Karun Chandhok


Karun Chandhok is an Indian racing driver and television presenter who last competed in Formula E for Mahindra Racing. Previously, Chandhok has competed for Hispania Racing in Formula One in. Before this, he drove in the GP2 Series for three years, winning two races. In 2013, Chandhok competed in the FIA GT Series for Seyffarth Motorsport.
Prior to his time in GP2, Chandhok won the Formula Asia championship in 2001 and was the inaugural Formula Asia V6 by Renault champion in 2006. After leaving F1, he has worked as a commentator in the United Kingdom for BBC Radio 5 Live and Sky Sports F1 from 2013 to 2015 and joined Channel 4 in 2016 as Technical Analyst and Pitlane Reporter. On 13 December 2018, it was announced that Chandhok will be re-joining Sky Sports F1 for the 2019 season.

Early career

Chandhok was born in Chennai, Tamil Nadu and is the son of Vicky Chandhok, multiple Indian rallying champion and president of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India since 2003.
In 2000, Chandhok was Indian National Racing Champion winning seven out of ten races in the Formula Maruti series. He scored pole position and fastest lap in all ten races. In 2001, Chandhok was the Formula 2000 Asia champion, becoming the youngest ever Asian Formula Champion, driving for Team India Racing.
Chandhok tested with British Formula 3 champion team Carlin Motorsport in 2001. He raced in the National class in 2002, driving for T-Sport, finishing sixth in class. He stayed with T-Sport in the National Class for 2003, and finished third in the final class standings, behind champion Ernesto Viso and runner-up Steven Kane. In 2004 Chandhok stepped up to the main British Formula 3 class with T-Sport, and finished 14th in the standings.
He was instantly a top 5 qualifier and finisher when he partnered his compatriot Narain Karthikeyan at RC Motorsport in the World Series by Nissan for the final two rounds the 2004 season.
With Karthikeyan moving on to Formula One in 2005, Chandhok raced part-season in the revised Formula Renault 3.5 Series with RC Motorsport. He was the first driver to represent A1 Team India in A1 Grand Prix at the beginning of the 2005–06 season, before handing over to Armaan Ebrahim for the remainder of the season.
In 2006 he became champion of the first ever Formula Asia V6 by Renault Championship, taking seven race wins and nine pole positions from 12 races.

GP2 Series

Chandhok moved to the GP2 Series in 2007, driving for Durango. Chandhok's first win in GP2 came in the sprint race at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium. Chandhok also led the sprint race in Turkey after starting from pole, only for the second place Kazuki Nakajima of DAMS to collide with him. The collision resulted in retirement for Chandhok while Nakajima was given a drive-through penalty.
Chandok got his biggest career break in November with a call up from the Red Bull Racing Formula One team to test for them over two days at the Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona on 13–14 November.
at the Monaco round of the 2009 GP2 Series season
Chandhok remained in GP2 for 2008, switching to the iSport International team where he was partnered by Bruno Senna. He won one race and finished tenth in the drivers' championship. He also drove for the team in the 2008 GP2 Asia Series season. After winning one race and finishing tenth in the championship, Chandhok was presented with the series' "Best Driving Style" award at the end of the season.
In November, Chandhok became the first Indian driver to be invited to join the British Racing Drivers' Club. India's membership of the Commonwealth entitles him to be a member.
Chandhok signed to drive for the Ocean Racing Technology team in the 2009 GP2 Series season. Even though the deal with ORT was for the pan-European series, Chandhok also drove in the final round of the 2008–09 GP2 Asia Series season, in Bahrain replacing Yelmer Buurman. Chandhok amassed ten points in the championship, with a best result of third at Silverstone. He and teammate Álvaro Parente suffered a testing season, with sixteen retirements between them.

Formula One

Force India links

Chandhok was linked with the Force India team, which was created in. It was an Indian registered-team formerly owned by a friend of the family, Vijay Mallya. After the team's driver, Giancarlo Fisichella, moved from Force India to Ferrari during the 2009 season, Chandhok was briefly linked with the seat, with long-time supporter Bernie Ecclestone supporting him. The team's test driver, Vitantonio Liuzzi, was instead promoted to the race seat.
Chandhok said in Autosport, on 11 June 2010, that he was targeting a move to Force India for. Chandhok believed that the commercial benefits for the team running an Indian driver make him an obvious choice.

HRT (2010)

Chandhok began the season driving for Hispania Racing alongside former GP2 teammate Bruno Senna, becoming the second Indian driver to compete in Formula One after Narain Karthikeyan in.
At Chandhok's first race, the 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix, he was unable to complete a lap in any of the free practice sessions as his car was still being completed and then suffered hydraulic problems. He was, however, able to use the qualifying session to run his F110 for the first time. He qualified last on the grid, 1.7 seconds behind Senna, who had completed laps earlier in the meeting, and crashed out of the race after just one lap due to a large bump in the tarmac which sent him crashing into the wall. Chandhok recorded the team's first classified finish when he ended up fourteenth in Australia. In Malaysia he finished 15th, and finished 17th in China. Chandhok retired in the next three races with suspension failure in Spain, an accident with Jarno Trulli in Monaco and more technical problems in Turkey. He finished 18th in Canada and Valencia, and 19th at Silverstone, but was dropped for the onwards, in favour of Sakon Yamamoto. For all the following races he was a co-commentator on BBC Radio 5 Live's coverage of the sport.

