Eric Hélary

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Eric Hélary
Nationality France French
24 Hours of Le Mans career
Participating years 1993 - 1998, 2002 - 2003, 2005 - 2006
Teams Peugeot Talbot Sport, Michel Hommell, Courage Compétition, Viper Team Oreca, BMW Motorsport, Toyota Motorsport, Pescarolo Sport
Best finish 1st (1993)
Class wins 2 (1993, 1995)

Eric Hélary is a racing driver from Paris. His career has encompassed single seater formulae, endurance sports car racing, and touring cars. He won the French Formula Three Championship in 1990 and is best known for his win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 1993.

Contents

[edit] Single seater career

Hélary's racing career began in a conventional way, with a period of karting between 1981 and 1984. He progressed to French Formula Ford in 1987 and won the title in the following year, then progressed to French Formula Three in 1989 and won that title in his second year. His single seater career ended in International Formula 3000.

[edit] Sports cars

Hélary's Peugeot 905B

Hélary first participated in sports car racing in the Peugeot Spyder Cup one-make championship in 1992 and secured the drivers' title in 1993. In the same year, he made his 24 Hours of Le Mans début in the factory Peugeot 905 alongside Christophe Bouchut and Geoff Brabham. He had previously driven this car with Bouchut in 1992.

After a period in touring cars, Hélary returned to endurance racing in the FIA GT Championship in 1996, driving a Chrysler Viper. He did not compete again in sports cars until a one-off return to FIA GTs in 2001. His next participation in endurance racing was another single race, this time in the FIA Sportscar Championship in 2003, driving a Pescarolo Courage-Peugeot alongside Nicolas Minassian. He made another one-off appearance with Pescarolo in the 2004 Le Mans Endurance Series and returned to the series for a full season in 2006. He is currently employed by Peugeot as its official test driver for the Peugeot 908 HDi FAP.

[edit] 24 Hours of Le Mans results

Year Class No Tyres Car Team Co-Drivers Laps Pos. Class
Pos.
1993 C1 3 M Peugeot 905 Evo 1B
Peugeot SA35 3.5L V10
France Peugeot Talbot Sport France Christophe Bouchut
Australia Geoff Brabham
375 1st 1st
1994 GT1 34 M Bugatti EB110 SS
Bugatti3.5L Turbo V12
France Michel Hommel France Alain Cudini
France Jean-Christophe Boullion
230 DNF DNF
1995 WSC 13 M Courage C34
Porsche Type-935 3.0L Turbo Flat-6
France Courage Compétition France Bob Wollek
United States Mario Andretti
297 2nd 1st
1996 GT1 50 M Chrysler Viper GTS-R
Chrysler 356-T6 8.0L V10
France Viper Team Oreca France Philippe Gache
France Olivier Beretta
283 21st 12th
1997 GT1 43 M McLaren F1 GTR
BMW S70 6.1L V12
Germany Team BMW Motorsport
Germany BMW Team Schnitzer
Netherlands Peter Kox
Italy Roberto Ravaglia
358 3rd 2nd
1998 GT1 28 M Toyota GT-One
Toyota R36V 3.6L Turbo V8
Japan Toyota Motorsports
Germany Toyota Team Europe
United Kingdom Martin Brundle
France Emmanuel Collard
191 DNF DNF
2002 LMP900 18 M Courage C60
Peugeot A32 3.2L Turbo V6
France Pescarolo Sport France Stéphane Ortelli
Japan Ukyo Katayama
144 DNF DNF
2003 LMP900 18 M Courage C60
Peugeot A32 3.2L Turbo V6
France Pescarolo Sport France Nicolas Minassian
France Soheil Ayari
352 9th 7th
2005 LMP1 17 M Pescarolo C60 Hybrid
Judd GV5 5.0L V10
France Pescarolo Sport France Soheil Ayari
France Sébastien Loeb
288 DNF DNF
2006 LMP1 17 M Pescarolo C60 Hybrid
Judd GV5 S2 5.0L V10
France Pescarolo Sport France Sébastien Loeb
France Franck Montagny
376 2nd 2nd

[edit] Touring cars

Hélary made his touring car début in the French Supertourisme championship in 1994, driving for Opel. He was classified fifth in the standings and imrpoved to the championship runner-up position in 1995. He made a departure into ice racing during the winter of 1996 by entering the Trophée Andros with Opel. He adapted well and finished in fourth position over all, then finished second over all in the 1997 season.

Hélary spent the remainder of 1997 working as a test driver for BMW's Super Tourenwagen Cup team in Germany and then returned to Opel for two years of racing in the series in 1998 and 1999. When the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters was relaunched in 2000, Hélary and Opel remained together. He made one more appearance in the DTM in 2002 before returning to French Supertourisme for a third season, in which he finished fourth in the standings. A full season of sports car racing intervened before Hélary's next, and so far last, touring car programme. 2005 brought a fourth season in French Supertourisme as well as competing in one round of the World Touring Car Championship in a Peugeot 407 for Peugeot Sport Denmark.

[edit] Complete WTCC results

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

Year Team Car 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Position Points
2005 Peugeot Sport Denmark Peugeot 407 MON Italy MGN France SLV United Kingdom IMO Italy PUE Mexico SPA Belgium OSC Germany IST Turkey VAL Spain MAC Macau NC 0
Ret DNS

[edit] References

Sporting positions
Preceded by
Jean-Marc Gounon
French Formula Three Champion
1990
Succeeded by
Christophe Bouchut
Preceded by
Derek Warwick
Yannick Dalmas
Mark Blundell
Winner of the 24 Hours of Le Mans
1993 with:
Geoff Brabham
Christophe Bouchut
Succeeded by
Yannick Dalmas
Hurley Haywood
Mauro Baldi


http://www.erichelary.com/site.html

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages