Tatiana Calderón

(Redirected from Tatiana Calderon)

Tatiana Calderón Noguera (born 10 March 1993) is a Colombian racing driver currently competing in the 2024 IMSA SportsCar Championship driving for Gradient Racing.[1] Calderón previously drove for the Drago Corse with ThreeBond squad in the Super Formula Championship and for Richard Mille Racing in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

Tatiana Calderón
Calderón in 2017
Nationality Colombian
Full nameTatiana Calderón Noguera
Born (1993-03-10) 10 March 1993 (age 31)
Bogotá, Colombia
IMSA SportsCar Championship career
Debut season2024
Current teamGradient Racing
Racing licence FIA Silver
Former teamsGEAR Racing powered by GRT Grasser
Starts6
Championships0
Wins0
Podiums0
Poles0
Fastest laps0
Best finish41st in 2020
Previous series
2023
2022
202021
2019
201618
2015–16
201315
2013
201113
201011
European Le Mans Series
IndyCar Series
Super Formula Championship
FIA Formula 2 Championship
GP3 Series
MRF Challenge
FIA European F3
British F3 Championship
European F3 Open
Pro Mazda Championship
IndyCar Series career
7 races run over 1 year
2022 position29th
Best finish29th (2022)
First race2022 Firestone Grand Prix of St. Petersburg (St. Petersburg)
Last race2022 Honda Indy 200 (Mid-Ohio)
Wins Podiums Poles
0 0 0

Born into a family of car dealers, Calderón began racing go-karts at the age of nine, and was the first woman to win national karting championships in either Colombia or the United States. She progressed to car racing at the age of 17 in the Star Mazda Championship, taking two podiums in the 2011 season, a race victory in the 2014 Florida Winter Series, and was runner-up in the 2015–16 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship. Calderón was the first woman to stand on the podium in the British Formula 3 International Series and the first to lead a lap in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship. From 2016 to 2018, she competed in the GP3 Series and later the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship. Calderón was employed by the Sauber Formula One team (later Alfa Romeo Racing) as a development and test driver from 2018 to 2021.

Early and personal life

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Calderón was born in Colombia's capital of Bogotá on 10 March 1993 to Alberto Calderón Palau and María Clara Noguera Calderón.[2][3] Alberto is the first cousin of Juan Manuel Santos, a former President of Colombia, and María is the daughter of Rodrigo Noguera Laborde, the co-founder of the Sergio Arboleda University.[4][5] Her parents operate a Kia Motors dealership in Bogotá.[6] Calderón has an older sister named Paula,[7] who co-manages the career of her younger sibling with former driver Fernando Plata,[6] and a younger brother, Felipe.[8] She was educated at Colegio Helvetia in Bogotá from 1997 to 2011, learning English and German, along with her native Spanish,[9] and accommodated her racing with her education, sometimes having to miss weeks of school.[5][10] Calderón played football, tennis, field hockey, golf, and tried horse riding before settling on motor racing at the age of nine.[8][11] Since 2012, she has lived in the Spanish capital of Madrid.[12]

Karting (2002–2008)

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Calderón was four years old when she had her first experience of driving in the streets of Bogotá sitting on her father's lap and holding the steering wheel of the family car.[13] She was introduced to racing by her sister,[14] and aged nine began driving go-karts visiting a rental race track north of Bogotá in the city's 170th street close to the family home with Paula and some of her friends.[3][4][10][14] The two siblings went to the track every night after school and during the weekends.[7] Around the age of ten Calderón began seriously considering a possible motor racing career.[8] She persuaded her father greatly to purchase a green go-kart[3][10] and a 50cc motorcycle for use on a personal basis on her family's farm and he educated her on racing's mechanical aspects.[9][15] Calderón's mother tried to sway her away from racing because she believed it was too dangerous,[9] though she later supported her daughter's career choice on the condition she maintained good grades in school.[16] Calderón was inspired by Juan Pablo Montoya's achievements and Ayrton Senna, a three-time Formula One World Champion.[6][8]

