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  1. Matt Neal

    Matt Neal (born December 20, 1966 in Birmingham) is a British motor racing driver. He won the British Touring Car Championship in 2005 and 2006. He has also won an ETCC race. He is 6'6" tall, making him almost entirely unable to race single-seaters. He first entered the BTCC in the early 90s with his father's Team Dynamics squad. He won the Total Cup for drivers without manufacturer support in 1993, before joining Mazda for a season cut short by a huge crash at Silverstone.

  2. Fabrizio Giovanardi

    Fabrizio Giovanardi (born December 14, 1966) is a racecar driver. He was born in Sassuolo near Modena in Italy. Fabrizio began his career karting before switching to Italian Formula 3. In season 1989 he switched to Formula 3000 to compete with First Racing and won the race in Vallelunga. A move to touring cars brought more luck, as he claimed the 1992 Italian championship.

  3. Tom Chilton

    Tom Chilton (born 15 March, 1985 in Surrey) is a British auto racing driver educated at Reigate St. Mary's School and Shiplake College. A keen racer from an early age, he competed in the BRSCC T-Cars Championship in 1999 and 2000, going on to take the BRSCC Saloon Car winter championship in 2001. His younger brother, Max, is also a racing driver.

  4. Mat Jackson

    Mat Jackson is a racing driver from Henley-in-Arden, England, born 10th June 1981. For 2007 he and his family-ran team contest the British Touring Car Championship in the BMW used by Andy Priaulx to win the 2006 World Touring Car Championship. He started racing in karts in his teens, before finishing 4th in the 2000 Renault Clio Cup, his first attempt at tin-top racing.

  5. James Thompson

    James Thompson (born April 26 1974) is a British auto racing driver from York. He has twice been champion of the British Touring Car Championship (BTCC). From 2005, he raced away from the BTCC for the first time in over a decade, joining Alfa Romeo, Seat then Alfa Romeo again in the World Touring Car Championship. He started racing in the BTCC in a privately-entered Peugeot in 1994, his performances earning him a factory Vauxhall drive for 1995.

  6. Adam Jones

    Adam Jones is an auto racing driver from Birmingham, England. He competed successfully in Formula 3 and Formula Renault in France, before switching to GT racing. Three years of irregular drives in both the FIA and British GT championships where followed by a stint in the Le Mans Endurance series alongside Sascha Maassen, winning his class at the Nürburgring. In 2005 he raced historic cars as well as the Britcar 24 hour race at Silverstone, …

  7. David Leslie

    David Leslie (born November 9, 1953 in Dumfries, Scotland) is an auto racing driver. He was Scottish karting champion 5 times before switching to cars, winning the Formula Ford title in 1978. He had spells in Formula 3, Sportscars and ThunderSaloons in the 1980s, but found a regular home in the British Touring Car Championship, first competing there in 1990 and doing his first full season in a Vauxhall in 1992, taking his first win a year later, …

  8. Mike Jordan

    Mike Jordan is a British racing driver from Sutton Coldfield, born on February 17 1958. He lives in Lichfield with his wife Judith and and his 3 sons.

  9. Rob Collard

    Robert Collard (born October 1, 1968) is an auto racing driver from Hampshire, best known for racing in the British Touring Car Championship and claiming the Independent's Cup title in 2003. For many years he raced hot rods, only switching to circuit racing in his late 20s. He raced Formula Ford for 3 years, winning the 1998 Formula Ford Festival. However, as most drives in Formula 3 and higher went to younger drivers, he turned his attention to saloon based racing, …

  10. Anthony Reid

    Anthony Reid is a British auto racing driver, born on 17 May, 1957 in Glasgow, Scotland. Although Scottish he has a very upper-class-English sounding voice. He spent many years in Formula Three and other junior single-seater championships, winning Japanese Formula Three Championship. Three title in 1992, and winning Japanese GT championship races but his success has mostly been with a roof over his head, firstly in sportscars and later in Touring car racing.

