This article is about the Formula One team that competed as Lotus from 2012 to 2015. For the original 1954–1994 motorsport team, seeTeam Lotus. For the team that competed in 1995 as Pacific Team Lotus, seePacific Racing. For the team that competed in 2010 as Lotus Racing and 2011 as Team Lotus, seeTeam Lotus (2010–2011).
Lotus F1 Team was a BritishFormula One racing team. The team competed under the Lotus name from2012 until2015, following the renaming of the formerRenault team based atEnstone in Oxfordshire. The Lotus F1 Team was majority owned byGenii Capital.[1][2] Lotus F1 was named after its branding partnerGroup Lotus. The team achieved a race victory and fourth position in the Formula One Constructors' World Championship in their first season under the Lotus title. Lotus F1 achieved 2 race victories in their time on the grid, both courtesy ofKimi Räikkönen. The team was sold back toRenault on 18 December 2015. The Lotus F1 Team name was officially dropped on 3 February 2016, as Renault announced that the team would compete asRenault Sport Formula One Team.
The team's Formula One history started in 1981 as theToleman Motorsport team, based inWitney, Oxfordshire, England. In 1986, the team was renamed toBenetton Formula, following its purchase in 1985 by theBenetton family. In 1992/3, the team moved a few miles to a new base inEnstone.Michael Schumacher won the Drivers' Championship with the team in both1994 and1995. In 1995, the team also won the Constructors' Championship, withJohnny Herbert driving alongside Schumacher.
Renault purchased the Benetton team in 2000, and in 2002, they renamed it theRenault F1 Team. In both 2005 and 2006,Fernando Alonso won the Drivers' Championship with the team, and the team won the Constructors' Championship (withGiancarlo Fisichella as their other driver).
Starting with theLotus E20, the team has recognised these achievements by placing three gold stars in the livery of their car, located just forward of the cockpit. At the end of 2009, Renault sold a majority stake in the team toGenii Capital. Since 2011,Lotus Cars became involved with the team and the team was renamed, first to "Lotus Renault GP" for 2011 season, and then to "Lotus F1 Team" for 2012 season.[citation needed] When discussing the history of the organisation as a whole rather than those of specific constructors it has operated, the colloquialism "Team Enstone" is generally used.[3][4][5]
Team Lotus, a sister company of Lotus Cars, competed in Formula One between 1958 and 1994, winning seven constructors' titles and six drivers' titles between 1963 and 1978.
The Lotus name returned to Formula One in 2010 throughTony Fernandes'sLotus Racing team, which used the name on licence from Group Lotus. Group Lotus later terminated the licence for the 2011 season, but Fernandes acquired the privately owned Team Lotus name and used it. For 2012, Team Lotus changed their name toCaterham F1 Team, clearing the way for theLotus Renault GP team to be renamed as "Lotus F1 Team".
On 29 November 2011, the team announced thatKimi Räikkönen would race for them in 2012 as he returned from a two-year stint away from Formula One which he spent competing in theWorld Rally Championship; Räikkönen signed for two years with a third year option. On 9 December 2011 the team announced thatGP2 Series champion and 2009 Renault F1 driverRomain Grosjean would race alongside Räikkönen.Renault would remain as an engine supplier but no longer free engines instead of paying engine package lease about 70%.
At the start of the season, the team wasinvolved in a protest over the use of a "radical" rear wing concept onMercedes AMG'sMercedes F1 W03, later dubbed the 'F-duct rear wing' or 'DoubleDRS'.[7] The dispute was not settled until the third race inChina when the stewards unanimously rejected their formal protest[8] and Lotus subsequently confirmed they would not appeal against the decision.[9]
Lotus started the season strongly with Grosjean qualifying third inAustralia but first lap incidents in Australia andMalaysia ruined his chances of his first Formula One points. InChina Räikkönen was running in second until his tyres 'fell off the cliff' pushing him out of the points for the only time of the season. InBahrain, Lotus achieved their first podiums of the season with Räikkönen very close to the winner Vettel and Grosjean behind in third. InMonaco Grosjean was involved in another first lap incident but inCanada he worked a one-stop strategy perfectly to take second position, his best Formula One finish. A race later inValencia Grosjean was running in second until a mechanical problem put him out of the race after a safety car period leaving Räikkönen to take another podium for second.
InGermany,Hungary andBelgium Räikkönen took 3 podiums in a row. In Hungary he and Grosjean had an inter-team battle after a round of pit stops. In the end Räikkönen finished ahead in second with Grosjean scoring his third podium with third.
At the2012 Belgian Grand Prix, Grosjean was involved in a multiple car pileup at the start of the race, resulting in Grosjean,Lewis Hamilton,Fernando Alonso andSergio Pérez all being eliminated from the race andKamui Kobayashi missing out on a possible podium after starting from the front row for the first time of his career. The incident was started when Grosjean collided with Hamilton on the approach to the La Source corner. After the race, Grosjean was issued with a one race ban covering the next Round at Monza. He was replaced for the race weekend by Lotus reserve driverJérôme d'Ambrosio.
