Esteban Gutiérrez

This name uses Spanish naming customs: the first or paternal family name is Gutiérrez and the second or maternal family name is Gutiérrez.
Esteban Gutiérrez

Gutiérrez in 2009 at the Hockenheimring
Born (1991-08-05) 5 August 1991
Monterrey, Mexico
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality Mexico Mexican
2016 team Haas-Ferrari[1]
Car number 21
Entries 42 (42 starts)
Wins 0
Podiums 0
Career points 6
Pole positions 0
Fastest laps 1
First entry 2013 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry 2016 Russian Grand Prix
Previous series
20112012
2011
2010
20092010
20092010
2008
2007
GP2 Series
GP2 Asia Series
GP3 Series
Formula 3 Euro Series
British F3
Formula BMW Europe
Formula BMW USA
Championship titles
2010
2008
GP3 Series
Formula BMW Europe
Awards
2012
2007
Pirelli Trophy for Tyre Management
FBMW USA Rookie/Year

Esteban Manuel Gutiérrez Gutiérrez[2] (Spanish pronunciation: [esˈteβan maˈnwel ɣuˈtjeres ɣuˈtjeres]; born 5 August 1991), is a Mexican racing driver. From 2011 to 2014, Gutiérrez drove for the Sauber Formula One team,[3] but lost his drive at the end of the 2014 season. He then signed with Ferrari as their test and reserve driver for 2015.[4] On October 30, 2015, Gutiérrez was confirmed to drive for the new Haas F1 Team for the 2016 Formula One season.[5]

In 2008, he won the Formula BMW Europe championship title,[6] becoming the youngest Mexican driver to win an International Championship at 17 years old. He also won the inaugural GP3 season in 2010. He became the first GP3 graduate to finish in the top three of the GP2 parent series in 2012, with the Lotus GP team.

Personal life

Gutiérrez was born in Monterrey, Nuevo León, the second of four brothers and one sister. His father Roberto Manuel Gutiérrez and mother Clara Gutiérrez are frequently seen at Esteban's races.[7] Esteban shares the passion for karting with his brother Andrés, seven years older than him. Gutiérrez is part of the young talent program of Escuderia Telmex. Gutiérrez enjoys karting, motorcycling, golf, virtual races and skiing.[8]

Early career

Karting

Gutiérrez started his career in 2004 in the Mexican Rotax Max Challenge when he raced in the last 3 events of the season. In 2005, he again competed in the Mexican Rotax Max Challenge, and also raced in the Grand Nationals in South Bend, Indiana, where he finished third, which earned him a place at the World Finals in Malaysia, where he finished 22nd due to mechanical problems.

In 2006, Esteban won all 5 races in the Camkart Challenge Mexico, and again he raced in the Mexican Rotax Max Challenge. He also finished 4th in the Mexican Grand Nationals in Zacatecas, Mexico.

Formula BMW Series

2007

In 2007, Gutiérrez made the step up into the single-seater ranks, competing in the Formula BMW USA series. He finished second overall in the championship, with 4 wins, 8 podiums, 9 pole positions and 3 fastest laps, earning him Rookie of the Year honours. Despite finishing second, Gutiérrez finished some 87 points behind runaway champion Daniel Morad.

Gutiérrez raced at the Formula BMW World Final in 2007, eventually finishing last of the classified finishers in 25th.[9]

2008

Gutiérrez winning the 2008 FBMW Europe championship

Gutiérrez moved across to Europe to compete in the 2008 Formula BMW Europe championship, which was the championship's maiden season after the merging of the British and German series. He won the championship by 26 points from his closest rival Marco Wittmann, taking 7 wins, 6 of which consecutively, and appearing on the podium another 5 times. Out of the seasons 16 races, he only finished outside the points twice in the whole season and retired once overall, giving him a final score of 353 points.

In his final FBMW race, Gutiérrez qualified on pole and finished third at the 2008 World Final in Mexico City, beaten only by the current FBMW Americas champion at the time Alexander Rossi and Michael Christensen.[10]

Formula 3 Euro Series

For 2009, Gutiérrez moved up to the Formula 3 Euro Series with a seat at reigning champions ART Grand Prix alongside Jules Bianchi, Valtteri Bottas and Adrien Tambay. He finished ninth overall in the championship, taking two podiums at the Nürburgring and Dijon Prenois.
He ended the season with 26 points altogether, putting Mexico sixth in the Nations Cup.

