Takao Wada

Last updated

Takao Wada
Nationality Flag of Japan.svg Japan
Born (1953-06-24) 24 June 1953 (age 70)
Tokyo, Japan
All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship career
Debut season 1994
Former teams JLOC, Endless Sports
Starts28
Wins0
Poles0
Fastest laps0
Best finish21st in 1994
Previous series
1994-99
1987-90
1983-92
1979-93
1979
1978
JGTC
JTCC
JSPC
All-Japan F2/F3000
Japanese Formula 3
FJ1300

Takao Wada (born 24 June 1953) is a Japanese former racing driver. [1] He competed at the top level of Japanese Open Wheel racing between 1977 and 1993, scoring two wins, one pole position and five podium finishes over a career that spanned 14 seasons and 90 races, but he was better known for winning the 1979 Japanese Formula Pacific Championship and the 1986 Japanese Touring Car Championship.

Contents

Motorsport career

Wada started racing in local touring car races in 1972, driving a privately-owned Nissan. [2] Five years later, he reached the highest level of Japanese Open Wheel racing at the end of the 1977 season, the last under the Formula 2000 regulations before adopting a Formula 2 format. At the same time, the Japanese Formula Pacific Championship was created after a one-year delay, accordingly to the changes instituted in the Macau Grand Prix back in 1974, [3] with similar regulations to the F2 cars, but with a higher level of involvement from Japanese auto makers. [4] [5] Wada, by now under contract with Nissan and with support from Yokohama Rubber, was one of the early stars of the championship, finishing runner-up in 1978 behind Masahiro Hasemi before winning the title in 1979 at the wheel of a brand new March 79B. [6]

That year, Wada finished 6th in the Japanese F2 series on his first full-time season, but he was involved in a serious crash at the final race at Suzuka, shortly after winning the Pacific title on the same weekend. Running two places behind him, the car driven by guest driver Beppe Gabbiani collided with Masahiro Hasemi approaching the Hairpin corner, overturned and went directly into Wada's path, who was then struck in the helmet by the left rear tyre of Gabbiani, still attached to the car. Wada lost consciousness and entered into cardiopulmonary arrest, being removed carelessly on a stretcher with his head unsecured before being revived at the medical centre. He suffered a concussion and spent three months in a hospital before making a full recovery. [7]

The following years were less successful, although he finished 3rd in the Macau Grand Prix in 1982 behind winner Roberto Moreno and Irish driver Alo Lawler. [8] Afterwards, the change of regulations at Macau spelled the end of the Formula Pacific series in Japan, and Wada returned to the F2 championship, as well as starting his sportscar career in prototypes. His open-wheel career stalled in the following years, equalling his best ever result in 1988 when he finished sixth, tied with former champion Geoff Lees for fifth in the standings. That year, he scored his first win at Fuji over the series champion, and Nissan teammate, Aguri Suzuki, a feat only equalled that year twice by multiple champion Kazuyoshi Hoshino.

1986 was a landmark year for Wada with his increased role as a Nissan driver. He took part for the first time in the 24 Hours of Le Mans, where he became the first Japanese driver to ever complete the race, which would be followed by four straight retirements in the following years. [9] He also had a successful first foray into the newborn Japanese Touring Car Championship, winning the title along Aguri Suzuki at the wheel of a Nissan Skyline. Despite that, he would not defend his crown, reappearing only in 1990 as he concentrated on his open-wheel and prototype efforts. [1]

His second and final Japanese F3000 win occurred in 1989, at Sportsland SUGO. [10] From 10th on the grid, Wada took the lead over Ross Cheever and pulled a 50-second lead as attrition took its toll. When trying to put Lees a lap down, Wada went off the track and spun onto the path of other cars. Hideki Okada failed to avoid him, as both rear left tires touched, suffering terminal damage. Wada was able to continue with a reasonable pace and a slightly bent suspension, which gradually damaged the brake hose. Heading to Turn 1 on the final lap, the brakes failed and Wada went briefly off-track, breaking the upper rocker arm in the process. The car kept running at a much reduced pace, as half of the tyre surface was up in the air on the turns. Akihiko Nakaya approached quickly, but ran out of time, and Wada won the race by 0.32 seconds, despite thinking he still had one more lap left. [11]

He escaped a fatal fate for the second time in 1991, during an All-Japan Sports Prototype Championship race at Fuji. A tyre blew in his Nissan R91VP at the end of the long straight, sending the car into a series of somersaults in the gravel trap. The car erupted in flames and was upside down as it stopped rolling, but Wada was able to sprint out of the machine uninjured before fellow driver Johnny Herbert could get to him, having stopped his own car to help him. [12]