After a near win in Bahrain, Räikkönen took the team's first victory at theAbu Dhabi Grand Prix. It was also his first race win after returning to Formula One. After finishing in the points in 19 of the 20 races, and achieving 7 podiums (including the win in Abu Dhabi) Räikkönen finished 3rd in the Drivers' Championship with Lotus 4th in the Constructors' Championship.
On 29 October 2012, Lotus F1 team confirmed that Räikkönen would be racing with the team in 2013. The news came after several weeks of speculation that Räikkönen had several other options for 2013 including other forms of motorsport. Romain Grosjean partnered him in the 2013 season. The 2013 Lotus, the E21, was launched on 28 January at the team's headquarters in Enstone, Oxfordshire, UK. The livery was a little bit different from the previous year's; this year Lotus has a black, gold and red livery, with more visible red as the sidepods, air intake, rear wing and front wing have red on them.
In the2013 Australian Grand Prix, Lotus achieved a first-place finish for Räikkönen despite qualifying in 7th place, thus giving Lotus F1 the leading driver in the Drivers' Championship and second place in the Constructors' Championship. Romain Grosjean, who started the race in 8th place, finished the race in 10th and took one point despite having problems with his car.
After Räikkönen was penalised for impedingNico Hülkenberg in qualifying and Grosjean failed to make Q3, theMalaysian Grand Prix saw Lotus sit only 10th and 11th on the starting grid. They ultimately finished 7th and 6th respectively.
At theChinese Grand Prix, Räikkönen qualified and finished 2nd, despite having to regain places after losing two at the start and having damaged the front of his car while battling Sergio Pérez for position; Grosjean finished 8th.
TheBahrain Grand Prix saw a bad qualifying result for both Lotus drivers, but as team principalEric Boullier had expected, the car had better race pace and both drivers subsequently finished on the podium. The race saw the same top 3 asthe previous year.Mansoor Ijaz, head of the Quantum Motorsports consortium, was involved in a proposed but ultimately unsuccessful deal to acquire a 35% stake in the team in summer 2013. The deal, which would have seen Quantum acquire the stake from majority owner Genii Capital, was announced in the summer of 2013 but faced repeated delays. While Ijaz claimed the deal was complete from his side, the transaction was never finalized.
After first corner contact at the start of the 17th round of the championship in Abu Dhabi, Kimi Räikkönen announced that he would be undergoing back surgery and would miss the final two races of the season. His place was taken by Heikki Kovalainen despite initial speculation suggesting that Michael Schumacher would replace him for the United States Grand Prix, something which was ruled out by Schumacher's manager.[10]
TheLotus E22 was notable for its radical "twin tusk" nose concept.
The team undertook a management and ownership change ahead of the 2014 season.Andrew Ruhan, a British property developer who had become co-chairman the previous year,[11] had loaned money to the team, and at the start of the year turned his loans into equity to take effective control of the company from Genii Capital.[12] In addition, Genii sold a 10% stake toYotaphone, whose logos would appear on the car in 2014.[11] The team's CEO left the team, as did team principalEric Boullier, who joinedMcLaren.[13] Ruhan installed Matthew Carter as the new chief executive,[14] who would run the team despite having no previous F1 experience.[12]Gérard Lopez became the titular team principal, and long-term employee Federico Gastaldi became deputy team principal.[15]
Lotus keptRomain Grosjean for 2014, andPastor Maldonado would join bringing sponsorship fromPDVSA.[16] The team struggled throughout the season, finishing eighth in the Constructors' Championship compared to the fourth place they achieved in 2013.
On 5 July 2014, Lotus announced that they would be switching toMercedes engines from the 2015 season, ending the team's 20-year association with Renault.[17] Grosjean and Maldonado remained at the team, withJolyon Palmer andCarmen Jordá being signed as test and development drivers respectively.
The early part of the season saw driver error and poor reliability cost the team important race results:
TheAustralian Grand Prix was disappointing start for the Lotus team; by lap 2 both cars had retired. Maldonado retired on lap 1 after a three-car wide tussle resulted in him crashing out at turn two and Grosjean lost power on lap 2.
InMalaysia, Grosjean finished 11th but Maldonado retired due to brake problems.
Grosjean finished 7th atChina, his and Lotus's best result since the2013 United States Grand Prix. On lap 33, Pastor Maldonado, who had been running ahead of his teammate, missed the pit entry on lap 33 and lost time, dropping several positions. He then proceeded to spin his car on lap 39 as he attempted to make up for lost time, and on lap 48 had a collision with Jenson Button following a long battle for position, damaging his car and retiring with rear brake failure a few laps later.
Despite only qualifying 16th and 10th, by lap 41 of theBahrain Grand Prix, Maldonado and Grosjean had been running in 7th and 8th places respectively, until an issue during the pit entry for Maldonado's last stop meant his car had to be reset and restarted, dropping him to 15th and promoting Grosjean to 7th.