GP3 Series

2010 saw Gutiérrez move to the GP3 Series, competing for ART Grand Prix. He joined Pedro Nunes and Alexander Rossi at the team.[11] Gutiérrez won the inaugural season with two races to spare by taking pole position, and the resultant two bonus points that came with it, for the final race weekend in Monza.[12] Gutiérrez dominated the whole season as he scored 10 times out of the 16 races, with 8 podium finishes and 5 wins. He only failed to finish once during the last sprint race at Monza.[13]

GP2 Series

2009

Gutiérrez was invited to the GP2 test in Jerez, Spain for the 2009 season on 6 October for ART Grand Prix, his first time in a GP2 car. During the morning session, he finished 11th fastest, and for the afternoon session, he finished 6th with a time just over half a second slower than the fastest time set by Jules Bianchi, who was also driving for ART. He was also recognised as the third fastest rookie of the day.[14] Gutiérrez again participated in another test session for GP2 at the end of year test in Paul Ricard, France for Telmex Arden International. On the first day on 10 November, he finished 10th in the morning session,[15] and 11th in the afternoon.[16] He was called back for the third day on 12 November, and finished 7th in the morning session,[17] and back to 11th in the afternoon.[18]

2010

At the end of 2010, after winning the Inaugural GP3 season with ART, the GP2 sister team signed him for a full drive for the 2011 season[19] so he participated at the end of year tests in Abu Dhabi throughout November. The first day of testing on 23 November was good for Gutiérrez, as he finished 6th in the morning session, and then followed that up by finishing 2nd in the afternoon session.[20] On the second day, he finished 5th in both morning and afternoon sessions.[21] After a 2 day break, the tests resumed on the 27th, with Gutiérrez finishing 5th in the morning session, but dropping down to 24th in the afternoon, giving him the 17th fastest lap of the day after driving the most laps of both sessions combined at 62.[22] On the 4th and final day of the test, he achieved the 5th fastest lap in the morning session, but again dropped to 24th position in the afternoon, giving him 16th overall.[23]

2011

After being signed for the team at the end of 2010, ART Grand Prix was renamed Lotus ART for the 2011. He was paired with Jules Bianchi for both the GP2 series and GP2 Asia series. He finished eleventh in the 2011 GP2 Asia series after taking a single 4th place finish at the Imola sprint race, after failing to score during the other 3 races in the series. In the main series, he scored his first points with a 7th place finish in the Valencia feature race after not scoring a single point during the rounds beforehand, and then he followed this up with his first GP2 series victory at the sprint race as well as setting his first fastest lap.[24]

He eventually finished 13th in the drivers' championship after only scoring twice more including a 2nd place finish in the sprint race at Hungary. He remained with Lotus ART for the 2012 season, with the team being renamed Lotus GP after the increased sponsorship from Lotus, and was partnered with James Calado.[25]

Gutiérrez participated in the 2011 GP2 Final in Abu Dhabi on 12 November, which was supposed to be the starting round of the 2012 GP2 Asia series, but as the series was combined with the GP2 main series for 2012, it was made as a non championship round. He finished first in the practice session for the race, after setting a time that was 0.5 seconds faster than the nearest competitor.[26] He had qualified in 8th position for the feature race, but he had to enter the pits in order to repair a damaged rear wing sustained when he was hit by Stefano Coletti at Turn 1 on the first lap and eventually finished one lap down from the race winner in 21st place.[27] The sprint race was a different story however, after starting from the 10th row of the grid in 21st, he made an exceptional race out of it and finished 5th, even though he was down in 9th on the last lap, taking 2 points and finishing 8th overall for the Final.[28]

2012

Gutiérrez follows teammate James Calado in 1st place out of the first corner at the 2012 Malaysian Sprint race.

