Press handouts from Formula 1 teams tell
you little you really want to know about a driver. You know
the sort of thing: residence, hobbies, favourite music,
favourite singers, favourite food, etc. How about Monte
Carlo, shopping, jazz and rock, Eric Clapton and Globe fish!
Well, it's a hell of a lot more interesting than Taki's
racing exploits, which date back to 1985 and the Fuji Freshman
championship. He came to England to compete in FF1600 in
1987 before returning home to tackle Japanese F3 through
until 1993, the sum total of his achievements being a few
fourth places. A move into Japanese F3000 with a top team,
Super Nova, still brought little by way of results, but
that didn't prevent him gaining a superlicence to race for
Simtek in the Japanese GP. Result - spun into pit wall along
the straight.
Far
from that being the end of Inoue's Grand Prix curriculum
vitae, he found the necessary to buy a seat at Footwork
for the whole 1995 season; Jack Oliver must have needed
the dosh. 'His learning curve has been steep, but his performance
very flat,' Oliver is quoted as saying in Autocourse. Indeed
it was two bizarre incidents that he was involved in (happily
without serious injury) which left the most impression,
the first when his Footwork was overturned by the course
car in Monaco while being towed back to the pits, the second
in Hungary when he was knocked flying by a rescue vehicle
sent to attend after his car had broken down. Back to the
press handout. Learned profession: racing driver.
(c)
'Who is Who' by Steve Small, 2000