As she began winning races, Calderón was regularly rammed by her male rivals, forcing her to retaliate in response to demonstrate that she was undeterred by them.[17] In the 2005 season, she won the EasyKart National Championship,[18] making her the first woman to win a Colombian national karting title.[19] The following year, she was runner-up in the EasyKart National Championship, took third in the Stars of Karting Este Division and was the Rotax Junior Division champion of the Colombian Kart Championship.[18] Calderón drove her first racing car at age 14, sharing a Kia Picanto with her sister Paula.[6] Around this time, the owners of her local go-kart track later allowed her to drive a professional four-stroke go-kart after she began winning races.[6] In 2008, she became the first woman to win the Snap-On-Stars of Karting Divisional Championship-JICA Eastern Championship and the IAME International Challenge series.[20] The former achievement made Calderón the first woman champion of a national American karting series.[19]

Junior racing career

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Junior open-wheel racing (2009–2014)

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After winning the Snap-On-Stars of Karting Divisional Championship-JICA Eastern Championship, she told her parents of her decision to focus on racing and not enroll at university.[8] Calderón had more success in 2009 when she made her sports car debut, coming second in the Radical European Master Series – SR5 with one victory and ten podium finishes, accruing 240 points for the PoleVision team.[21] She finished second in that year's Colombian Rotax Senior Max Challenge.[18][20] Aged 17, Calderón moved into open-wheel racing, driving in the Star Mazda Championship (part of the Road to Indy programme) in 2010 for Juncos Racing in its No. 25 car.[22][23] She had five top-ten finishes, with a best of seventh in the first Autobahn Country Club race. In 13 races, Calderón finished with 320 points for a final championship position of 10th.[24] She also won the Colombian Rotax Championship that year.[18]

Calderón joined the Derek Daly Academy driver development programme in early 2011 after reading a book authored by Daly.[25] While Daly advised Calderón and helped her to transition to driving more powerful cars,[23] she stayed with Juncos Racing for the 2011 Star Mazda Championship and changed her car number to 10.[26][27] Calderón took two third-place finishes at Barber Motorsports Park and Canadian Tire Motorsport Park.[28][29] These results made her the first woman to mount the podium in Star Mazda Championship history.[30] Her final championship position was sixth with 322 points scored.[29] Calderón entered the final three rounds of the 2011 European F3 Open Championship for Team West-Tec in October, scoring three points by finishing eighth in the second Circuit de Catalunya race, placing 21st in the drivers' standings.[31]

She entered into discussions to compete in Indy Lights for the 2012 season but she declined due to her and her father's dislike of oval tracks.[32][33] Around this time, Calderón began working with racer Andy Soucek to better her driving ability.[32] That year, she raced the entire 2012 European F3 Open Championship with EmiliodeVillota Motorsport with team owner Emilio de Villota as her race engineer.[34] Calderón finished the season with eight top-ten finishes for ninth in the championship and 56 points scored.[21] In October, she drove the final two weekends of the 2012 Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series for AV Formula,[35] scoring no points to place 33rd in the standings.[21] Two months later, Calderón flew to Colombia to enter the 6 Hours of Bogotá in a No. 91 Radical car that she shared with Juan Camilo Acosta, Juan Esteban García and Luis Carlos Martínez, finishing third overall and second in class.[36]

For the 2013 season, she joined Double R Racing for both the FIA Formula 3 European Championship and the British Formula 3 International Series.[33] Before that, Calderón entered the five-round, fifteen-race New Zealand-based Toyota Racing Series with ETEC Motorsport as the series' sole woman driver.[37] That year, she became the first woman to stand on the overall podium in British Formula 3 history with a third-place finish at the Nürburgring round. She scored no points in the European series, in part because of tyre issues, and Double R Racing's inexperience competing in the championship.[33] In July, Calderón finished 20th in the Masters of Formula 3 at Circuit Zandvoort.[38] In late October, she tested an Auto GP car in a two-day test session at the Circuito de Jerez.[39] She made a guest appearance for EmiliodeVillota Motorsport in the season-ending European F3 Open Championship round at the Circuit de Catalunya but was ineligible to score points.[40]

