DAMS

DAMS (formerly Driot-Arnoux Motorsport, currently Driot Associés Motor Sport) is an auto racing team from France, involved in many areas of motorsport. DAMS was founded in 1988 by Jean-Paul Driot and former Formula One driver René Arnoux.[4] It is headquartered near Le Mans, only 2 km from the Bugatti Circuit.

DAMS
Founded1988
Founder(s)Jean-Paul Driot
René Arnoux
BaseRuaudin, France
Team principal(s)Francois Sicard
Current seriesFIA Formula 2 Championship
Formula E
Former seriesGP2 Series
GP3 Series
Formula Renault 3.5 Series
Formula 3000
Formula Renault V6 Eurocup
ALMS
FIA GT Championship
FIA Sportscar Championship
A1 Grand Prix
Formula BMW Europe
GP2 Asia Series
Auto GP
Formula Le Mans
Porsche Supercup
Current driversFormula E
22. Oliver Rowland[1]
23. Sébastien Buemi[2]
Formula 2
1. Sean Gelael[3]
2. Dan Ticktum[3]
Teams'
Championships
A1 Grand Prix:
2005–06 (as A1 Team France)
GP2 Asia Series:
2008–09, 2011
Formula Le Mans Cup:
2009
Auto GP:
2010, 2011
GP2 Series:
2012, 2014
Formula Renault 3.5 Series:
2013, 2014
Formula E:
2014–15, 2015–16, 2016–17
FIA Formula 2 Championship:
2019
Drivers'
Championships
International Formula 3000:
1990: Érik Comas
1993: Olivier Panis
1994: Jean-Christophe Boullion
Formula Renault V6 Eurocup:
2003: José María López
GP2 Asia Series:
2008–09: Kamui Kobayashi
2011: Romain Grosjean
Auto GP:
2010: Romain Grosjean
GP2 Series:
2011: Romain Grosjean
2012: Davide Valsecchi
2014: Jolyon Palmer
Formula Renault 3.5 Series:
2013: Kevin Magnussen
2014: Carlos Sainz, Jr.
Formula E:
2015-16: Sebastien Buemi
Websitehttps://dams.fr/en/

Notable DAMS drivers include Érik Comas, Allan McNish, Olivier Panis, Jean-Christophe Boullion, Sébastien Bourdais, Kazuki Nakajima, Romain Grosjean, Kevin Magnussen, Jolyon Palmer and Pierre Gasly.

History

The year after its foundation, DAMS joined the International Formula 3000 Championship. They stayed in F3000 until 2001. DAMS were one of many French teams that were part of the Elf young driver sponsorship program.

Aside from F3000, DAMS planned to join the F1 World Championship in 1996, with a car (the GD-01) developed by Reynard, but lack of funds prevented the team from advancing.[4]

DAMS enter in sports car racing since 1997 until 2002 where it helped the Michel Vaillant movie, preparing and racing cars in the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

In August 2019, founder Jean-Paul Driot died, aged 68.[5]

His two sons, Olivier and Gregory Driot, are now the e.dams team principals

Formula 3000/GP2 Series/FIA Formula 2 Championship

Right from its inception, the French team entered the FIA International Formula 3000 Championship, which they won in 1990 with Érik Comas, 1992 with Olivier Panis and 1994 with Jean-Christophe Boullion.

In 13 years, 1989 to 2001, DAMS won 4 team titles, 3 drivers titles, 21 wins, 19 pole positions and 19 fastest laps, making DAMS one of the most successful Formula 3000 teams with Super Nova Racing and Arden International.

The team competed in the GP2 Series since its beginning in 2005,[6] winning races with drivers José María López and Nicolas Lapierre.

Jérôme d'Ambrosio driving for DAMS at the Turkish round of the 2009 GP2 Series.

DAMS was associated with the Toyota Drivers Program (TDP) from 2006 to 2009, and ran their drivers in the GP2 Series. In 2006, it was Franck Perera and then Kazuki Nakajima in 2007, who finished 5th in the GP2 championship and raced in the last Formula One Grand Prix of the season with Williams. Following this he won a full-time race seat with the team for 2008 and was retained for the 2009 season. In 2008, TDP driver Kamui Kobayashi replaced Nakajima at DAMS GP2 and became the Toyota Racing test driver.[7] Kobayashi stayed on in 2009, and was partnered by Jérôme d'Ambrosio for these two years. Neither driver was able to put together a consistent run of form in the main GP2 Series championships, but Kobayashi did win the 2008–09 Asian championship with the team.