Wada last raced in open-wheel racing in the 1993 season, being one of only nine drivers who has competed in 14 or more seasons in Super Formula and its predecessors. With the demise of the All Japan Sports-Prototype Championship, Wada turned to the JGTC (All-Japan GT Championship), racing for the Japan Lamborghini Owner's Club with modest results for five years before being reunited with a Nissan Skyline GT-R, on which he hanged up the helmet after 1999. [9] [1]

Off the track, Wada was known for his casual attire, combining a 'punch perm' hairstyle (mostly associated with low income workers, motorcycle gangs and outlaws such as the yakuza) with American-style sunglasses. [13] After his retirement, he set up a driving school for young drivers aiming to compete in the lower divisions of Japanese racing. [2]

Motorsports results

Japanese Top Formula Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

YearEntrant1234567891011DCPoints
1977Tomei Jidousya SUZ SUZ MIN SUZ FUJ FUJ SUZ SUZ
10
18th3
1978Tomei Jidousya SUZ FUJ SUZ SUZ SUZ
Ret
MIN SUZ NC0
1979Harada Racing Company SUZ
7
MIN
7
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
3
SUZ
3
SUZ
Ret
SUZ
Ret
6th30
1983Mimasu Racing SUZ
11
FUJ
Ret
MIN SUZ
10
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
6
SUZ
Ret
SUZ
9
13th9
1984OM Racing SUZ
7
FUJ
Ret
MIN SUZ
14
SUZ
7
FUJ
11
SUZ
11
SUZ
12
17th8
1985Advan Sports Tomei SUZ
7
FUJ
8
MIN SUZ
Ret
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
4
SUZ
10
SUZ
Ret
12th18
1986 Advan Sports Shigeyama Racing SUZ
3
FUJ
4
MIN
9
SUZ
6
SUZ
12
FUJ
9
SUZ
11
SUZ
11
8th32
1987 Advan Sports Shigeyama Racing SUZ
14
FUJ
8
MIN
10
SUZ
7
SUZ
DSQ
SUG
7
FUJ
9
SUZ
11
SUZ
Ret
13th14
1988 Advan Sport Pal SUZ
5
FUJ
7
MIN
Ret
SUZ
Ret
SUG
4
FUJ
1
SUZ
6
SUZ
10
6th15
1989 Advan Sport Pal SUZ
Ret
FUJ
Ret
MIN
Ret
SUZ
10
SUG
1
FUJ
16
SUZ
16
SUZ
Ret
7th9
1990 Advan Sport Pal SUZ
Ret
FUJ
4
MIN
Ret
SUZ
14
SUG
22
FUJ
7
FUJ
Ret
SUZ
Ret
FUJ
Ret
SUZ
4
11th6
1991 Advan Sport Pal SUZ
17
AUT
DNS
FUJ
7
MIN
Ret
SUZ
DNQ
SUG FUJ
DNQ
SUZ FUJ
C
SUZ FUJ 26th0
1992 Nisseki Racing Team SUZ
DNQ
FUJ
14
MIN
10
SUZ
12
AUT
8
SUG
13
FUJ
6
FUJ
16
SUZ
DNS
FUJ
10
SUZ
Ret
18th1
1993 Super Evolution Racing Team SUZ
15
FUJ
12
MIN
8
SUZ
14
AUT
C
SUG
12
FUJ
C
FUJ SUZ FUJ SUZ 19th0

Complete JGTC results

YearTeamCarClass1234567DCPts
1994 KEN WOLF with Terai Engineering Lamborghini Countach GT1 FUJ
Ret
SEN
8
FUJ
Ret
SUG
11
MIN
Ret
21st3
1995 KEN WOLF with Terai Engineering Lamborghini Diablo JotaGT1 SUZ
15
FUJ
SEN
13
FUJ
13
SUG
Ret
MIN
Ret
NC0
1996 KEN WOLF with JLOC Corsa Lamborghini Diablo JotaGT500 SUZ
Ret
FUJ
Ret
SEN
FUJ
11
SUG
Ret
MIN
14
NC0
1997 JLOC Corsa Lamborghini Diablo GT-1GT500 SUZ
FUJ
Ret
SEN
Ret
FUJ
14
MIN
Ret
SUG
13
NC0
1998 Lamborghini Diablo JotaGT500 SUZ
15
FUJ
C
SEN
FUJ
17
TRM
Ret
MIN
DNA
SUG
Ret
NC0
1999 Endless  [ ja ] Sports Nissan Skyline GT-R GT500 SUZ
12
FUJ
10
SUG
10
MIN
FUJ
16
TAI
TRM
26th2