  11. Martyn Bell

    Martyn Bell is an auto racing driver synonymous with racing BMW rear-wheel-drive cars in his native Britain. For 2006 hecompeted in the British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) in a 320i, in a team owned and run by Geoff Steel, himself a one-time BTCC racer. With only 16 employees the team is smaller than many rivals.

  12. Matt Allison

    Matt Allison is an racing driver from Norwich, England, born June 13 1983. He had a long career in karting, and some success in Formula Ford. After starting to race in Renault Clios in late 2003, scoring a podium in his first ever saloon-car race, and then coming 6th overall in 2004, with 2 poles and 5 podiums but no wins. In 2005 he improved to third, taking his first win as well as 2 more poles and no fewer than 12 podiums. He then won the Clio Cup Winter series in 2005, …

  13. Rickard Rydell

    Rickard Rydell (born 22 September 1967 in Stockholm) is a Swedish racing driver. In the early 1990s, Rydell raced in various Formula Three series. He also won pole position in the 1991 Macau Grand Prix, and won the 1992 race. He competed in Japanese F3 in 1992 and 1993, British F3 in 1989 and 1991, and the Swedish F3 series in 1987 and 1988. In 1990, he raced in F3000. In 1984-1985, he won the Swedish 100cc go kart championship. His first year in the BTCC was 1994, …

  14. John George

    John George (born 1961) is a Cornish mobile phone entrepeneur and race car driver. He is head of JAG Communications, an independent mobile phone retailer.. He also competed successfully in pistol shooting before it was banned in the UK. He is married to Sue, and has a daughter Kailey and son Ken. He is teetotal. 2007 is his second season in the British Touring Car Championship, driving an ex-Matt Neal Honda Integra for the TH Motorsport team.

  15. James Pickford

    James Pickford is an English race car driver, born 30th April 1979 in Macclesfield, Cheshire. As a child his interest was in motorbikes; his father Keith ran bike racing teams. However, as with Damon Hill his mother led him towards the relatively safe world of car racing, beginning in karts in 1994. For a while he was coached by former BTCC racer Tim Sugden.

  16. John Cleland

    John Cleland (born July 15 1952 in Wishaw, Scotland). is a retired Scottish auto racing driver. He raced autocross and hillclimb in the 1970s, before achieving success in British Production Car and Thundersaloon championships, before joining Vauxhall for the 1989 British Touring Car Championship. John adapted quickly and won the title at his first attempt, in the days when the championship consisted of four separate classes, …

  17. Gabriele Tarquini

    Gabriele Tarquini (b. March 2, 1962) is a former Formula One driver from Italy. He participated in 78 grands prix, debuting on May 3, 1987. He scored 1 championship point, and holds the record for the most failed attempts to pre-qualify, mainly because he was a regular in the pre-qualifying era, usually in cars which were so slow as to struggle to qualify.

  18. Will Hoy

    Will Hoy, born in Royston, Hertfordshire, was a British racecar driver and the 1991 British Touring Car Championship, the highlight of a 20-year career in motor racing. He did not begin racing until his late 20s and first raced at international level in 1985, taking on the full World Sportscar Championship including Le Mans. Over the next few years, he raced in an assortment of championships and one-off races, …

  19. Tom Kristensen

    Tom Kristensen (born 7th July 1967 in Hobro) is a Danish racing driver. He has won many championships in auto racing but his most famous achievement is being the first person to win the prestigious 24 Hours of Le Mans seven times, six of which have been consecutive. In 1997, he won the race with the Joest Racing team, driving a Tom Walkinshaw Racing-designed and Porsche-powered WSC95, …

  20. Carl Breeze

    Carl Breeze is a British auto racing driver, born July 7 1979. He is not to be confused with Hyla Breese, another racer with British Touring Car Championship experience. His racing heroes include Ayrton Senna, Nelson Piquet and Valentino Rossi. Breeze won 3 major British karting titles before moving up to car racing. He dabbled in racing in New Zealand and France before moving into Formula Renault.