Gutiérrez started the 2012 season with a double points finish at the first race in Malaysia including a second place in the sprint race.[29] He followed this up with a third and another second place finish at the first Bahrain round in the feature and sprint races respectively. However, after the Lotus GP drivers opted to sit out the practice session for the second round to conserve tires, Gutiérrez qualified poorly in 14th due to the difference in conditions, but eventually made up enough places to score a point with tenth, and then finished fourth in the sprint race.[30][31] At the race in Catalunya, he managed another double points-scoring result with tenth and seventh-place finishes, and also the fastest lap in the feature race.[32]

Gutiérrez's run of points-scoring finishes ended in Monaco where he was running in eighth position for most of the feature race before hitting the barriers several laps before the finish. He pitted for a new nosecone, but by then he was well out of contention for points and eventually pulled into his pit-box, but he was classified as a finisher since he had completed 90% of the race distance.[33] His sprint race was considerably better, as a first-lap crash between ten other drivers enabled him to jump from 23rd to 12th in a few corners, and after consistently setting quick laps throughout the rest of the race, he once again made it into the final points-scoring position of eighth.[34]

In Valencia, Gutiérrez qualified on the second row in third,[35] before he was penalised for impeding other drivers and dropped two places down into fifth.[36] During the race, Gutiérrez managed to make up a few places at the start and was running in third position for most of the race before the first safety car came out, leaving his team mate in first place the only one left to pit. A few laps later the race started again but there was another scrap which led to a second safety car period, where Calado finally pitted for fresh rubber bringing Gutiérrez up into second for the restart, where he dived down the inside of Fabio Leimer to take the lead and kept it until the checkered flag, giving him his first feature race win at the same track he won his first sprint race the year before.[37] During the sprint race, Gutiérrez ran into the back of a crashed Ericsson on the second corner, where he was then hit from behind by Coletti and Valsecchi taking him out of the race and giving him his first retirement of the season.[38]

Silverstone was to be another great round for Gutiérrez, where he managed to get himself up on to the second row of the grid after benefiting from near by drivers suffering from penalties, as well as his closest championship rivals receiving penalties too.[39][40] For the second feature race in a row, he was again in the right place at the right time after pitting first of all the drivers and moving up to second before a safety car was released while the race leader, Leimer, had yet to pit, leaving Gutiérrez to inherit the lead and hold it long enough to finish first, giving him his second feature race win in as many races.[41] He pushed hard in the sprint race to get back on the podium, where after climbing up to fourth from eighth, he out-braked himself trying to pass Felipe Nasr who was running third at time, and lost out to Johnny Cecotto Jr. and dropped to fifth position. However, he made a do-or-die overtake around the outside of Cecotto at Stowe corner, where his cold tires caused him to have tremendous oversteer and he careered off the circuit, and in his attempt to get back onto the track, he slid off the grass and clouted into the side of the Venezuelan who in turn smashed through a safety barrier and into a tire wall. Gutiérrez managed to limp to the line with a severely damaged car to take the checkered flag in fourth place.[42] A few hours after the race, Gutiérrez was found to have caused an avoidable collision and was given a 10-place grid penalty for the next race.[43]

In Hockenheim, Gutiérrez qualified down in 12th position, which was then 22nd with his penalty from Silverstone applied.[44] For the feature race, he managed to make up many places on a drying track and was locked in a last lap battle for ninth with Ericsson before Tom Dillmann overtook the both of them leaving Gutiérrez to reclaim tenth and the final points position.[45] For the sprint race he made a good start off the line and gradually took place by place but was unable to pass Fabio Leimer on the last few laps and had to settle for fifth. With only 7 points to his name, he failed to capitalise on championship rivals Luiz Razia and Velsecchi's short comings at the round.[46] A week later in Hungary, he managed to qualify up in seventh position,[47] and led the race with a 20 second lead at one point, but with a one stop strategy and failing to get up to speed after the pit-stop on his new super-soft tires, he finished down in eighth.[48] Starting from reverse pole for the sprint race, Gutiérrez easily cruised to another series win by 3.5 seconds over Nathanaël Berthon with Razia a further 12 seconds behind, giving him his 3rd win of the season and keeping him in third place in the championship for another round.[49]

Belgium ended up as his worst round of the season despite qualifying in third for the feature race. He had a good start and kept position but touched the grass while attempting to pass Rio Haryanto and slipped back into fourth. He did manage to pass his teammate down the hill from turn 1 but a first corner collision meant he passed under yellow flags which was under investigation for most of the race. A botched pit-stop where his rear right wheel stuck was only the beginning of his bad luck where a major crash caused a safety car period and then the race was red flagged a few laps later. Despite allowing Calado to re-take his position under the safety car earlier in the race, he was still deemed to have overtaken under yellow flags on the first corner and was given a drive through penalty, and despite racing back through the field, he finished 11th.[50] During the sprint race, crashes throughout the first lap meant that championship rivals Razia and Valsecchi were out of the points giving him a great opportunity to catch up. He did manage to get up to eighth on the first lap, but while running in fifth, he made an over ambitious overtake around Les Combes on Julián Leal caused them both to spin into the gravel trap effectively ruining his race and leaving him in 13th at the finish line.[51] The no points scoring round moved him down into fourth in the championship.