InSpain, both drivers had a great start from 11th and 12th on the grid to be running comfortably inside the top ten. Then on lap 4, contact between the two drivers left Maldonado with a heavily damaged rear wing and, despite a lengthy pitstop in order to reposition the wing, ultimately retired; Grosjean recovered to 8th with only minimal damage.
Maldonado qualified 9th for the2015 Monaco Grand Prix, but suffered from brake problems in the early laps and retired on lap seven.Grosjean looked set for 10th despite a grid penalty, until an aggressive overtake attempt byMax Verstappen on the start of lap 64 sent Verstappen flying into the barriers and Grojsean into a spin. Grojsean ultimately finished 12th and out of the points.
InCanada, Grosjean and Maldonado qualified in 5th and 6th places respectively on a track where all Mercedes powered cars had a clear advantage over the rest of the field. Maldonado finished 7th after losing a place toHülkenberg at the start. Grosjean was forced to pit again after cutting his rear left tyre while attempting to lap the Marussia ofWill Stevens and dropped from 6th to 11th in the process, but recovered to take 10th place and nevertheless secured Lotus's first double points finish of the season.
InAustria, Grosjean retired with gearbox issues while Maldonado finished 7th from 10th on the grid.
Both cars retired from theBritish Grand Prix, after a late braking Daniel Ricciardo forced Grosjean into Maldonado during the first few corners of the opening lap.
During theHungarian Grand Prix weekend deputy team principalFederico Gastaldi confirmed that team ownerGérard Lopez was in deep discussion withRenault board members in an effort to sell the team back to its former owners.[18][19] Lotus had received their allocation of tyres less than an hour before the opening session at the Hungaroring after Pirelli refused to release the tyres over unpaid bills, amid the team's growing financial difficulties.[20] In the race, Grosjean finished 7th while Maldonado finished 14th after accumulating three penalties during the race.[21]
Grosjean finished third in theBelgian Grand Prix gaining the team's first podium finish since the2013 United States Grand Prix. However, the Lotus cars were temporarily seized post-race due to a legal dispute with former test driver,Charles Pic.[22]
During the2015 Japanese Grand Prix, Lotus were locked out of their hospitality unit, stemming from unpaid bills from the race organizers in Japan from the previous year.[23] On 30 September, it was announced thatRenault had signed a letter of intent to buy a controlling stake of Lotus F1 from Genii Capital.[24] This came after Lotus were bailed out by Renault after falling behind in income tax and insurance payments to the British Government.[25] Seventh and eighth places in the race itself gave the team their first double top eight finish since the2013 Indian Grand Prix.
On 21 December 2015 it was officially confirmed on the Lotus F1 Team website thatGroupe Renault had re-purchased the Enstone-based team and planned on entering the2016 season as the official Renault factory team. Renault appointed Jérôme Stoll as chairman andCyril Abiteboul as managing director.
The Lotus F1 Team competed in a black-and-gold livery inspired by that ofTeam Lotus – the motorsport sister company of its naming and branding partnerGroup Lotus – when it was sponsored by tobacco brandJohn Player Special during the 1970s and 1980s. However, in April 2012 it was announced this sponsorship agreement had been prematurely terminated although the team would continue to use the Lotus name until at least 2017.[26]
In March 2013, days before the launch of the new LotusE21, American conglomerateHoneywell pulled out of a reported €50 million sponsorship agreement with the team.[27]
In 2014, again without a title sponsor, each car's title sponsor space was instead shared race by race by existing sponsors alongside temporary sponsorsInterwetten (Germany and Hungary)[28] andHisense (Italy, United States and Abu Dhabi),[29] as well as paying homage to theEl Greco exhibition at the Spanish Grand Prix.[30]
Its sponsors included French car brandRenault (though during the 2015 season, the team hadMercedes power), oil company and Romain Grosjean sponsorTotal (though not shown on the car in the 2015 season as the Mercedes engines usedPetronas fuel), Chinese solar energy companyTrina Solar,Advanced Global Trading,Microsoft Dynamics, French fashion brand Japan Rags, luxury watch brandRichard Mille,Symantec,Avanade andUnilever Personal care brands Rexona and Clear. The later two companies switching toWilliams F1 for 2015. For the 2013 season Lotus signed a deal with theCoca-Cola group brandBurn energy drink and Pastor Maldonado sponsorPDVSA. For 2014, Lotus signed a deal withSaxo Bank.
The team was previously owned byGenii Capital with property investor,Andrew Ruhan having a two percent stake and Russian phone company,Yota Devices having a speculated ten percent share in the company.[31]The company later on was majority owned byGroupe Renault, with Jérôme Stoll as chairmen andCyril Abiteboul appointed managing director.[1]
Although World Championship races held in 1952 and 1953 were run to Formula Two regulations, constructors who only participated during this period are included herein to maintain Championship continuity. Constructors whose only participation in the World Championship was in theIndianapolis 500 races between 1950 and 1960 are not listed.