  21. Richard Marsh

    Richard Marsh is an auto racing driver from Derbyshire, England. After competing in the Ford Fiesta championship and the Porsche Carrera Cup he graduated to the production class of the British Touring Car Championship midway through the 2003 season with John Batchelor's Team Varta squad. He remained with the team for 2004 in the Touring Class, initially driving a Honda Civic Type-R but subsequently a Peugeot 307.

  22. David Pinkney

    David "Dave" Pinkney (born July 5, 1957 in Bridlington, Yorkshire) Brother of Donald Pinkney, is a British auto racing driver. In 2006 he raced in the British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) in one of the 2005 championship-winning Honda Integra cars. He took a pair of top 5 finishes at Thruxton in rounds 11 and 12, following it with 2 more points finishes at Croft. For 2007, he drives an Alfa Romeo 156 run by the newly-established A-Tech team.

  23. Kelvin Burt

    Kelvin Burt is a British auto racing driver, born September 7, 1967 in Birmingham but now living in Tamworth. After attending the Jim Russell Racing Drivers' School in 1987 he turned to Formula Ford racing, battling hard against David Coulthard for the championship. He won his class in a British Touring Car Championship round at Oulton Park, before spending 1991 winning the Formula Vauxhall Lotus series, and being voted Autosport Club Driver of the Year.

  24. Rick Kerry

    Rick Kerry is a British motor racing driver from Ipswich, United Kingdom. For 2007, Rick is competing in the British Touring Car Championship in a BMW 120d.

  25. Steve Soper

    Steve Soper is a retired racing driver from Surrey, England, born in 1952. He raced in sports cars and touring cars at the top level for over 20 years. In 1983 he almost won the British Touring Car Championship before his Rover was deemed illegal. He finished as runner-up in the series in 1988 in a Ford Sierra, and in 1993 behind team-mate Joachim Winkelhock. In 1997 he came second in the FIA GT Championship.

  26. Paul Radisich

    Paul Radisich (b October 9 1962 in Auckland) is a New Zealand racing driver of Croat origin. He has competed in saloon cars for many years - both European-style tourers and the V8 Supercars of Australia and New Zealand.

  27. Jack Sears

    Sir Jack Sears (born February 16, 1930) is a British former race and rally driver, and was one of the principal organisers of the 1968 London-Sydney Marathon. He won the inaugural British Saloon Car Championship in 1958, driving an Austin Westminster and regained the title in 1963, driving a variety of cars including a Ford Cortina GT, a seven litre Ford Galaxie and a Lotus Cortina, which was used for the final two races.

  28. Mark Proctor

    Mark Proctor is a British racing driver who has competed in a wide range of championship. In the mid-1990s he raced rallycross, twice coming 2nd in his class in the British Rallycross Championship. In 1996 he switched to Eurocar BV8 series, coming 2nd in 1998 and 5th in the following 2 seasons. In 2001 the ASCAR series brought US-style stock car racing to a wider UK audience, and Mark was a stalwart driver for several seasons, finishing in the series top 10 three times.

  29. Craig Baird

    Craig Baird is a race car driver born in Hamilton, New Zealand on 22 July 1970. Baird is a very successul driver in his homeland, winning three consecutive New Zealand Formula Atlantic championship titles (1990-1992), and then four consecutive New Zealand Touring Car Championship titles (1993-1996). Since then Baird has raced in Australian Supertouring Cars (1997), as well as for the Ford team in the British Touring Car Championship (1998).

  30. Joachim Winkelhock

    Joachim Winkelhock (born October 24, 1960), is a German motor racing driver. The younger brother of the late Manfred Winkelhock, Winkelhock was born in Waiblingen, near Stuttgart. The youngest brother Thomas Winkelhock as well as Manfred's son Markus Winkelhock are racers, too. After the death of his brother interrupted his career in 1985, he resumed later on, winning the 1988 German Formula Three championship as well as that year's European Cup, …

  31. Ben Edwards

    Ben Edwards is a British motor racing commentator. At the moment, he is the voice of A1 Grand Prix and the British Touring Car Championship in addition to Formula One DVD Reviews for Duke Video. He first became known to British viewers through his Formula 1 commentary on Eurosport. He was usually partnered with former Formula One race winner John Watson. When Eurosport lost the rights to Formula 1 at the end of 1996, …