24 Hours of Le Mans results

YearTeamCo-DriversCarClassLapsPos.Class
Pos.
1986 Flag of Japan.svg Nismo Flag of the United Kingdom.svg James Weaver
Flag of Japan.svg Masahiro Hasemi
Nissan R85VC128516th10th
1987 Flag of Japan.svg Nismo Flag of Japan.svg Masahiro Hasemi
Flag of Japan.svg Aguri Suzuki
Nissan R87E C1117DNFDNF
1988 Flag of Japan.svg Nismo Flag of Japan.svg Kazuyoshi Hoshino
Flag of Japan.svg Aguri Suzuki
Nissan R88C C1286DNFDNF
1989 Flag of Japan.svg Team Le Mans Co.
Flag of France.svg Courage Compétition
Flag of Japan.svg Akio Morimoto
Flag of Sweden.svg Anders Olofsson
March 88SNissan C1221DNFDNF
1990 Flag of Japan.svg Team LeMans Flag of Sweden.svg Anders Olofsson
Flag of Brazil.svg Maurizio Sandro Sala
Nissan R89C C1182DNFDNF

Related Research Articles

Lola Cars International Ltd. was a British race car engineering company in operation from 1958 to 2012. The company was founded by Eric Broadley in Bromley, England, before moving to new premises in Slough, Buckinghamshire and finally Huntingdon, Cambridgeshire, and endured for more than fifty years to become one of the oldest and largest manufacturers of racing cars in the world. Lola Cars started by building small front-engined sports cars, and branched out into Formula Junior cars before diversifying into a wider range of sporting vehicles.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aguri Suzuki</span> Japanese racing driver (born 1960)

Aguri Suzuki is a Japanese former racing driver. He participated in 88 Formula One Grands Prix, his best result being third place at the 1990 Japanese Grand Prix. He then became involved in team ownership, with interests firstly in the Japanese Formula Nippon Championship and the IRL in partnership with Mexican racer Adrian Fernandez. He was the owner of the Super Aguri F1 team, which participated in Formula One from 2006 to 2008. He then went on to form Team Aguri, which raced in Formula E from 2014 to 2016.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Érik Comas</span> French racing driver (born 1963)

Érik Gilbert Comas is a French former Formula One driver. He was French Formula 3 champion in 1988, and then Formula 3000 champion in 1990, after scoring the same number of points as Jean Alesi in 1989, but losing on a count-back of positions. He participated in 63 Grands Prix, debuting on 10 March 1991. He scored a total of 7 championship points. His last point, in the 1994 German Grand Prix, was also the last one for the Larrousse team.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kazuyoshi Hoshino</span> Japanese racing driver (born 1947)

Kazuyoshi Hoshino is a Japanese former racing driver and businessman.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kojima Engineering</span> Automobile manufacturer

Kojima Engineering was a Japanese Formula One constructor who entered cars in the Japanese Grand Prix in 1976 and 1977.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Masahiro Hasemi</span> Japanese racing driver (born 1945)

Masahiro Hasemi is a former racing driver and team owner from Japan. He started racing motocross when he was 15 years old. In 1964 he signed to drive for Nissan. After establishing himself in saloon car and GT races in Japan, he participated in his only Formula One race at the 1976 Japanese Grand Prix for Kojima on 24 October 1976. He qualified 10th after an error which cost him his chance of a pole position and finished 11th, seven laps behind the winner. Contrary to a widely propagated but mistaken result, however, he never set a fastest lap in a Formula One championship race. Along with compatriots Noritake Takahara and Kazuyoshi Hoshino, he was the first Japanese driver to start a Formula One Grand Prix.

March Engineering was a Formula One constructor and manufacturer of customer racing cars from the United Kingdom. Although only moderately successful in Grand Prix competition, March racing cars enjoyed much better success in other categories of competition, including Formula Two, Formula Three, IndyCar and IMSA GTP sportscar racing.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Toshio Suzuki (racing driver)</span> Japanese racing driver (born 1955)

Toshio Suzuki is a former racing driver from Saitama Prefecture, Japan.

Toda Racing Co., Ltd was established in 1971 in Okayama, Japan as a maintenance company for racing vehicles and engines. Since its inception, company activities have grown to include manufacturing and development of racing engines for various forms of Japanese motorsports, ranging from Formula 3 to GT300. The experience gained in the realm of professional motorsports is applied to all TODA Racing products available to consumers.