Romain Grosjean won the championship with the team in 2011.

D'Ambrosio remained with the team for 2010, and was paired with Ho-Pin Tung, who replaced the Sauber-bound Kobayashi. As part of an agreement with the Renault Formula One team, both were nominated as Renault F1 test drivers, and the DAMS GP2 cars were liveried in an identical yellow-and-black scheme to the Renault R30 chassis.[8] D'Ambrosio won the sprint race at Monaco, but his form thereafter was disappointing and he was rested for one of the rounds in favour of Romain Grosjean, another driver with Renault F1 links. Grosjean later got the opportunity to move into the team full-time when Tung, yet to score a point after 12 races, sustained a broken vertebra in a racing accident. D'Ambrosio, Grosjean and Tung finished 12th, 14th and 28th respectively in the drivers' championship, whilst DAMS finished sixth position in the teams' championship. Grosjean remained with the team for 2011, with Norwegian rookie Pål Varhaug replacing D'Ambrosio, who graduated to F1 with the Virgin Racing team. DAMS retained its links with Renault, although these were somewhat diluted by the F1 team's new sponsorship deal with Lotus Cars, which also backed the rival ART team in GP2. Grosjean dominated the year, winning both the Asian and main series championships. DAMS also won the Asian teams' title, but Varhaug's failure to score points in the main series saw the team beaten to the championship by Addax.

For the 2012 season, Grosjean moved to the Lotus (formerly Renault) Formula One team, and Varhaug switched to the Auto GP World Series; they were replaced by series veteran Davide Valsecchi and reigning British F3 champion Felipe Nasr. Valsecchi began the season strongly, winning an unprecedented three races in a row in Bahrain, and later prevailed over closest rival Luiz Razia to win the championship, whilst Nasr finished on the podium four times to finish tenth in the championship, the second-highest rookie behind James Calado. Between them, Valsecchi and Nasr scored enough points to win DAMS's first GP2 Teams' Championship, six points ahead of ART, competing under the Lotus GP banner.

The team wrapped up both the 2014 Drivers' and Teams' Championships, with Jolyon Palmer winning the former. DAMS went into the 2015 season with Red Bull Junior Team driver Pierre Gasly and 2014 GP3 champion Alex Lynn as their driver lineup. The team struggled in the Bahrain feature race with Gasly being involved in a fourth lap collision with Arthur Pic, Raffaele Marciello and Norman Nato and Lynn falling down the order after driving into the back of Alexander Rossi and damaging his front wing. Both drivers finished outside the points in the following day's sprint race. The team had an improved weekend in Barcelona, with Lynn taking his first GP2 victory in the sprint race and Gasly joining him on the podium in third.

A1 Grand Prix, Formula Renault and Formula E

The e.dams Formula E car on show at Battersea Park Street Circuit, June 2015

In the 2003 and 2004 seasons, DAMS took part in the Formula Renault V6 Eurocup, which they won that same year with Argentinian José María López. In 2005 the team entered the World Series by Renault.[9] Since 2005, DAMS joined the GP2 Series but also the A1 Grand Prix where it serviced three teams.

Driot is one of the owners of the A1 Team France.[10][11] DAMS also managed A1 Team Switzerland,[12] A1 Team Mexico[13] and later A1 Team South Africa[14] in the A1 Grand Prix championships. With A1 Team France, DAMS was the first winner of the series winning 13 of the 22 races including in the 2005–06 season.

For the 2007–08 season, A1 Team France and South Africa collaborated closely to finalize the car like it was previously done with A1 Team Switzerland.[15]

The team joined the new Formula E championship in 2014 under the name e.DAMS, with collaboration from Alain Prost.[16] Sébastien Buemi was runner-up in the inaugural season and champion in 2015-16, having claimed 8 wins and 13 podiums in 23 races. Nicolas Prost finished sixth and third respectively, claiming three wins. In the 2016–17 season, the team clinched their third straight constructors' title but Buemi lost the title to Lucas di Grassi at the final round in Montreal. Buemi also had to miss the New York City rounds due to commitments in the World Endurance Championship and was replaced by Pierre Gasly.