Monza didn't go well again for Gutiérrez, as he qualified down in ninth,[52] and then went on to finish exactly where he started, after being mugged of his reverse pole position in the dying moments by Colleti.[53] The sprint race went no better, as damage on the first lap caused his front wing to lose a lot of downforce before he finally went straight into the wall around the Parabolica corner, giving him only his second retirement of the season.[54] At the final round in Singapore, he was out of the running for the championship, but could still achieve third in the championship. He qualified in third on the grid[55] and jumped ahead of a slow moving Luca Filippi up into second, where he stayed for the rest of the race as he couldn't get by Max Chilton.[56] He took the fastest lap of the race giving him his third place in the championship back, but he was only 3 points ahead of Chilton. During the sprint race, both Chilton and Calado dropped out of contention for points giving him third place overall in for the season as he cruised home in sixth position.[57]

His third place in the championship marked him the first GP3 graduate to finish in the top 3 of the GP2 series, with 176 points, 3 wins, 4 other separate podiums and 5 fastest laps, equalling Valsecchi's total for the year for most fastest laps of the season.

Formula One

Gutiérrez first tested a BMW Sauber Formula One car in December 2009 as part of his prize for winning the Formula BMW Europe championship.[58] Despite the team losing its BMW backing for 2010, he joined it as an observer for some race weekends and has been placed on the same training programme as race drivers Pedro de la Rosa and Kamui Kobayashi.[59] Later in the season, he was officially named as the team's test and reserve driver on 10 September.[60][61] On 16 November 2010 he took part in the young drivers test in Abu Dhabi setting the 4th fastest time of the day, just over six tenths of a second off the qualifying time set by Kamui Kobayashi.[62]

He almost had his debut race for Sauber at the 2011 Canadian Grand Prix when race driver Sergio Pérez was still unwell from a crash at the previous race in Monaco.[63] As Gutiérrez was the test and reserve driver for the team, he would have been selected to race instead. However, due to the timing of the event and a driver being needed by the end of free practice two, and the fact that he was in Mexico at the time, Gutiérrez was unable to take over the car and instead the team opted to use former race driver and McLaren test driver at the time Pedro de la Rosa,[64] much to the despair of Gutiérrez who was said to be 'ready' to race.[65]

On 28 July 2011, it was announced that Gutiérrez would remain as Sauber's reserve driver into the 2012 season.[66] Gutiérrez again took part for the team at the young drivers test in Abu Dhabi on 19 November, this time setting 5th fastest lap on Thursday and 7th fastest overall, which was just over one second down on fellow Mexican Sergio Pérez's fastest time in qualifying.[67]

On 26 October 2012, Gutiérrez participated in the first free practice session at the Indian Grand Prix, substituting for an unwell Pérez. He ultimately recorded the 20th fastest time in the session, before Pérez was able to return to the car for the second session.[68]

Sauber (2013–2014)

Gutiérrez in the Sauber C32 during winter tests at Jerez, in 2013

On 23 November 2012, it was announced that Gutiérrez would remain with Sauber, but was to be promoted to the race team alongside Nico Hülkenberg, who would be joining the team from Force India.[3] His first outing for the team was the Australian Grand Prix, where he qualified in 18th position after crashing during the first qualifying session which was eventually red flagged due to heavy rain. After a solid drive he eventually finished the race thirteenth, the best position of all of the 2013 rookies.[69] In Malaysia, Gutiérrez made it through into Q2 and qualified 14th, and ran an uneventful race to finish in twelfth,[70] after he was forced to pit with five laps remaining.

In China, he only managed to qualify 18th despite his teammate getting through to Q3. His race was cut short on lap 4 when he missed his braking point on the back-straight and pummelled into the back of Adrian Sutil, which resulted in his first retirement of the season. In Bahrain, he once again qualified down in 18th, and started the race last on the grid after receiving a 5 place grid penalty after his crash in China. After spending the race battling with quickly degrading tyres, he finished where he started, albeit, a lap down from the leaders.