 
Competing for Jo Zeller Racing at the Hockenheimring in 2014

During the 2014 Florida Winter Series Calderón won her first open-wheel race at Sebring International Raceway.[41] She finished fifth in the championship standings with two more top five finishes.[21] Not long after, Calderón returned to Europe and entered the EuroFormula Open Winter series round at Circuit Paul Ricard, finishing fourth for EmiliodeVillota Motorsport.[42] She had originally signed for Signature Team days before the 2014 FIA Formula 3 European Championship began; a lack of testing time and the misgivings of her being noncompetitive due to the car's under-powered engine led her to join Jo Zeller Racing.[a][33][44] During the season, in which she was advised by Anthony Hamilton, the father of driver Lewis Hamilton,[5] regular points-scoring finishes put her 15th in the drivers' standings.[33] In November, Calderón became the first woman to contest the Macau Grand Prix since Cathy Muller in 1983,[45] finishing 13th.[46]

Further junior racing ventures and the GP3 Series (2015–2018)

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Calderón as a Carlin driver in 2015

In late 2014, driver Susie Wolff began to mentor and advise Calderón.[33] She moved to Carlin for the 2015 FIA Formula 3 European Championship after testing with the team in December 2014.[47] Calderón briefly led the rain-affected third race at Spa-Francorchamps, becoming the first woman to lead a series race.[48] She scored no points to go unranked in the 33-race season.[49] During the 2015–2016 season, Calderón drove in the MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship for MRF Racing,[50] where she developed a reputation for risky overtaking because the cars' low downforce allowed them to run close together.[51] She consistently finished in the top five, winning at the Dubai Autodrome and was runner-up to Pietro Fittipaldi in the points standings.[50]

Due to a regulation introduced by motorsport's governing body, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, in late 2015 limiting drivers to three full seasons in European F3,[52] Calderón was ineligible to enter the series for a fourth consecutive season. She instead contested the 2016 GP3 Series for Arden International and was the team's first woman driver in history.[53][54] She had tested a World Series Formula V8 3.5 car with Pons Racing at Ciudad del Motor de Aragón in November 2015 before choosing GP3 two months later because it was faster.[53] Calderón scored two points from tenth-place finishes at the Hockenheimring and the Autodromo Nazionale Monza for 21st in the drivers' championship.[55] She was slow in qualifying, giving her an average starting position of 17th.[56] Calderón was third at the Red Bull Ring and took 66 points for Teo Martín Motorsport and then RP Motorsport in six rounds of the Euroformula Open Championship.[21] She was also a panellist on the Canal F1 Latin America show Directo Fórmula.[57]

At the end of 2016, Calderón was introduced to the Sauber Formula One team principal Monisha Kaltenborn and began working for Sauber as a development driver.[6] In addition to continuing her GP3 schedule, she conducted tests in Sauber's simulator and joined the team at race weekends.[58] Calderón switched teams from Arden to DAMS for the 2017 season.[59] She had a best result of seventh at the Monza feature race and was eighth at the Circuito de Jerez to finish 18th in the drivers' championship with seven points.[55] Calderón drove in the series-ending round of the World Series Formula V8 3.5 at Bahrain International Circuit in place of Damiano Fioravanti at RP Motorsport.[60] She finished third in the second race, taking the first podium finish for a woman in the series.[61]

 
Driving for Jenzer Motorsport at the Red Bull Ring in 2018.

