Harold Primat | |
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![]() Primat at the2011 24 Hours of Le Mans driver parade | |
Nationality | ![]() |
Born | (1975-06-12)12 June 1975 (age 49) Neuilly-sur-Seine, France |
Racing licence | ![]() |
24 Hours of Le Mans career | |
Years | 2005–2012 |
Teams | Rollcentre Racing, Swiss Spirit,Pescarolo Sport,Aston Martin Racing |
Best finish | 6th(2010) |
Harold Primat (born 12 June 1975) is a French-born Swiss racing driver who previously competed in theBlancpain Endurance Series and other long-distance events such as theBathurst 12 Hour andNurburgring 24 Hours.
The nephew of motorcycle racerClaude Vigreux, Primat began his career in karts before graduating to the Max Mygale and Winfield racing schools in France, as well as theJim Russell Centre in the UK.[1]
He then moved to the US, where he competed in theFormula Ford 2000 championship. He then moved on to theBritish Formula Three Championship and later theF3 Euroseries, before concluding his single-seater career in World Series Lights with the Saulnier team.[2]
During 2003 and 2004, Primat combined his single-seater races withendurance racing. Debuting in 2003 with the Saulnier team, he competed in theV de V Endurance championship, leading his maiden race atSpa until a mechanical failure put him out of the race. Primat became vice-champion in his second season, narrowly missing out on the title after a prior World Series Lights commitment forced him to skip a race.
Moving to the top level of endurance racing withKruse Motorsport in 2005, Primat qualified third and finished second in class at the12 Hours of Sebring event. Remaining with Kruse on the other side of the Atlantic, Primat began the European season at Spa but retired due to engine problems. He then switched to Rollcentre Racing, which allowed him to compete for overall honours in the LMP1 category, and went on to achieve three top-ten finishes in his debut year.
2005 also saw Primat make his maiden appearance at theLe Mans 24 Hours. After qualifying in 13th, the Rollcentre Dallara-Nissan suffered technical problems in the early stages of the race, resulting in the team not being classified.
Primat switched teams for 2006, becoming part of an all-Swiss line-up in the new Swiss Spirit outfit, under his former boss Serge Saulnier, whose team ran the programme. Primat won top 3 finishes at Spa and Jarama, finishing in joint-fourth place in the championship overall. However he was again unable to complete the Le Mans 24 Hours after gearbox problems forced him into retirement on lap 132.
He again mixed his European schedule with some US-based races in 2006, finishing third at Laguna Seca and fourth at Petit Le Mans for theCreation Autosportif team. However, his debut at the blue ribandDaytona 24 Hours was thwarted by an engine failure on his Spirit of Daytona Crawford-Pontiac.
In 2007 Primat signed forHenri Pescarolo's eponymous team. A podium finish at Spa was his best result in the face of increased competition from the works Peugeot squad, but Primat finished in the top six at four of the six races. The season also saw him finish Le Mans for the first time, finishing sixth in class and 13th overall despite losing 90 minutes in the pits to an oil leak.
Remaining withPescarolo Sport for the2008 Le Mans Series, Primat had a top-three finish atMonza, despite the addition of the factory Audi squad to the LMS field. Primat also took a best-yet seventh-place finish at Le Mans, which placed him first among the unofficial 'petrol' class, beaten only by the diesel machines of sportscar heavyweights Audi and Peugeot.
In January 2009 Harold was confirmed as anAston Martin Racing factory driver for the brand's first return to top-class endurance racing since 1989. PartneringDarren Turner, he finished fourth in the Le Mans Series standings, including a second position at the Nürburgring. Primat was joined byPeter Kox andStuart Hall for Le Mans, where a water leak curtailed the #009 Lola-Aston Martin's involvement after 252 laps. The highlight of Primat's season was victory alongsideStefan Mücke at the inauguralAsian Le Mans Series race at Okayama in late autumn.
2010 saw Primat again driving for Aston Martin Racing, recording three podium finishes in the ALMS and LMS. Sixth place overall at Le Mans itself also represented his best finish at the French race to date. A third season with AMR in 2011, this time alongside Turner and Mücke, produced two more top three finishes for Primat, including an outright ALMS victory at Laguna Seca. Aston Martin's new, open-top AMR-One proved unreliable however, prompting the team to withdraw from the LMP1 ranks at the end of the year.
Primat then moved to privateer LMP1 outfitRebellion Racing for the newly revivedFIA World Endurance Championship in 2012. With Audi and Toyota's factory entries winning all eight rounds between them, it was left to Rebellion to fight for the LMP1 Trophy against Strakka, JRM andOAK Racing. Two victories by Primat - at Silverstone and Shanghai - brought the trophy to Rebellion.
In 2013 Primat swapped sports-prototype for GT machinery as part of Phoenix Racing'sBlancpain Endurance Series, VLN andBathurst 12 Hour driver roster. Piloting an Audi R8 LMS ultra, Primat took fourth place at the Australian classic despite losing four laps to repairs, and achieved the same result at the blue riband 24 Hours of Spa. Racing alongsideOliver Jarvis and Christopher Hasse, the Belgian event saw the trio deliver a comeback drive that ranked among the highlights of the 24 hour contest. Primat also found success on the VLN scene, picking up several top-three finishes.
On 16 September 2015, Primat announced his retirement from racing, ending his seventeen year long career. Primat retired after the final round of the2015 Blancpain Endurance Series season, at theNürburgring. He said that "now is the right time to begin a fresh chapter in life by focusing on other projects".[3]
Year | Team | Co-Drivers | Car | Class | Laps | Pos. | Class Pos. |
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2005 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Dallara SP1-Nissan | LMP1 | 133 | DNF | DNF |
2006 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Courage LC70-Judd | LMP1 | 132 | DNF | DNF |
2007 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Pescarolo 01-Judd | LMP1 | 325 | 13th | 6th |
2008 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Pescarolo 01-Judd | LMP1 | 362 | 7th | 7th |
2009 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Lola-Aston Martin B09/60 | LMP1 | 252 | DNF | DNF |
2010 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Lola-Aston Martin B09/60 | LMP1 | 365 | 6th | 5th |
2011 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Aston Martin AMR-One | LMP1 | 2 | DNF | DNF |
2012 | ![]() | ![]() ![]() | Lola B12/60-Toyota | LMP1 | 350 | 11th | 7th |
Year | Entrant | Class | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | Rank | Points |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2012 | Rebellion Racing | LMP1 | Lola B12/60 | Toyota RV8KLM 3.4 L V8 | SEB 19 | SPA 5 | LMS 9 | SIL 4 | SÃO 6 | BHR 5 | FUJ 7 | SHA 4 | 8th | 62.5 |
Source:[5] |
Since 2016 Primat invested in multiple Startups, amongst others in UK-based companiesPlaybrush andBusuu as well as Austrian-basedTractive.[6][7]