The following season saw the team's final season with Renault in Formula E fail to see any of their drivers win a single race in the championship. Their highest finish was 2nd for Buemi in Marrakesh. The team could only finish fifth in the constructors' championship. At the end of the season, Nicolas Prost left the team.

For the 2018–19 season, the team switched to Nissan and originally hired Alexander Albon to partner Buemi, however on 26 November 2018 Albon was released from his contract with the team to instead drive in the 2019 Formula One season with the Toro Rosso team. Four days later, the team signed Oliver Rowland, who raced for the team in the 2017 FIA Formula 2 Championship.

In 2018, the team fielded Nicholas Latifi and Alexander Albon in the FIA Formula 2 Championship.[17] The team secured third place in the constructors' championship and took 5 wins during the season (4 for Albon and 1 for Latifi).

For the 2019 season, the team hired Sérgio Sette Câmara to replace Albon.

For the 2020 season, the team hired Sean Gelael and Dan Ticktum to race for the team

Sports car racing

A Panoz Esperante GTR-1 campaigned by DAMS in the 1997 FIA GT Championship season

Starting from 1997, Driot's team diversified into sports car racing, entering the FIA GT Championship in partnership with Panoz. Splitting up in the following year, DAMS ran a Lola B98/10 with a Judd engine in the SportsRacing World Cup, winning four races, as well as participating in the American Le Mans Series and the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

In 2000 and 2001, DAMS associated themselves with General Motors, preparing the works Cadillac Northstar LMP prototypes for the American Le Mans Series, FIA Sportscar Championship and the 24 Hours of Le Mans, but failed to get any competitive results.

DAMS (running the Bob Berridge Racing Lola) helped the Michel Vaillant movie crew in the 2002, 24 Hours of Le Mans entering with a Lola B98/10-Judd as Vaillante and a Panoz LMP-1 Roadster-S-Élan as Leader.[18]

They then switched their effort to an FIA GT return. In 2003, they tried entering two Nissan 350Z, but once again funds prevented the French team from developing the Japanese car. In 2004, they teamed with Lamborghini and entered two Murciélago R-GT cars in the final rounds of the FIA GT Championship.

Current series results

Formula E

Year Chassis Powertrain Tyres No. Drivers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Points T.C.
Team e.dams-Renault
2014–15 Spark SRT01-e SRT01-e1 M BEI PUT PDE BUE MIA LBH MCO BER MSC LON 232 1st
8 Nicolas Prost 12† 4 7 2 1 14 6 10 8 7 10
9 Sébastien Buemi Ret 3 1 Ret 13 4 1 2 9 1 5
Renault e.dams
2015–16 Spark SRT01-e Renault Z.E.15 M BEI PUT PDE BUE MEX LBH PAR BER LON 270 1st
8 Nicolas Prost Ret 10 5 5 3 11 4 4 1 1
9 Sébastien Buemi 1 12 1 2 2 16 3 1 5 Ret
2016–17 Spark SRT01-e Renault Z.E.16 M HKG MRK BUE MEX MCO PAR BER NYC MTL 268 1st
8 Nicolas Prost 4 4 4 5 9 5 5 8 8 6 6 Ret
9 Sébastien Buemi 1 1 1 13 1 1 DSQ 1 DSQ 11
Pierre Gasly 7 4
2017–18 Spark SRT01-e Renault Z.E. 17 M HKG MRK SCL MEX PDE RME PAR BER ZUR NYC 133 5th
8 Nicolas Prost 9 8 13 10 Ret 15 14 16 14 Ret 10 11
9 Sébastien Buemi 11 10 2 3 3 Ret 6 5 4 5 3 4
Nissan e.dams
2018–19 Spark SRT05e Nissan IM01 M ADR MRK SCL MEX HKG SYX RME PAR MCO BER BRN NYC 190 4th
22 Oliver Rowland 7 15 Ret 20† Ret 2 6 12 2 8 Ret 14 6
23 Sébastien Buemi 6 8 Ret 21† Ret 8 5 15 5 2 3 1 3
2019–20 Spark SRT05e Nissan IM02 M DIR SCL MEX MRK BER I BER II BER III 167 2nd
22 Oliver Rowland 4 5 17 7 9 14 7 6 5 1 Ret
23 Sébastien Buemi Ret 12 13 3 4 7 2G 11 3 10 3G
Notes
  • ^1 – In the inaugural season, all teams were supplied with a spec powertrain by McLaren.
  • G – Driver was fastest in group qualifying stage and was given one championship point.
  • † – Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.