She moved to Jenzer Motorsport for the 2018 GP3 Series after DAMS left the championship.[62] A month later, Sauber made Calderón its test driver, spending time in the team's simulator and engineers coached her at its headquarters and race circuits.[b][64] In GP3, her performance improved from 2017, scoring 11 points over seven races for a championship placing of 16th.[55] After Calderón expressed her hope of testing for Sauber before the year was over,[65] she drove the team's C37 in a promotional day at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez on 30 October, becoming the first Latin American woman to drive a Formula One car.[66] Calderón drove a 2013 C32 car in a two-day test session at the Fiorano Circuit a month later.[67] On 16 December, she tested the Techeetah DS E-TENSE FE19 electric car at the inaugural Formula E in-season test in Ad Diriyah,[68] and drove it again in the series' rookie test at Marrakesh's Circuit International Automobile Moulay El Hassan on 13 January 2019.[69]

FIA Formula 2 and progression into top-level racing (2019–present)

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Calderon at the 2019 Spielberg Formula 2 round with BWT Arden

Calderón returned to Arden for the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship and became the first woman to drive in the series.[70] The renamed Alfa Romeo Racing team retained her as its test driver for the year.[71] She stated that her two Formula One test sessions assisted her acclimatisation to Formula 2.[72] At the Baku feature race, Calderón became the first woman in history to lead a lap in Formula 2.[73] Poor qualifying results from a lack of tyre preparation led her to employ different strategies to gain position in a feature race. She had two race engineers during the season.[74] Calderón had a best finish of 11th at Circuit Paul Ricard and was 22nd in the drivers' standings with no points scored.[55] Late in the year, she obtained sponsorship that allowed her to enter the season-ending Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez double header round of the Porsche Supercup in Team Project 1's No. 24 911 GT3 Cup car, retiring from the first race and finishing 25th and last in the second.[75][76]

Following the purchase of Arden's Formula 2 entry for the 2020 season by HWA Racelab and the signing of drivers Giuliano Alesi and Artem Markelov, Calderón left the team and sought a career in either American or endurance racing.[77] As a result, she left Formula 2 to join the Super Formula Championship with Drago Corse with ThreeBond for the 2020 season. Team owner Ryo Michigami negotiated with her late in December 2019 and concluded with an agreement not long after. Michigami selected Calderón over Nobuharu Matsushita for the seat and she spoke to him regularly about the SF19 car.[78] In addition to her Super Formula seat she remained at Alfa Romeo's Formula One team as a test driver. Calderón worked with the reserve driver Robert Kubica to develop its C39 car, and was appointed an ambassador for the team.[79] She also entered three rounds of the 2019–20 F3 Asian Championship with Seven GP, taking six top-ten finishes for 31 points and 13th in the drivers' standings.[21]

Calderón tested Sébastien Bourdais' No. 14 A. J. Foyt Enterprises-prepared Dallara-Chevrolet car for 87 laps during a single day at Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in July 2021 through a sponsorship agreement.[80][81] She prepared for two weeks learning the circuit and the car and received coaching and mentoring.[81]

 
Calderón during the 2022 Acura Grand Prix of Long Beach

Calderón impressed A. J. Foyt Enterprises with her performance,[82] and the team considered her a potential driver for the 2022 IndyCar Series.[83] She left Alfa Romeo in 2021,[84] and signed to drive the No. 11 A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara-Chevrolet vehicle,[85] originally for each of the 12 street and road course rounds of the 2022 IndyCar Series;[86] she was replaced by J. R. Hildebrand for the oval track races.[84] Calderón struggled to acclimatise to the circuits she raced at owing to restrictions on testing that limited her to a single pre-season test session, her lack of IndyCar track knowledge as well as adapting to new tyres and a car requiring physical effort.[87][88] After competing in seven races, she was sidelined due to repeated missed payments by her team's primary sponsor.[89] She ended the season 29th in the drivers' standings with 58 points scored.[90] In August, Calderón joined Charouz Racing System, replacing Cem Bölükbaşı for the concluding four rounds of the 2022 Formula 2 Championship with financing from pop singer Karol G.[86][91] She injured her right hand in an accident with Olli Caldwell in the Monza sprint race and she spent the following two months recuperating with the help of therapy to regain her strength in her arm and injured hand.[92] Calderón finished the year 28th in the Drivers' Championship and achieved no points-scoring finishes.[55]

She left Charouz Racing System at the conclusion of the season due to her not having enough sponsorship funding in order for her to continue to race in Formula One's support categories or IndyCar.[93]