Gutiérrez during FP1 in Malaysia

Spain was a turning point in Gutiérrez's short Formula One career. After getting though to Q2 for only the second time, he qualified in 16th where all the cars from 2nd to him were between a second of each other. Before the race it was found he had impeded Kimi Räikkönen in qualifying and thus he dropped 3 places on the grid to 19th. He had a very good race compared to previous results; he led the race for a couple of laps after the first stint becoming the 12th different driver in 2013 to do so, and had a close battle midway through the race with Jenson Button, but eventually after a late pit-stop and a charge through the field, he failed to pass Daniel Ricciardo over the last couple of laps, finishing three tenths behind the last point scoring position. He also achieved his first fastest lap of the race,[71] putting him second in the record books for 'Youngest Driver to Set a Fastest Lap' after Nico Rosberg.

Gutierrez at the 2014 Singapore Grand Prix

Gutiérrez achieved his first points-scoring finish at the Japanese Grand Prix; having started fourteenth on the grid, Gutiérrez made his way up the order and eventually finished the race in seventh place, holding off Nico Rosberg in the closing stages.[72][73] On 21 December 2013, it was confirmed that Gutiérrez would continue with Sauber in 2014.

Having failed to score a single point during the 2014 season, on 15 December 2014, it was announced that Gutiérrez had signed for Ferrari as test and reserve driver for 2015.[4]

Ferrari (2015)

Following his dismissal from Sauber in favour of Marcus Ericsson and Felipe Nasr, it was announced that Gutiérrez would serve as reserve driver for Scuderia Ferrari, in place of the late Jules Bianchi.

Haas F1 (2016–)

In October 2015, at the Mexican Grand Prix, it was announced that Gutiérrez would return to racing in the sport alongside Romain Grosjean at Haas F1 Team.

Racing record

Career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2007 Formula BMW USA Team Autotecnica 14 4 9 2 8 436 2nd
Formula BMW World Final 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 25th
Formula BMW ADAC Esteban Gutiérrez 2 0 0 1 0 46 26th
2008 Formula BMW Europe Josef Kaufmann Racing 16 7 3 9 12 353 1st
Formula BMW World Final 1 0 1 0 1 N/A 3rd
German Formula Three 2 0 0 0 0 N/A NC
International Formula Master Trident Racing 2 0 0 0 1 8 19th
2009 Formula 3 Euro Series ART Grand Prix 20 0 0 0 2 26 9th
British Formula 3 4 0 0 1 1 N/A NC
Masters of Formula 3 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 17th
2010 GP3 Series ART Grand Prix 16 5 3 7 9 88 1st
Formula 3 Euro Series 2 0 0 0 0 N/A NC
British Formula 3 3 0 0 0 0 N/A NC
2011 GP2 Series Lotus ART 18 1 0 1 2 15 13th
GP2 Asia Series 4 0 0 0 0 3 11th
GP2 Final 2 0 0 0 0 2 8th
Formula One Sauber F1 Team Test driver
2012 GP2 Series Lotus GP 24 3 0 5 7 176 3rd
Formula One Sauber F1 Team Test driver
2013 Formula One Sauber F1 Team 19 0 0 1 0 6 16th
2014 Formula One Sauber F1 Team 19 0 0 0 0 0 20th
2015 Formula One Scuderia Ferrari Test driver
2016 Formula One Haas F1 Team 4 0 0 0 0 0* 22nd*

* Season still in progress.
† As Gutiérrez was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.

Complete Formula 3 Euro Series results

(key)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 DC Points
2009 ART Grand Prix Dallara F308/070 Mercedes HOC
1

16
HOC
2

Ret
LAU
1

24
LAU
2

11
NOR
1

4
NOR
2

12
ZAN
1

5
ZAN
2

7
OSC
1

9
OSC
2

9
NÜR
1

3
NÜR
2

6
BRH
1

7
BRH
2

5
CAT
1

Ret
CAT
2

9
DIJ
1

12
DIJ
2

3
HOC
1

11
HOC
2

6
9th 26
2010 ART Grand Prix Dallara F308/049 Mercedes LEC
1
LEC
2
HOC
1

6
HOC
2

Ret
VAL
1
VAL
2
NOR
1
NOR
2
NÜR
1
NÜR
2
ZAN
1
ZAN
2
BRH
1
BRH
2
OSC
1
OSC
2
HOC
1
HOC
2
NC N/A

As Gutiérrez was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points.