  32. Robb Gravett

    Robb Gravett is a British racing driver who won the 1990 British Touring Car Championship and finished 2nd in his class in 1988 and 1989, in a Ford Sierra, the most powerful car of the era. There were 4 different classes of cars racing for the same title in those days, each scoring points based on where they finished among their own class. Andy Rouse and Steve Soper were his main 1990 rivals. The championship changed to a single-class in 1991, …

  33. Roberto Ravaglia

    Italian Roberto Ravaglia (born May 26, 1957, in Venice, Italy) currently runs BMW's Team Italy-Spain in the World Touring Car Championship (WTCC), who took Alessandro Zanardi to a famous race victory at Oschersleben. Before retiring in 1997, he was one of most successful touring car racing driver, primarily for BMW, and won seven titles in three (four) championships. He was twice Italian karting champion, and raced in Formula 3 in the early 1980s.

  34. Mark Smith

    Mark Smith is an auto racing driver, in the 2006 British Touring Car Championship for the In-Front team in an Alfa Romeo 156. Their preparations were hampered pre-season, when a gearbox which was supposed to come ready-to-run was supplied in kit form and not until after the first race weekend. As a result, the team did the first race with an old-fashioned H-pattern box, and skipped round 2 completely. They never scored a top 10 finish, and did not return in 2007.

  35. Frank Sytner

    Frank Sytner (born June 29 1944 in Liverpool) is a British racing driver, a Life Member of the BRDC, and was the 1988 British Touring Car Champion, driving a BMW M3. He also won his class in 1990. He started racing in the early 1970s in Formula Ford and later became known for racing in the Clubmans formula for front-engined sports cars, before moving into Touring Cars in the 1980s.

  36. Frank Gardner

    Frank Gardner (born October 1 1930) is a former racing driver from Australia. He is best known as a Touring car racing and Sports car racing driver. He also participated in nine World Championship Formula One Grands Prix, debuting on July 11, 1964. He scored no championship points. He also participated in numerous non-Championship Formula One races. He won the 1971 and 1972 Formula 5000 championships and the 1977 Australian Sports Sedan Championship.

  37. Laurent Aïello

    Laurent Aïello is a retired race car driver. He has won four touring car championships during his career – French Supertouring Championship in 1994, German Supertouring Cup in 1997, the British Touring Car Championship in 1999 and DTM in 2002. In 1998 he also won the Le Mans 24 Hours race in a Porsche 911 GT1, and in 1990 he won the Monaco Formula Three Grand Prix. His two seasons in International Formula 3000 were not successful however, …

  38. Chris Hodgetts

    Chris Hodgetts (born December 6 1950 in Tamworth-in-Arden) is a British former racing driver. He debuted in the British Touring Car Championship in 1980. His first overall podium place came in 1981 when he came second. He was consistent in the top five after that. He came 4th in 1983, 5th in 1984, 2nd in 1985, before he won the series in 1986 and 1987. He also shared the BRDC C2 Championship with Tim Harvey in 1989 before retiring in 1990.

  39. Vicki Butler-Henderson

    Vicki Butler-Henderson (born 16 February 1972, in Hertfordshire, England) is a racing driver and presenter on British TV. She was educated at The Perse School for Girls in Cambridge. Originally Butler-Henderson worked as a racing driver - she started racing at the age of 12 - and racing instructor before moving into journalism where she worked on numerous British motoring magazines including "Auto Express", "What Car?" and "Performance Car".

  40. James Weaver

    James Weaver (born March 4 1955 in London) is a former British racing driver. He began his career in the European F3. In 1982 he was the Eddie Jordan Racing team's primary driver, but in 1983 he went back to the European F3. He debuted in the British Touring Car Championship in 1989 at the Oulton Park circuit in March that year. He finished second overall in the British Touring Car Championship that year behind the winner John Cleland. He won Class B that year.

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