SportsCar racing

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Calderón entered the 2020 24 Hours of Daytona (part of the IMSA SportsCar Championship) alongside Rahel Frey, Katherine Legge and Christina Nielsen in the No. 19 GEAR Racing Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo.[c][95][94] Calderón prepared for the race by increasing her fitness regime and sleeping less in case she was told to drive early in the morning.[96] Multiple car issues relegated the team to a 16th-place finish in class.[97] She shared a Le Mans Prototype 2 (LMP2) Oreca 07-Gibson car in the European Le Mans Series (ELMS) with Sophia Flörsch on the all-female Signatech-run Richard Mille Racing team in 2020.[98] Calderón finished the ELMS season with three top-tens for 11th in the Drivers' Championship with 1912 points and was 23rd in the Super Formula Championship with zero points.[55] In September, she made her 24 Hours of Le Mans debut alongside Flörsch and Beitske Visser, finishing ninth in LMP2 and 13th overall.[99]

In 2021, Calderón raced in the FIA World Endurance Championship (WEC) in the No. 1 Richard Mille Racing-run Oreca 07-Gibson LMP2 car with Flörsch and Visser and continued to drive for the single car Drago Corse team in the Super Formula Championship.[100] She was also retained as Alfa Romeo's test and development driver. Calderón's WEC season saw her finish 17th in the LMP2 Drivers' Championship with 23 points with four top-ten finishes in the five races that she entered. She concluded the Super Formula season without scoring any points in the four races she drove for 24th in the championship standings.[55]

Calderón signed to drive for the Team Virage squad in the LMP2 Pro-Am class of the ELMS in the 2023 ELMS season alongside Rob Hodes and Ian Rodríguez in its Oreca 07 entry.[101] She ended the season 16th in the LMP2 Pro/Am Drivers' Championship with five top-tens and one pole position.[55] Calderón has signed to partner Legge and Sheena Monk as a driver of Gradient Racing's No. 66 Acura NSX GT3 Evo22 for the five-round North American Endurance Cup in the GTD category of the 2024 IMSA SportsCar Championship, joined by Stevan McAleer for the 2024 24 Hours of Daytona.[1]

Driving style

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Calderón describes herself as a smooth driver; she feels she reacts better to more powerful cars and in wet weather.[6] Since women on average have less muscle mass than men, she trains intensely to be able to handle a high-performance racing vehicle, and she said that she increased the thickness of her neck by 9 cm (3.5 in) while training to deal with the high amount of g-force that she feels in a Formula One car.[68][102] Calderón's short stature of 5 ft 4 in (1.63 m) means she finds it difficult to locate the correct angle and get the most power for her arms. She could not have a rest inserted at the back of her helmet due to restrictions in the GP3 Series regulations. Additionally, Calderón spent half of the 2016 season locating her preferred seating position, during which she made contact with her legs in the act of steering and decided to adjust the position of her car pedals to increase her comfort.[63]