Complete GP3 Series results

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

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 DC Points
2010 ART Grand Prix ESP
FEA

3
ESP
SPR

3
TUR
FEA

1
TUR
SPR

7
VAL
FEA

1
VAL
SPR

7
GBR
FEA

1
GBR
SPR

3
GER
FEA

4
GER
SPR

1
HUN
FEA

2
HUN
SPR

5
BEL
FEA

16
BEL
SPR

7
ITA
FEA

1
ITA
SPR

Ret
1st 88

Complete GP2 Series results

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

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 DC Points
2011 Lotus ART TUR
FEA

Ret
TUR
SPR

11
ESP
FEA

Ret
ESP
SPR

12
MON
FEA

12
MON
SPR

DNS
VAL
FEA

7
VAL
SPR

1
GBR
FEA

10
GBR
SPR

8
GER
FEA

12
GER
SPR

Ret
HUN
FEA

Ret
HUN
SPR

2
BEL
FEA

14
BEL
SPR

7
ITA
FEA

9
ITA
SPR

6
13th 15
2012 Lotus GP MYS
FEA

7
MYS
SPR

2
BHR1
FEA

3
BHR1
SPR

2
BHR2
FEA

10
BHR2
SPR

4
ESP
FEA

10
ESP
SPR

7
MON
FEA

23
MON
SPR

8
VAL
FEA

1
VAL
SPR

Ret
GBR
FEA

1
GBR
SPR

4
GER
FEA

10
GER
SPR

5
HUN
FEA

8
HUN
SPR

1
BEL
FEA

11
BEL
SPR

13
ITA
FEA

9
ITA
SPR

Ret
SGP
FEA

2
SGP
SPR

6
3rd 176

Gutiérrez did not finish the race, but was classified as he had completed over 90% of the race distance.

Complete GP2 Asia Series results

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

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 DC Points
2011 Lotus ART ABU
FEA

Ret
ABU
SPR

12
ITA
FEA

12
ITA
SPR

4
11th 3

Complete Formula One results

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

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 WDC Points
2012 Sauber F1 Team Sauber C31 Ferrari 056 2.4 V8 AUS MAL CHN BHR ESP MON CAN EUR GBR GER HUN BEL ITA SIN JPN KOR IND
TD
ABU USA BRA    
2013 Sauber F1 Team Sauber C32 Ferrari 056 2.4 V8 AUS
13
MAL
12
CHN
Ret
BHR
18
ESP
11
MON
13
CAN
20†
GBR
14
GER
14
HUN
Ret
BEL
14
ITA
13
SIN
12
KOR
11
JPN
7
IND
15
ABU
13
USA
13
BRA
12
16th 6
2014 Sauber F1 Team Sauber C33 Ferrari 059/3 1.6 V6 t AUS
12
MAL
Ret
BHR
Ret
CHN
16
ESP
16
MON
Ret
CAN
14†
AUT
19
GBR
Ret
GER
14
HUN
Ret
BEL
15
ITA
20
SIN
Ret
JPN
13
RUS
15
USA
14
BRA
14
ABU
15
20th 0
2016 Haas F1 Team Haas VF-16 Ferrari 059/5 1.6 V6 t AUS
Ret
BHR
Ret
CHN
14
RUS
17
ESP MON CAN EUR AUT GBR HUN GER BEL ITA SIN MAL JPN USA MEX BRA ABU 22nd* 0*

Drivers did not finish the Grand Prix, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.
* – Season still in progress.

Records

References

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  5. "Gutierrez seals 2016 F1 return with Haas". formula1.com. 30 October 2015. Retrieved 31 October 2015.
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External links

Sporting positions
Preceded by
New championship
Formula BMW Europe
Champion

2008
Succeeded by
Felipe Nasr
Preceded by
New championship
GP3 Series
Champion

2010
Succeeded by
Valtteri Bottas
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
New award
Pirelli Trophy for Tyre Management
Champion

2012
Succeeded by
Sam Bird
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