FIA Formula 2 Championship

Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles FLaps Podiums T.C. Points
2017 Dallara-Mecachrome Oliver Rowland 22 2 1 1 10 3rd 369
Nicholas Latifi 22 1 0 2 9
2018 Dallara-Mecachrome Alexander Albon 24 4 3 0 7 3rd 303
Nicholas Latifi 24 1 0 2 3
2019 Dallara-Mecachrome Nicholas Latifi 24 4 0 4 9 1st 418
Sérgio Sette Câmara 24 2 2 3 8
2020 Dallara-Mecachrome Dan Ticktum 12 1 2[lower-alpha 1] 3 8th* 66*
Sean Gelael 10

*Season in progress

Former series results

Formula 3000

International Formula 3000 Championship Results[20]
Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points D.C. T.C.
1989 Lola-Mugen Érik Comas 9 2 2 3 39 2nd 1st
Éric Bernard 10 1 3 3 25 3rd
1990 Lola-Mugen Érik Comas 11 4 3 2 51 1st 1st
Allan McNish 11 2 1 1 26 4th
1991 Lola-Mugen Laurent Aïello 9 0 1 0 4 15th 8th
Allan McNish 8 0 0 0 2 16th
1992 Lola-Cosworth Jean-Marc Gounon 10 1 0 0 19 6th 5th
Frédéric Gosparini 7 0 0 0 0 NC
Jérôme Policand 9 0 0 0 0 NC
Éric Hélary 1 0 0 0 0 NC
1993 Reynard-Cosworth Olivier Panis 9 3 2 2 32 1st 1st
Franck Lagorce 8 2 1 1 21 4th
1994 Reynard-Cosworth Jean-Christophe Boullion 8 3 0 1 36 1st 1st
Guillaume Gomez 8 0 1 0 12 7th
1995 Reynard-Cosworth Tarso Marques 7 1 2 2 15 5th 4th
Guillaume Gomez 7 0 1 2 8 8th
1996 Lola-Zytek Judd Laurent Rédon 9 0 0 0 7 8th 8th
Jean-Philippe Belloc 10 0 0 0 0 NC
1997 Lola-Zytek Judd Jamie Davies 9 1 1 1 22 4th 5th
Grégoire de Galzain 6 0 0 0 0 NC
1998 Lola-Zytek Judd Jamie Davies 12 0 0 0 8 10th 9th
Grégoire de Galzain 9 0 0 0 0 NC
1999 Lola-Zytek Franck Montagny 10 0 0 0 6 10th 10th
David Terrien 6 0 0 0 0 NC
2000 Lola-Zytek Franck Montagny 10 0 0 0 5 15th 11th
Kristian Kolby 6 0 0 0 2 23rd
2001 Lola-Zytek Sébastien Bourdais 12 1 1 1 26 4th 4th
Derek Hill 12 0 0 0 0 NC
  • D.C. = Drivers' Championship position, T.C. = Teams' Championship position.

FIA GT Championship

FIA GT Championship results[21]
Year Class Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points T.C.
1997 GT1 Panoz Esperante GTR-1
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
Franck Lagorce
Éric Bernard
9 0 0 0 0 NC
1998 GT1 Panoz Esperante GTR-1
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
Éric Bernard
David Brabham
Johnny O'Connell
Christophe Tinseau
Franck Lagorce
10 0 0 0 17 5th
  • T.C. = Teams' Championship position.