Racing record

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Career summary

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Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2009 Radical European Master Series - SR5 Hope Pole Vision Racing 10 1 0 0 10 240 2nd
2010 Star Mazda Championship Juncos Racing 13 0 0 0 0 320 10th
2011 Star Mazda Championship Juncos Racing 11 0 0 0 2 322 6th
European F3 Open Team West-Tec 6 0 0 0 0 2 21st
2012 European F3 Open EmiliodeVillota Motorsport 16 0 0 0 0 56 9th
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps AV Formula 4 0 0 0 0 0 33rd
2013 FIA Formula 3 European Championship Double R Racing 30 0 0 0 0 0 32nd
British Formula 3 International Series 12 0 0 0 1 79 7th
Masters of Formula 3 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 20th
Toyota Racing Series ETEC Motorsport 15 0 0 0 0 432 12th
2014 FIA Formula 3 European Championship Jo Zeller Racing 33 0 0 0 0 29 15th
Macau Grand Prix Mücke Motorsport 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 13th
Florida Winter Series Ferrari Driver Academy 12 1 0 1 1 N/A 5th
2015 FIA Formula 3 European Championship Carlin 33 0 0 0 0 0 27th
2015–16 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 Championship MRF Racing 14 1 0 1 7 199 2nd
2016 GP3 Series Arden International 18 0 0 0 0 2 21st
Euroformula Open Championship Teo Martín Motorsport 10 0 0 0 1 66 9th
Spanish Formula 3 Championship 6 0 0 0 0 32 6th
2017 GP3 Series DAMS 15 0 0 0 0 7 18th
World Series Formula V8 3.5 RP Motorsport 2 0 0 0 1 25 14th
2018 GP3 Series Jenzer Motorsport 18 0 0 0 0 11 16th
Formula One Alfa Romeo Sauber F1 Team Test/Development driver
2018–19 Formula E DS Techeetah Test driver
2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship BWT Arden 22 0 0 0 0 0 22nd
Porsche Supercup Team Project 1 - FACH 2 0 0 0 0 0 NC
Formula One Alfa Romeo Racing Test driver
2019–20 F3 Asian Championship Seven GP 9 0 0 0 0 31 13th
2020 Super Formula Drago Corse with ThreeBond 5 0 0 0 0 0 23rd
European Le Mans Series - LMP2 Richard Mille Racing Team 4 0 0 0 0 19.5 11th
24 Hours of Le Mans - LMP2 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 9th
IMSA SportsCar Championship - GTD GEAR Racing powered by GRT Grasser 1 0 0 0 0 15 57th
Formula One Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen Test driver
2021 Super Formula Drago Corse with ThreeBond 4 0 0 0 0 0 24th
FIA World Endurance Championship - LMP2 Richard Mille Racing Team 5 0 0 0 0 23 17th
24 Hours of Le Mans - LMP2 1 0 0 0 0 N/A DNF
Formula One Alfa Romeo Racing Orlen Test driver
2022 IndyCar Series A. J. Foyt Racing 7 0 0 0 0 58 29th
FIA Formula 2 Championship Charouz Racing System 7 0 0 0 0 0 28th
2023 European Le Mans Series - LMP2 Pro-Am Team Virage 6 0 1 0 0 24 16th
2024 IMSA SportsCar Championship - GTD Gradient Racing 5 0 0 0 0 883 41st
Source:[21]

As Calderón was a guest driver, she was ineligible for points. * Season still in progress.

American open–wheel racing results

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Complete Star Mazda Championship results

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Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Rank Points Ref
2010 Juncos Racing SEB
20
STP
19
LAG
9
IRP
11
IOW
12
NJ1
11
NJ2
9
ACC
7
ACC
11
TRO
9
ROA
8
MOS
16
ATL
11
10th 320 [24]
2011 Juncos Racing STP
18
BAR
3
IRP
9
MIL
9
IOW
5
MOS
3
TRO
12
TRO
8
SON
5
BAL
8
LAG
7
6th 322 [29]

IndyCar Series

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

Year Team Chassis No. Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Rank Points Ref
2022 A. J. Foyt Enterprises Dallara DW12 11 Chevrolet STP
24
TXS LBH
16
ALA
26
IMS
15
INDY DET
23
ROA
25
MDO
25
TOR
IOW
IOW
IMS
NSH
GTW
POR
LAG
29th 58 [103]
Sources:[55][90]

Complete Formula Renault 2.0 Alps Series results

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

Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Pos Points
2012 AV Formula MNZ
1

MNZ
2

PAU
1

PAU
2

IMO
1

IMO
2

SPA
1

SPA
2

RBR
1

RBR
2

MUG
1

16
MUG
2

20
CAT
1

20
CAT
2

14
33rd 0

Complete FIA Formula 3 European Championship results

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(key)

Year Entrant Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 DC Points Ref
2013 Double R Racing Mercedes MNZ
1

