Tomas Scheckter (born September 21, 1980) is
a South African racing driver, born in Monte Carlo. He is
the son of 1979 Formula One World Champion Jody Scheckter
and the nephew of racer Ian Scheckter.
Scheckter
started racing karts in South Africa at the age of 11 and
it did not take long for the young driver to reach the podium.
He had his first taste of a major championship as a teenager
when he captured the South African Kart Championship in
1995. In 1996 he ventured on to the main circuit in the
South African Formula Vee series and soon after he was in
the South African Formula Ford Series where he posted two
wins.
He
had proven his speed in South African motorsports and was
then off to Europe the following year where he entered the
British Formula Vauxhall Junior series where he raced against
the likes of Antônio Pizzonia and Takuma Sato. Scheckter
earned third in the championship with one victory and one
pole. He was also named series Rookie of the Year.
In
1999 Scheckter won the Formula Opel Euroseries championship
with a record eight victories and eight poles, and in the
process broke all the winning records previously set by
Mika Häkkinen, Rubens Barrichello, and David Coulthard.
That success landed him a drive that same year in the last
two races of the Formula Nissan championship which Fernando
Alonso had dominated that whole season. Even though Scheckter
was with a new team for this brief stint in Formula Nissan,
he captured a win, two poles and a second place position.
Scheckter
moved on to the Formula 3 Series in 2000, and in his rookie
year, he was the runner-up in the British Formula Three
Championship with two victories and two pole positions,
while contending again with drivers such as Sato and Pizzonia.
He also had time to race in the prestigious Marlboro Masters
F3 race at Zandvoort where he took the third podium position.
To complete his year, he competed in the final four races
of the FIA Formula 3000 Championship, finishing second at
Hockenheim behind future IRL teammate Tomáš
Enge. He also raced in the Open Telefonica by Nissan, finishing
as championship runner-up.
Scheckter
was signed as a test/reserve driver by Jaguar for the 2001
Formula One season, but was soon fired after being charged
with soliciting a prostitute.
Tomas
was signed to drive for Eddie Cheever's Red Bull Cheever
Racing in the IndyCar Series for the 2002 season. He was
the Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the year after leading 85
laps of the race. However, Cheever soon grew tired of Scheckter's
frequent crashes, and looked to replace him with Buddy Rice.
At Michigan International Speedway, Cheever was forced to
race Scheckter due to contractual obligations, but gave
Rice the best equipment and crew. In a memorable race, Scheckter
beat Rice by inches for his first IRL win, while team owner
Cheever crashed out. However, he was soon gone from Team
Red Bull.
In
2003 he moved to Target Ganassi Racing with mixed results,
often being criticized for his inconsistency and frequency
of crashing, finishing well behind title winning teammate
Scott Dixon.
In
2004 he moved to Panther Racing to replace double champion
Sam Hornish, Jr.. In 2004 and 2005 Scheckter and Panther
were the dominant Chevrolet powered team, greatly outpacing
other teams powered by what many considered the weakest
engine in the series. Scheckter broke through a horrendous
string of bad luck, defeating Hornish to win the Bombardier
Learjet 500 at Texas Motor Speedway in June 2005 for his
second career victory.
In
mid-2005, Scheckter was announced as one of the drivers
for A1 Team South Africa in the inaugural A1 Grand Prix
series. He raced in the rounds at EuroSpeedway Lausitz and
Estoril.
In
2006, Scheckter drove for Tony George and Patrick Dempsey's
Vision Racing alongside teammate Ed Carpenter and finished
10th in points.
In
2007 Scheckter again raced for Vision Racing sponsored by
Joost. The South African was one of the few drivers that
year to challenge the Team Penske, Andretti Green Racing
and Target Chip Ganassi Racing drivers on a regular basis
during races, on occasion leading the race. He ultimately
finished 10th in points for the second season in a row with
a best finish of 5th.
For
the 2008 season, Scheckter was scheduled to race for Luczo
Dragon Racing in 3 races: Kansas, Indianapolis and Infineon.
Despite not finishing at Kansas or Indy, Scheckter's runs
gave the team additional race time at Texas, Detroit, and
Chicagoland. Scheckter failed to return any good results
in the additional races despite qualifying well. He did
not return to the team in 2009, as it became a full time
team with 2008 Indy Lights champion Raphael Matos. Scheckter
was reported to be joining Beck Motorsports, now renamed
Team 3G, starting at the 2009 Long Beach race, but the deal
never materialized. Scheckter personally secured sponsorship
from Mona Vie which he shopped to a number of teams, ultimately
signing with Dale Coyne Racing for a second week program.
He qualified 26th and finished 12th. Later in the 2009 season
he returned with the Mona Vie sponsorship with Dreyer &
Reinbold Racing sharing the #23 car with Milka Duno, who
brought her own sponsorship, as well as driving a third
car, the #43, in select races.
(c)
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2009