Jules Bianchi

Race Car Driver

Jules Bianchi was born in Nice, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France on August 3rd, 1989 and is the Race Car Driver. At the age of 25, Jules Bianchi biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.

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Date of Birth
August 3, 1989
Nationality
France
Place of Birth
Nice, Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, France
Death Date
Jul 17, 2015 (age 25)
Zodiac Sign
Leo
Networth
$10 Million
Profession
Racing Automobile Driver
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Jules Bianchi Height, Weight, Eye Color and Hair Color

At 25 years old, Jules Bianchi physical status not available right now. We will update Jules Bianchi's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.

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Jules Bianchi Religion, Education, and Hobbies
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Jules Bianchi Spouse(s), Children, Affair, Parents, and Family
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Jules Bianchi Career

Bianchi's exposure to motorsport started at around 3 years of age through karting and was facilitated by the fact that his father owned a kart track. Since age 17, Bianchi was professionally managed by Nicolas Todt.

In 2007, Bianchi left karting and raced in French Formula Renault 2.0 for SG Formula, where he finished as champion with five wins. He also competed in the Formula Renault Eurocup where he had one pole position and one fastest lap in three races.

In late 2007, Bianchi signed with ART Grand Prix to compete in the Formula 3 Euro Series.

In 2008 Bianchi won the Masters of Formula 3 at Zolder, and also finished third in the 2008 Formula 3 Euro Series season.

Bianchi continued in the F3 Euroseries in 2009, leading ART's line-up along with rookie team-mates Valtteri Bottas, Esteban Gutiérrez and Adrien Tambay. With eight wins, Bianchi sealed the title with a round to spare, at Dijon-Prenois. He then added a ninth win at the final round at Hockenheim. He also drove in the Formula Renault 3.5 Series at Monaco, after SG Formula acquired the cars formerly run by Kurt Mollekens.

Bianchi drove for ART in the subsequent GP2 Asia season and the 2010 GP2 season. He competed in three of the four rounds of the GP2 Asia championship. In the main series, Bianchi took two pole positions and a number of points positions before he was injured in a first-lap crash at the Hungaroring. In the feature race, he spun into the path of the field exiting the first corner, and was struck head-on by Ho-Pin Tung, sustaining a fractured second lumbar vertebra in the process. Bianchi was fourth in the drivers' championship at the time of his injury. Despite initial pessimistic assessments of the severity of his injury, he recovered to take part in the next round of the championship.

Bianchi remained with ART for 2011, and was partnered by 2010 GP3 Series champion Esteban Gutiérrez. He starred in the first two rounds of the 2011 GP2 Asia Series, holding off Romain Grosjean for victory in the feature race and gaining fourth in the sprint race, but he was later penalised. He finished runner-up to Grosjean in the drivers' championship. In the main series, Bianchi finished third in the championship, behind Grosjean and Luca Filippi.

Bianchi opted to switch to the Formula Renault 3.5 Series for 2012, following his one-off appearance in the category in 2009. He signed for the Tech 1 Racing team, and was partnered with Kevin Korjus, and later with Daniel Abt. He finished second in the title race, narrowly losing out to Robin Frijns at the final round.

Formula One career

In August 2009, Bianchi was linked by the BBC and various other media sources to the second Ferrari Formula One seat occupied by Luca Badoer during Felipe Massa's absence. Bianchi tested for Ferrari at the young drivers test at Circuito de Jerez for two of the three days, over 1–2 December 2009. The other drivers tested on 3 December included Daniel Zampieri, Marco Zipoli and Pablo Sánchez López as the top three finishers in the 2009 Italian Formula Three Championship. Bianchi's performance in this test led to him becoming the first recruit of the Ferrari Driver Academy and signing up to a long-term deal to remain at the team's disposal.

On 11 November 2010 he was confirmed by Ferrari as the team's test and reserve driver for the 2011 season, replacing Luca Badoer, Giancarlo Fisichella and Marc Gené, as well as confirming he would test for the team during the young driver test in Abu Dhabi over 16–17 November. Bianchi carried on his GP2 racing, as Formula 1 allows test and reserve drivers to race in parallel in other competitions. On 13 September 2011, Bianchi tested for Ferrari at Fiorano, as part of the Ferrari Driver Academy, with fellow academy member and Sauber F1 driver Sergio Pérez. Bianchi completed 70 laps and recorded a quickest lap time of 1:00.213. For the 2012 season, Ferrari loaned him to the Sahara Force India team, for whom he drove in nine Friday free practice sessions over the course of the year as the outfit's test and reserve driver.