19
MNZ
2

23
MNZ
3

21
SIL
1

22
SIL
2

19
SIL
3

15
HOC
1

26
HOC
2

26
HOC
3

23
BRH
1

22
BRH
2

25
BRH
3

20
RBR
1

21
RBR
2

20
RBR
3

17
NOR
1

Ret
NOR
2

26
NOR
3

Ret
NÜR
1

22
NÜR
2

20
NÜR
3

19
ZAN
1

21
ZAN
2

22
ZAN
3

24
VAL
1

20
VAL
2

20
VAL
3

20
HOC
1

21
HOC
2

22
HOC
3

Ret
32nd 0 [104]
2014 Jo Zeller Racing Mercedes SIL
1

23
SIL
2

18
SIL
3

19
HOC
1

18
HOC
2

22
HOC
3

18
PAU
1

18
PAU
2

Ret
PAU
3

15
HUN
1

20
HUN
2

15
HUN
3

16
SPA
1

15
SPA
2

5
SPA
3

17
NOR
1

Ret
NOR
2

Ret
NOR
3

10
MSC
1

14
MSC
2

11
MSC
3

8
RBR
1

15
RBR
2

13
RBR
3

9
NÜR
1

Ret
NÜR
2

9
NÜR
3

8
IMO
1

9
IMO
2

14
IMO
3

Ret
HOC
1

12
HOC
2

8
HOC
3

Ret
15th 29 [55]
2015 Carlin Volkswagen SIL
1

20
SIL
2

Ret
SIL
3

22
HOC
1

Ret
HOC
2

21
HOC
3

25
PAU
1

17
PAU
2

19
PAU
3

Ret
MNZ
1

17
MNZ
2

22
MNZ
3

13
SPA
1

25
SPA
2

25
SPA
3

18
NOR
1

14
NOR
2

12
NOR
3

14
ZAN
1

19
ZAN
2

11
ZAN
3

14
RBR
1

13
RBR
2

21
RBR
3

16
ALG
1

29
ALG
2

Ret
ALG
3

15
NÜR
1

20
NÜR
2

15
NÜR
3

Ret
HOC
1

18
HOC
2

21
HOC
3

24
27th 0 [49]

Complete Macau Grand Prix results

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Year Team Car Qualifying Quali Race Main race Refs
2014   Mücke Motorsport Dallara F312 21st 16th 13th [46][55]

Complete GP3 Series results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (Small number denotes finishing position)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Pos Points
2016 Arden International CAT
FEA

14
CAT
SPR

18
RBR
FEA

20
RBR
SPR

Ret
SIL
FEA

17
SIL
SPR

20
HUN
FEA

21
HUN
SPR

21
HOC
FEA

10
HOC
SPR

9
SPA
FEA

14
SPA
SPR

Ret
MNZ
FEA

10
MNZ
SPR

16
SEP
FEA

Ret
SEP
SPR

15
YMC
FEA

Ret
YMC
SPR

Ret
21st 2
2017 DAMS CAT
FEA

14
CAT
SPR

Ret
RBR
FEA

13
RBR
SPR

12
SIL
FEA

14
SIL
SPR

15
HUN
FEA

Ret
HUN
SPR

13
SPA
FEA

16
SPA
SPR

13
MNZ
FEA

7
MNZ
SPR

C
JER
FEA

13
JER
SPR

8
YMC
FEA

16
YMC
SPR

15
18th 7
2018 Jenzer Motorsport CAT
FEA

Ret
CAT
SPR

Ret
LEC
FEA

17
LEC
SPR

16
RBR
FEA

12
RBR
SPR

12
SIL
FEA

Ret
SIL
SPR

10
HUN
FEA

11
HUN
SPR

8
SPA
FEA

10
SPA
SPR

9
MNZ
FEA

15
MNZ
SPR

6
SOC
FEA

10
SOC
SPR

7
YMC
FEA

10
YMC
SPR

8
16th 11
Source:[55]

Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results

edit

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers) (Small number denotes finishing position)

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 25 26 27 28 DC Points
2019 BWT Arden BHR
FEA