24 Hours of Le Mans

24 Hours of Le Mans results[22]
Year Class No Tyres Car Drivers Pole Fast
lap
Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
1997 GT1 52 M Panoz Esperante GTR-1
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
Franck Lagorce
Éric Bernard
Jean-Christophe Boullion
no no 149
(DNF)
28th 13th
1998 GT1 44 M Panoz Esperante GTR-1
Ford (Roush) 6.0L V8
with Panoz Motorsports Inc.
Éric Bernard
Christophe Tinseau
Johnny O'Connell
no no 236
(DNF)
26th 11th
1999 LMP 25 P Lola B98/10
Judd GV4 4.0L V10
Christophe Tinseau
Franck Montagny
David Terrien
no no 77
(DNF)
37th 15th
2000 LMP900 3 P Cadillac Northstar LMP
Cadillac Northstar 4.0L Turbo V8
Éric Bernard
Emmanuel Collard
Franck Montagny
no no 300 19th 9th
LMP900 4 P Cadillac Northstar LMP
Cadillac Northstar 4.0L Turbo V8
Marc Goossens
Christophe Tinseau
Kristian Kolby
no no 4
(DNF)
47th 19th
2001 LMP900 6 M Cadillac Northstar LMP
Cadillac Northstar 4.0L Turbo V8
Wayne Taylor
Max Angelelli
Christophe Tinseau
no no 270 15th 5th
LMP900 5 M Cadillac Northstar LMP
Cadillac Northstar 4.0L Turbo V8
Éric Bernard
Emmanuel Collard
Marc Goossens
no no 56
(DNF)
38th 15th
2002 LMP900 10 M Lola B98/10
Judd GV4 4.0L V10
(Vaillante Camera Car)
with Bob Berridge Racing
Philippe Gache
Emanuele Clerico
Michel Neugarten
no no 150
(NC)
27th 12th
LMP900 22 M Panoz LMP-1 Roadster-S
Élan 6L8 6.0L V8
(Leader Camera Car)
Jérôme Policand
Marc Duez
Perry McCarthy
no no 98
(DNF)
42nd 18th

American Le Mans Series

American Le Mans Series results[23]
Year Class Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points T.C.
1999 LMP Lola B98/10-Judd Jean-Marc Gounon
Christophe Tinseau
Franck Montagny
4 0 0 0 26 14th
2000 LMP Cadillac Northstar LMP-Cadillac Northstar Emmanuel Collard
Éric Bernard
1 0 0 0 87 7th
LMP Cadillac Northstar LMP-Cadillac Northstar Christophe Tinseau
Marc Goossens
1 0 0 0

FIA Sportscar Championship

FIA Sportscar Championship results[24]
Year Class Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points T.C.
1999 SR Lola B98/10-Judd GV4 4.0L V10 Jean-Marc Gounon
Éric Bernard
Christophe Tinseau
10 3 5 3 80 3rd
2000 SR Cadillac Northstar LMP-Cadillac Northstar Emmanuel Collard
Éric Bernard
3 0 0 0 14 8th
SR Cadillac Northstar LMP-Cadillac Northstar Christophe Tinseau
Marc Goossens
3 0 0 0

Formula Renault V6 Eurocup

Formula Renault V6 Eurocup results[25]
Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points D.C. T.C.
2003 Tatuus-Renault V4Y RS José María López 18 5 8 7 505 1st 2nd
Davide di Benedetto 1 0 0 0 14 9th†
Christian Murchison 7 0 0 0 69 10th
Mike den Tandt 3 0 0 0 62 11th
Adam Khan 6 0 0 0 4 22nd
2004 Tatuus-Renault V4Y RS Neel Jani 19 4 8 239 4th 3rd
Bruce Lorgère-Roux 15 0 0 72 14th
José María López 4 0 1 2 27th
  • † Davide di Benedetto drive only the last round for DAMS. He drive also for Guidare Formula this season and is final 9th place take both team results.
  • D.C. = Drivers' Championship position, T.C. = Teams' Championship position.

GP2 Series

Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles F.L. Pod Points D.C. T.C.
2005 Dallara-Mecachrome José María López 23 1 0 0 3 36 9th 7th
Fairuz Fauzy 23 0 0 0 0 0 24th
2006 Dallara-Mecachrome Franck Perera 21 0 0 0 1 8 17th 12th
Ferdinando Monfardini 21 0 0 0 0 6 21st
2007 Dallara-Mecachrome Kazuki Nakajima 21 0 1 3 5 44 5th 5th
Nicolas Lapierre 21 2 1 2 2 23 12th
2008 Dallara-Mecachrome Jérôme d'Ambrosio 20 0 0 0 2 21 11th 8th
Kamui Kobayashi 20 1 0 2 1 10 16th
2009 Dallara-Mecachrome Jérôme d'Ambrosio 20 0 0 0 3 29 9th 6th
Kamui Kobayashi 20 0 0 0 1 13 16th
2010 Dallara-Mecachrome Jérôme d'Ambrosio 18 1 1 0 2 21 12th 6th
Romain Grosjean 8 0 0 0 2 14 14th
Ho-Pin Tung 14 0 0 0 0 0 28th
2011 Dallara-Mecachrome Romain Grosjean 18 5 1 6 10 89 1st 2nd
Pål Varhaug 18 0 0 0 0 0 23rd
2012 Dallara-Mecachrome Davide Valsecchi 24 4 2 5 10 247 1st 1st
Felipe Nasr 24 0 0 0 4 95 10th
2013 Dallara-Mecachrome Marcus Ericsson 22 1 2 4 5 121 6th 4th
Stéphane Richelmi 22 0 1 0 1 103 8th
2014 Dallara-Mecachrome Jolyon Palmer 22 4 3 6 12 276 1st 1st
Stéphane Richelmi 22 1 1 0 2 73 9th
2015 Dallara-Mecachrome Pierre Gasly 21 0 3 1 4 110 8th 4th
Alex Lynn 21 2 2 1 4 110 6th
2016 Dallara-Mecachrome Alex Lynn 22 3 0 0 5 124 6th 5th
Nicholas Latifi 22 0 0 0 1 23 16th

† Tung also competed in 2 races for Racing Engineering in 2010.

A1 Grand Prix

A1 Grand Prix Results[26]
Year Car Team Races Wins Poles Fast laps Points T.C.
2005–06 Lola-Zytek A1 Team France 22 13 3 5 172 1st
A1 Team Switzerland 22 1 2 0 121 2nd
A1 Team Mexico 22 1 1 0 59 10th
2006–07 Lola-Zytek A1 Team France 22 0 0 0 67 4th
A1 Team Mexico 22 0 0 1 35 10th
A1 Team South Africa 22 1 1 1 24 14th
2007–08 Lola-Zytek A1 Team France 20 1 2 1 118 4th
A1 Team Mexico 20 0 0 1 22 16th
A1 Team South Africa 20 2 4 2 96 5th
2008–09 Ferrari A1 Team France 14 1 0 1 47 5th
A1 Team South Africa 14 0 0 0 19 14th

Formula Renault 3.5 Series

World Series by Renault results[27]
Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles F/laps Podiums Points D.C. T.C.
2005 Dallara-Renault Alx Danielsson 9 0 0 0 1 32 15th 11th
Pastor Maldonado 8 0 0 0 0 4 25th
Ferdinando Monfardini 2 0 0 0 0 1 28th
Alex Lloyd 1 0 0 0 0 0 40th
Nicolas Prost 2 0 0 0 0 0 41st
Raffaele Giammaria 4 0 0 0 0 0 43rd
2012 Dallara-Zytek Arthur Pic 17 1 2 2 2 102 8th 9th
Lucas Foresti 17 0 0 0 0 8 23rd
2013 Dallara-Zytek Kevin Magnussen 17 5 8 4 13 274 1st 1st
Norman Nato 17 0 1 0 0 33 13th
2014 Dallara-Zytek Carlos Sainz, Jr. 17 7 7 6 7 227 1st 1st
Norman Nato 17 2 1 1 2 89 7th
2015 Dallara-Zytek Nyck de Vries 17 1 1 1 6 160 3rd 2nd
Dean Stoneman 17 0 0 0 4 130 6th

GP3 Series

Year Car Drivers Races Wins Poles F.L. Pod Points D.C. T.C.
2016 Dallara-Mecachrome Santino Ferrucci 16 0 0 0 1 34 12th 5th
Jake Hughes 16 1 1 2 3 69 9th
Kevin Jörg 16 0 0 0 0 13 17th
2017 Dallara-Mecachrome Dan Ticktum 5 0 0 1 1 36 11th 6th
Tatiana Calderón 15 0 0 0 0 7 18th
Santino Ferrucci 6 0 0 0 0 3 19th
Bruno Baptista 15 0 0 0 0 1 20th
Matthieu Vaxivière 4 0 0 0 0 0 22nd