The 2001 International Formula 3000 Championship was the 35th season of the second-tier motorsport feeder championship of Formula One and the 17th season to be held under the series name. It featured the 2001 FIA International Formula 3000 Championship, a one-make motor racing series, recognised by the sport's governing body, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA), as the second highest class of competition of single seater racing cars. A total of 37 drivers representing 13 teams contested 12 races, starting in Brazil on 31 March and ending in Italy on 15 September as they competed for the Drivers' and Teams' Championships.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">André Couto</span> Macanese racing driver

André Couto is a Macanese motor racing driver who is best known for winning his home F3 Grand Prix in 2000 and Japan's Super GT GT300 Championship in 2015.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2006 Super GT Series</span>

The 2006 Autobacs Super GT Series was the fourteenth season of the Japan Automobile Federation Super GT Championship including the All Japan Grand Touring Car Championship (JGTC) era and the second season as the Super GT series. It was also the twenty-fourth season of a JAF-sanctioned sports car racing championship dating back to the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship. The season began on March 19 and ended on November 5, 2006, after 9 races.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nissan R90C</span> Motor vehicle

The Nissan R90C was a platform used for Group C racing cars built in 1990 by Nissan Motors for competition in World Sportscar Championship (WSC) based in Europe and the All Japan Sports Prototype Championship (JSPC). The cars based on the basic R90C platform would compete until 1993 before Nissan chose to withdraw from sports car racing, not returning until 1997. It won three JSPC championships and several significant endurance races during its career.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">João Paulo de Oliveira</span> Brazilian professional racing driver (born 1981)

João Paulo Lima de Oliveira is a Brazilian professional racing driver currently competing in the Japanese Super GT series and in the FIA World Endurance Championship driving for the Vanwall Racing Team. He won the Super GT GT300 class championship in both 2020 and 2022 and the Formula Nippon championship in 2010.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nissan R88C</span>

The Nissan R88C is a sports prototype race car developed by Nissan and Lola for the 24 Hours of Le Mans.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Masami Kageyama</span> Japanese racing driver

Masami Kageyama is a Japanese racing driver from Kanagawa Prefecture. His older brother is Masahiko Kageyama who was also a successful racing driver in similar categories.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jüri Vips</span> Estonian racing driver (born 2000)

Jüri Vips is an Estonian racing driver. He previously competed in the NTT IndyCar Series with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing, with whom he is still employed, FIA Formula 2 Championship with Hitech Grand Prix. He was the 2017 ADAC Formula 4 champion.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nissan Skyline Turbo C</span> Motor vehicle

The Nissan Skyline Turbo C is a Group C prototype sports car developed by Garage Le Mans for the 1983 All Japan Endurance Championship and Fuji Long Distance Series. While used as a marketing tool for the R30 Skyline, the Skyline Turbo C has no parts commonality or shared origin with the street car. The engine is equipped with Nissan's LZ20B type.

The Nissan LM03C is a Group C race car developed by Le Mans Garage for the 1983 All Japan Endurance Championship and Fuji Long Distance Series.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">SSR Wheels</span> Japanese wheel manufacturer

SSR Wheels is a Japanese wheel manufacturer for both motorsport and aftermarket applications, headquartered in Osaka, Japan.

References

  1. 1 2 3 "Profile". driverdb.com. Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  2. 1 2 "WADA RACING SPORTS". www.wrs.co.jp. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  3. "マカオグランプリ博物館へ行こう!". [モータースポーツ] All About (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  4. "TOYOTA MOTOR SPORTS". www.toyota.co.jp. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  5. "NISSAN HERITAGE COLLECTION online". nissan-heritage-collection.com. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  6. Brown, Allen. "Japanese Formula Pacific 1979 season review and full race results". OldRacingCars.com. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  7. ""A machine came down from the sky!" Losing memory for three months in a big crash | Racing driver Takao Wada Vol.5, who made a legend with Yokohama Tires". Japan Top News. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  8. "Past Winners | Macau Grand Prix". www.macau.grandprix.gov.mo. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  9. 1 2 "SUCCESSIVE DRIVERS:TAKAO WADA". www.jloc-net.com. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  10. "Victory of All Japan F3000 legend - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  11. "【8】「最終ラップの1コーナーでブレーキがブシュと抜けた」記憶に残る菅生F3000での勝利|ヨコハマタイヤと伝説を作った レーシング・ドライバー 和田孝夫 Vol.8". マイナビニュース (in Japanese). 2 July 2020. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  12. "JSPC - Fuji 500 Miles 1991 - Takao Wada - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  13. "菅生F3000の和田孝夫 - キマグレ競馬". 菅生F3000の和田孝夫 - キマグレ競馬 (in Japanese). Retrieved 30 December 2020.