13
BHR
SPR

15
BAK
FEA

Ret
BAK
SPR

Ret
CAT
FEA

13
CAT
SPR

13
MON
FEA

14
MON
SPR

Ret
LEC
FEA

11
LEC
SPR

19†
RBR
FEA

17
RBR
SPR

13
SIL
FEA

14
SIL
SPR

16
HUN
FEA

16
HUN
SPR

Ret
SPA
FEA

C
SPA
SPR

C
MNZ
FEA

Ret
MNZ
SPR

14
SOC
FEA

15
SOC
SPR

16
YMC
FEA

16
YMC
SPR

14
22nd 0
2022 Charouz Racing System BHR
SPR
BHR
FEA
JED
SPR
JED
FEA
IMO
SPR
IMO
FEA
CAT
SPR
CAT
FEA
MCO
SPR
MCO
FEA
BAK
SPR
BAK
FEA
SIL
SPR
SIL
FEA
RBR
SPR
RBR
FEA
LEC
SPR
LEC
FEA
HUN
SPR
HUN
FEA
SPA
SPR

19
SPA
FEA

18
ZAN
SPR

Ret
ZAN
FEA

Ret
MNZ
SPR

Ret
MNZ
FEA

DNS
YMC
SPR

20
YMC
FEA

18
28th 0
Source:[55]

Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as she completed over 90% of the race distance.

Complete Porsche Supercup results

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(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap) (Small number denotes finishing position)

Year Team 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pos. Points Ref
2019 Project 1/FACH CAT MON RBR SIL HOC HUN SPA MNZ MEX
Ret
MEX
25
NC† 0† [55]

As Calderón was a guest driver, she was ineligible for points.

Complete IMSA SportsCar Championship results

edit

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap; small number denotes finishing position)

Year Entrant Class Make Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Rank Points Ref
2020 GEAR Racing powered by GRT Grasser GTD Lamborghini Huracán GT3 Evo Lamborghini 5.2 L V10 DAY
16
DAY SEB ELK VIR ATL MDO CLT PET LGA SEB 57th 15 [105]
2024 Gradient Racing GTD Acura NSX GT3 Evo22 Acura 3.5 L Turbo V6 DAY
19
SEB
17
LBH LGA WGL
13
MOS ELK VIR IMS
16
PET
12
41st 883

Complete European Le Mans Series results

edit

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

Year Entrant Class Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rank Points
2020 Richard Mille Racing Team LMP2 Oreca 07 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 LEC
5
SPA
6
LEC MNZ
10
ALG
11
11th 19.5
2023 Team Virage LMP2 Pro-Am Oreca 07 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 CAT
9
LEC
NC
ARA
6
SPA
5
ALG
9
ALG
10
16th 24
Sources:[55][106]

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

edit
Year Team Co-Drivers Car Class Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
2020   Richard Mille Racing Team   Sophia Flörsch
  Beitske Visser
Oreca 07-Gibson LMP2 364 13th 9th
2021   Richard Mille Racing Team   Sophia Flörsch
  Beitske Visser
Oreca 07-Gibson LMP2 74 DNF DNF
Source:[106]

Complete Super Formula results

edit

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

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 DC Points
2020 Drago Corse with ThreeBond MOT
12
OKA SUG AUT
16
SUZ
13
SUZ
12
FUJ
17
23rd 0
2021 Drago Corse with ThreeBond FUJ
13
SUZ
17
AUT SUG MOT MOT
Ret
SUZ
19
24th 0
Source:[55]

Complete FIA World Endurance Championship results

edit

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

Year Entrant Class Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rank Points
2021 Richard Mille Racing Team LMP2 Oreca 07 Gibson GK428 4.2 L V8 SPA
8
ALG
6
MNZ
8
LMS
Ret
BHR BHR
9
17th 23
Sources:[55][106]

Notes and references

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ Calderón raced a Jo Zeller Racing car prepared by Mücke Motorsport at the season-opening round at the Silverstone Circuit in place of Sandro Zeller.[43]
  2. ^ Simona de Silvestro was employed by Sauber as an affiliate driver during 2014.[63]
  3. ^ Ana Beatriz was due to partner Calderón at Daytona before she withdrew due to pregnancy.[94]

References

edit
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