Timeline

Current series
Formula E 2014–2020
FIA Formula 2 Championship 2017–2020
Former series
Formula Renault 3.5 Series 2005, 2012–2015
International Formula 3000 1989–2001
FIA GT Championship 1997–1998
24 Hours of Le Mans 1997–2002
American Le Mans Series 1999–2000
FIA Sportscar Championship 1999–2000
Formula Renault V6 Eurocup 2003–2004
A1 Grand Prix 2005–2009
Formula BMW Europe 2008–2010
GP2 Asia Series 2008–2011
Formula Le Mans 2009–2010
Auto GP 2010–2011
Porsche Supercup 2013
GP2 Series 2005–2016
GP3 Series 2016–2017

Notes

  1. 0 poles achieved during qualifying, and 2 poles given as a result of the reverse grid in the sprint race.[19]
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References

  1. "Nissan e.dams confirms driver lineup for Formula E championship". 30 November 2018. Retrieved 2 January 2019.
  2. Smith, Luke (9 July 2017). "Buemi, Prost sign on with Renault e.dams in Formula E to 2019". motorsports.nbcsports.com. NBC Sports. Retrieved 18 January 2018.
  3. "Gelael and Ticktum announced at DAMS for 2020". 4 December 2019. Archived from the original on 4 December 2019. Retrieved 31 December 2019.
  4. Team history Archived 13 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine dams.fr
  5. "DAMS founder and e.dams team principal Jean-Paul Driot dies aged 68". Autosport. 4 August 2019. Retrieved 7 August 2019.
  6. DAMS presentation at gp2series.com gp2series.com
  7. DAMS signs Kobayashi for 2008 season automobilsport.com (23 November 2007)
  8. English, Steven (1 February 2010). "Renault's d'Ambrosio, Tung join DAMS". autosport.com. Haymarket Publishing. Retrieved 1 February 2010.
  9. Renault World Series claims 30 cars grandprix.com
  10. Driot, directeur principal Archived 8 February 2008 at the Wayback Machine france.a1gp.com
  11. A1 Team France information Archived 31 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine a1podium.com
  12. A1 Team Switzerland information Archived 31 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine a1podium.com
  13. A1 Team Mexico information Archived 31 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine a1podium.com
  14. A1 Team Switzerland information Archived 31 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine a1podium.com
  15. "Team France and RSA to continue to work together". GPUpdate.net. 14 August 2007. Retrieved 1 February 2011.
  16. Alain Prost joins with DAMS to field Formula E squad - Racer, 24 October 2013
  17. Gruz, David (14 April 2018). "DAMS confirms Latifi for 2018, Albon for Bahrain only". motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  18. Preliminary practice Lola Cars notes Archived 12 November 2005 at the Wayback Machine motorsport.com, 2002-05-07
  19. "Formula 2 poles". results.motorsportstats.com. Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
  20. GP2 and Formula 3000 entry list and complete results Archived 19 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
  21. FIA GT complete results Archived 24 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine wsrp.ic.cz
  22. 24h of Le Mans complete results Archived 22 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine wsrp.ic.cz
  23. ALMS complete results Archived 19 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine wsrp.ic.cz
  24. FIA Sportscar complete results Archived 21 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine wsrp.ic.cz
  25. FRV6 Eurocup complete results Archived 26 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
  26. A1GP complete Archived 26 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine resultsresults.a1gp.com
  27. WSbR complete results Archived 19 January 2008 at the Wayback Machine speedsportmag.com
Achievements
Preceded by
ART Grand Prix
GP2 Asia Series Teams' Champion
2008–09
Succeeded by
iSport International
Preceded by
none
Formula Le Mans Cup Teams' Champion
2009
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
iSport International
GP2 Asia Series Teams' Champion
2011
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by
none
Auto GP Teams' Champion
2010-2011
Succeeded by
Super Nova Racing
Preceded by
Addax Team
GP2 Series Teams' Champion
2012
Succeeded by
Russian Time
Preceded by
Tech 1 Racing
Formula Renault 3.5 Series Teams' Champion
2013-2014
Succeeded by
Fortec Motorsports
Preceded by
Russian Time
GP2 Series Teams' Champion
2014
Succeeded by
ART Grand Prix
Preceded by
none
Formula E Teams' Champion
2014-17
Succeeded by
Audi Sport Abt Schaeffler
Preceded by
Carlin
FIA Formula 2 Teams' Champion
2019
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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