpine F1 Team academy on 10 February after his Formula Renault Eurocup title win.[154][155] In May 2023, Martins made his F1 test debut in Monza, driving the Alpine A521.[156][157] He got another test, this time driving the Alpine A522 a year later in June, at the Red Bull Ring.[158] He again drove the A522 during a test at the Losail International Circuit in November.[159]
Formula E
editIn April 2023, Nissan announced that Martins would test for them in the Formula E Berlin rookie test.[160][161] He then took part in the rookie pre-season test with the team for the 2023–24 season.[162]
World Endurance Championship
editMartins partook in the WEC rookie test in November 2024 with the Alpine Endurance Team, driving the Hypercar at the Bahrain International Circuit.[163] He completed the session fourth quickest, highest of the rookies.[164]
Personal life
editMartins currently lives in Paris, and was a champion in gymnastics at a young age.[165][166]
Karting record
editKarting career summary
editSeason | Series | Team | Position |
---|---|---|---|
2014 | Championnat Regional Île de France — Cadet | 13th | |
Championnat de France — Cadet | 6th | ||
Challenge Rotax Max France — Cadet | 3rd | ||
2015 | Trophée Interclub — Cadet | 3rd | |
Trophée Oscar Petit — Cadet | 1st | ||
National Series Karting — Cadet | 2nd | ||
Coupe de France — Cadet | 4th | ||
Challenge Rotax Max France — Cadet | 4th | ||
Championnat de France — Cadet | 3rd | ||
2016 | WSK Champions Cup — OKJ | VDK Racing | NC |
Championnat de Belgique — X30 Junior | 1st | ||
X30 Challenge Europa — X30 Junior | 2nd | ||
WSK Super Master Series — OKJ | 20th | ||
CIK-FIA Karting European Championship — OKJ | 3rd | ||
WSK Final Cup — OKJ | 1st | ||
IAME International Final — X30 Junior | 13th | ||
CIK-FIA World Championship — OKJ | 1st | ||
2017 | WSK Champions Cup — OK | VDK Racing | 8th |
WSK Super Master Series — OK | 20th |
Complete CIK-FIA Karting European Championship results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Team | Class | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | DC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | VDK Racing | OKJ | ZUE QH 30 |
ZUE PF 9 |
ZUE R 32 |
ADR QH 16 |
ADR PF 10 |
ADR R 12 |
PRT QH 9 |
PRT PF 1 |
PRT R 1 |
GEN QH 1 |
GEN PF 1 |
GEN R 1 |
3rd | 109 |
Racing record
editCareer summary
editSeason | Series | Team | Races | Wins | Poles | F/Laps | Podiums | Points | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | French F4 Championship | FFSA Academy | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | NC† |
2017 | French F4 Championship | FFSA Academy | 21 | 4 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 299 | 2nd |
2018 | Formula Renault Eurocup | R-ace GP | 20 | 2 | 2 | 1 | 6 | 186 | 5th |
Formula Renault NEC | 12 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 83 | 6th‡ | ||
2019 | Formula Renault Eurocup | MP Motorsport | 19 | 6 | 9 | 5 | 14 | 312.5 | 2nd |
F3 Asian Winter Series | Pinnacle Motorsport | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | NC† | |
2020 | Formula Renault Eurocup | ART Grand Prix | 20 | 7 | 10 | 8 | 14 | 348 | 1st |
2021 | FIA Formula 3 Championship | MP Motorsport | 20 | 1 | 0 | 4 | 6 | 131 | 5th |
2022 | FIA Formula 3 Championship | ART Grand Prix | 18 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 139 | 1st |
2023 | FIA Formula 2 Championship | ART Grand Prix | 26 | 1 | 3 | 6 | 9 | 150 | 5th |
2024 | FIA Formula 2 Championship | ART Grand Prix | 24 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 5 | 93* | 8th* |
† As Martins was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.
‡ Martins was ineligible for points from the third round onwards.
Complete French F4 Championship results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | Pos | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2016 | LEC 1 |
LEC 2 |
LEC 3 |
LEC 4 |
PAU 1 |
PAU 2 |
PAU 3 |
PAU 4 |
LÉD 1 |
LÉD 2 |
LÉD 3 |
LÉD 4 |
MAG 1 |
MAG 2 |
MAG 3 |
MAG 4 |
LMS 1 4 |
LMS 2 10 |
LMS 3 3 |
LMS 4 3 |
CAT 1 |
CAT 2 |
CAT 3 |
NC† | 0 |
2017 | NOG 1 1 |
NOG 2 11 |
NOG 3 1 |
MNZ 1 1 |
MNZ 2 4 |
MNZ 3 EX |
PAU 1 2 |
PAU 2 8 |
PAU 3 16 |
SPA 1 4 |
SPA 2 2 |
SPA 3 2 |
MAG 1 2 |
MAG 2 13 |
MAG 3 2 |
CAT 1 2 |
CAT 2 4 |
CAT 3 2 |
LEC 1 7 |
LEC 2 5 |
LEC 3 1 |
2nd | 299 |
† As Martins was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.
Complete Formula Renault Northern European Cup results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | DC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | R-ace GP | PAU 1 5 |
PAU 2 4 |
MNZ 1 3 |
MNZ 2 1 |
SPA 1 Ret |
SPA 2 1 |
HUN 1 4 |
HUN 2 9 |
NÜR 1 4 |
NÜR 2 2 |
HOC 1 Ret |
HOC 2 Ret |
6th‡ | 83 |
‡ Martins was ineligible for points from the third round onwards.
Complete Formula Renault Eurocup results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
Year | Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | Pos | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2018 | R-ace GP | LEC 1 11 |
LEC 2 4 |
MNZ 1 6 |
MNZ 2 5 |
SIL 1 6 |
SIL 2 6 |
MON 1 3 |
MON 2 3 |
RBR 1 9 |
RBR 2 1 |
SPA 1 Ret |
SPA 2 1 |
HUN 1 4 |
HUN 2 9 |
NÜR 1 4 |
NÜR 2 2 |
HOC 1 Ret |
HOC 2 Ret |
CAT 1 Ret |
CAT 2 3 |
5th | 186 |
2019 | MP Motorsport | MNZ 1 4 |
MNZ 2 2 |
SIL 1 10 |
SIL 2 3 |
MON 1 1 |
MON 2 2 |
LEC 1 3 |
LEC 2 3 |
SPA 1 2 |
SPA 2 5 |
NÜR 1 5 |
NÜR 2 DNS |
HUN 1 1 |
HUN 2 3 |
CAT 1 1 |
CAT 2 1 |
HOC 1 1 |
HOC 2 5 |
YMC 1 2 |
YMC 2 1 |
2nd | 312.5 |
2020 | ART Grand Prix | MNZ 1 10 |
MNZ 2 2 |
IMO 1 4 |
IMO 2 4 |
NÜR 1 1 |
NÜR 2 1 |
MAG 1 3 |
MAG 2 1 |
ZAN 1 1 |
ZAN 2 2 |
CAT 1 1 |
CAT 2 1 |
SPA 1 2‡ |
SPA 2 4 |
IMO 1 5 |
IMO 2 1 |
HOC 1 2 |
HOC 2 2 |
LEC 1 4 |
LEC 2 2 |
1st | 348 |
‡ Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.
Complete FIA Formula 3 Championship results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers)
Year | Entrant | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | DC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | MP Motorsport | CAT 1 9 |
CAT 2 2 |
CAT 3 5 |
LEC 1 2 |
LEC 2 3 |
LEC 3 4 |
RBR 1 5 |
RBR 2 26† |
RBR 3 24 |
HUN 1 15 |
HUN 2 25 |
HUN 3 27 |
SPA 1 5 |
SPA 2 7 |
SPA 3 2 |
ZAN 1 8 |
ZAN 2 1 |
ZAN 3 10 |
SOC 1 3 |
SOC 2 C |
SOC 3 8 |
5th | 131 |
2022 | ART Grand Prix | BHR SPR Ret |
BHR FEA 1 |
IMO SPR 2 |
IMO FEA 9 |
CAT SPR Ret |
CAT FEA 1 |
SIL SPR 2 |
SIL FEA 7 |
RBR SPR 8 |
RBR FEA 2 |
HUN SPR 6 |
HUN FEA 10 |
SPA SPR 21 |
SPA FEA Ret |
ZAN SPR 7 |
ZAN FEA 2 |
MNZ SPR 10 |
MNZ FEA 4 |
1st | 139 |
† Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as they completed more than 90% of the race distance.
Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results
edit(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers)
Year | Entrant | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | DC | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2023 | ART Grand Prix | BHR SPR 3 |
BHR FEA Ret |
JED SPR 2 |
JED FEA Ret |
MEL SPR 15 |
MEL FEA 18 |
BAK SPR 13† |
BAK FEA DSQ |
MCO SPR 7 |
MCO FEA 8 |
CAT SPR 3 |
CAT FEA 3 |
RBR SPR 2 |
RBR FEA 9 |
SIL SPR 7 |
SIL FEA 1 |
HUN SPR 7 |
HUN FEA 3 |
SPA SPR 4 |
SPA FEA 5 |
ZAN SPR 2 |
ZAN FEA 9 |
MNZ SPR 2 |
MNZ FEA Ret |
YMC SPR 20 |
YMC FEA 2 |
5th | 150 | ||
2024 | ART Grand Prix | BHR SPR 11 |
BHR FEA Ret |
JED SPR Ret |
JED FEA 11 |
MEL SPR 7 |
MEL FEA 8 |
IMO SPR 12 |
IMO FEA 9 |
MON SPR Ret |
MON FEA 9 |
CAT SPR 1 |
CAT FEA Ret |
RBR SPR 10 |
RBR FEA 11 |
SIL SPR Ret |
SIL FEA 5 |
HUN SPR 2 |
HUN FEA 2 |
SPA SPR 12 |
SPA FEA Ret |
MNZ SPR 2 |
MNZ FEA 6 |
BAK SPR 4 |
BAK FEA 2 |
LSL SPR 9 |
LSL FEA NC |
YMC SPR |
YMC FEA |
8th* | 93* |
* Season still in progress.
References
edit- ^ "Victor Martins". Alpine Cars. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
- ^ "Victor Martins élu par la rédaction de LusoJornal: Sportif franco-portugais de l'année". LusoJournal.com. 6 January 2021. Retrieved 28 August 2021.
- ^ "Who is Victor Martins?". 22 November 2016. Retrieved 18 December 2016.
- ^ "About - Victor Martins". victormartins.fr. Retrieved 9 February 2023.
- ^ "Victor Martins: The karting prodigy being likened to Vandoorne". 6 December 2016.
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- ^ "Martins keen to take confidence from 'dream' Formula 1 test with Alpine". FIA_F2® - The Official F2® Website. 17 June 2024. Retrieved 18 June 2024.
- ^ "Such an amazing feeling being back ..." Instagram. 9 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
- ^ "Ghiotto And Martins In At Nissan For Berlin Rookie Test". FIA Formula E. 13 April 2023. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
- ^ "Nissan Formula E Team completes strong Berlin Rookie Test with Ghiotto and Martins". nismo.com. 25 April 2023. Retrieved 5 May 2023.
- ^ "Nissan Formula E Team continues Season 10 preparation with Valencia test". nismo.com. 28 October 2023. Retrieved 16 November 2023.
- ^ Hall, Sam (18 October 2024). "Victor Martins enters Alpine Hypercar mix with WEC rookie test". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 19 October 2024.
- ^ "Bamber Tops Morning Session; Martins Fastest Rookie". Sportscar365. 3 November 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
- ^ "Truffle pasta, Motocross and a lucky bracelet: Getting to know the real Victor Martins". FIA_F2® - The Official F2® Website. 14 June 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
- ^ "Victor Martins: My Greatest Influences". FIA_F2® - The Official F2® Website. 27 October 2024. Retrieved 11 November 2024.
External links
edit- Official website
- Victor Martins career summary at DriverDB.com