On 1 March 2013, Marussia announced that Bianchi was to replace Luiz Razia as a race driver after Razia's contract was terminated, due to sponsorship issues. Bianchi qualified 19th for the Australian Grand Prix, out-qualifying team-mate Max Chilton by three-quarters of a second. Bianchi overtook Pastor Maldonado, and Daniel Ricciardo on the first lap and he eventually finished 15th on his debut. He was 19th on the grid again in Malaysia, 0.3 seconds away from Q2. Bianchi fell behind the Caterhams at the start of the race, but moved up the order after the pit stops, eventually going on to finish 13th, ahead of his teammate, and both Caterhams. As of the Hungarian Grand Prix, Bianchi had beaten his teammate in all qualifying sessions and all races that both of them had finished. In the Japanese Grand Prix he and Charles Pic of Caterham were given ten-place grid penalties for receiving three reprimands over the season, and at the race, his race ended early after a collision with Giedo van der Garde.

In October 2013, Marussia confirmed that Bianchi would stay at the team for the following season. After starting off the season with struggles in Australia, in which he was not classified, Bianchi overcame the odds to score his – and his team's – first World Championship points by finishing ninth at the Monaco Grand Prix.

Out of the nine races which Bianchi and Chilton completed without retiring, during the 2014 season, he was the quicker driver in eight of them, establishing his status as the first driver. Chilton retired twice, and Bianchi five times, with three of Bianchi's retirements being mechanical failures.

Days before his fatal accident, Bianchi declared himself "ready" to step into the Scuderia Ferrari race seat should the team need him amid the looming departure of Fernando Alonso.

Source

As he praises former Formula One champion Jules Bianchi for his career as a 'gamechanger' in his career, Charles Leclerc wears a special helmet at Japanese Grand Prix to honor his mentor Jules Bianchi, who died after a tragic crash ten years ago

www.dailymail.co.uk, April 5, 2024
Charles Leclerc of Ferrari will wear a special helmet at the Japanese Grand Prix this weekend to commemorate Jules Bianchi's tragic crash in Suzuka. Bianchi was involved in a serious accident in the closing stages of the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix after losing control of his car in wet weather and collided with a rescue vehicle. He underwent emergency surgery and was put into a induced coma, but he died in July the following year as a result of his injuries. Before his untimely death with Leclerc, his godson, the Frenchman was regarded as a 'gamechanger' in his return to Formula One, the Monegasque driver praised Bianchi as a 'gamechanger.' "Of course, it's a very special place, and I have somewhere in my head Jules," Leclerc, whose helmet style is based on the one worn by Bianchi when he competed for Marussia in 2014 and includes his number 17, which was banned by the FIA following Bianchi's death.

After a close call with a tractor, Pierre Gasly says he was 'two meters away from going away.'

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 9, 2022
Pierre Gasly, an emotional man, believes he was 'two meters away from passing away' after being left'very worried' and concerned about his safety after a near-miss with a recovery truck in the Japanese Grand Prix, which left him'very worried' and afraid of his life. Gasly was in the pit-lane starting in the rain, and despite the treacherous weather following a pre-race downpour, he attempted to close the distance to the safety car, which had been delayed due to lap one accidents for Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon. When the AlphaTauri driver barely escaped a collision with a recovery truck that hadn't recovered its way onto the track before all drivers were back in the pit-lane, Gasly both terrified and angry, particularly given the similarities to the 2014 disaster in Japan that would cost Jules Bianchi his life.

After Pierre Gasly passes a tractor at a good pace in a wet Japanese GP, Lando Norris leads a F1 fury

www.dailymail.co.uk, October 9, 2022
The McLaren driver was not alone, with Red Bull's Sergio Perez noting that it was a similar'mistake' that resulted in the untimely death of French driver Jules Bianchi in 2015. The race was red-flagged almost immediately after lights were out, but the time-limited run was eventually revived, with Max Verstappen leading the way in search of his second world championship. Norris of McLaren took to social media to say, 'Wtf.' How's this happened!? Years ago, we had lived in this situation. We put our lives in jeopardy, especially in such circumstances. We want to run. But this... is unacceptable.'
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