Lotus (2011)

On 22 March 2011, Chandhok was confirmed as a reserve driver at Team Lotus for the season. He drove the car in free practice for the, crashing out on the installation lap. He reprised his co-commentary role for BBC Radio 5 Live at the. After driving in a further three free practice sessions he replaced Jarno Trulli for the. He finished 20th and last, two laps behind teammate Heikki Kovalainen and a lap behind 19th placed Daniel Ricciardo. He was also 4 laps behind race winner Lewis Hamilton.

Endurance Racing: 2012

For 2012, Chandhok drove in the FIA World Endurance Championship for JRM Racing in a Honda Performance Development ARX-03a with co-drivers David Brabham and Peter Dumbreck. At the Le Mans 24 Hours, Chandhok's team finished sixth overall out of the 56 starters.

FIA GT Series: 2013

Chandhok drove in the FIA GT Series for the 2013 season in a last minute deal for Seyffarth Racing. He was joined in the car by Jan Seyffarth, who had been competing in the German GT series for his family run team. Chandhok joined Armaan Ebrahim, who became the first Indian driver to be confirmed in the series. Ebrahim signed a full one-year contract with the BMW Sports Trophy-Team India GT 1 Team.

Formula E: 2014–2015

In 2014–2015, Chandhok drove the inaugural season of Formula E for Mahindra Racing.

Racing record

Career summary

Complete Formula Renault 3.5 Series results

YearTeam1234567891011121314151617PosPoints
2005RC MotorsportZOL
1
13
ZOL
1
11
MON
1
Ret
VAL
1
16
VAL
2
Ret
LMS
1
DNS
LMS
2
DNS
BIL
1
BIL
2
OSC
1
OSC
2
DON
1
DON
2
EST
1
EST
2
MNZ
1
MNZ
2
29th0

Complete A1 Grand Prix results

YearEntrant12345678910111213141516171819202122DCPoints
2005–06IndiaGBR
SPR
15
GBR
FEA
DNS
GER
SPR
16
GER
FEA
Ret
POR
SPR
POR
FEA
AUS
SPR
AUS
FEA
MYS
SPR
MYS
FEA
UAE
SPR
UAE
FEA
RSA
SPR
RSA
FEA
IDN
SPR
IDN
FEA
MEX
SPR
MEX
FEA
USA
SPR
USA
FEA
CHN
SPR
CHN
FEA
24th0

Complete GP2 Series results

YearEntrant123456789101112131415161718192021DCPoints
2007DurangoBHR
FEA
9
BHR
SPR
Ret
CAT
FEA
Ret
CAT
SPR
15
MON
FEA
Ret
MAG
FEA
Ret
MAG
SPR
16
SIL
FEA
12
SIL
SPR
13
NÜR
FEA
Ret
NÜR
SPR
16
HUN
FEA

14
HUN
SPR
15
IST
FEA
8
IST
SPR
Ret
MNZ
FEA
5
MNZ
SPR
6
SPA
FEA
7
SPA
SPR
1
VAL
FEA

17
VAL
SPR
Ret
15th16
2008iSport InternationalCAT
FEA
9
CAT
SPR
Ret
IST
FEA
4
IST
SPR
12
MON
FEA
3
MON
SPR
Ret
MAG
FEA
7
MAG
SPR
Ret
SIL
FEA
3
SIL
SPR
Ret
HOC
FEA
8
HOC
SPR
1
HUN
FEA
4
HUN
SPR
DNS
VAL
FEA
15
VAL
SPR
Ret
SPA
FEA
10
SPA
SPR
7
MNZ
FEA
11
MNZ
SPR
Ret
10th31
2009Ocean Racing TechnologyCAT
FEA
Ret
CAT
SPR
Ret
MON
FEA
7
MON
SPR
Ret
IST
FEA
13
IST
SPR
14
SIL
FEA
6
SIL
SPR
3
NÜR
FEA
11
NÜR
SPR
Ret
HUN
FEA
17
HUN
SPR
10
VAL
FEA
Ret
VAL
SPR
6
SPA
FEA
Ret
SPA
SPR
7
MNZ
FEA
19
MNZ
SPR
12
ALG
FEA
Ret
ALG
SPR
13
18th10

Complete GP2 Asia Series results

YearEntrant123456789101112DCPoints
2008iSport InternationalDUB1
FEA
7
DUB1
SPR
3
SEN
FEA
Ret
SEN
SPR
13
SEP
FEA
Ret
SEP
SPR
7
BHR
FEA
8
BHR
SPR
Ret
DUB2
FEA
Ret
DUB2
SPR
Ret
13th7
2008–09Ocean Racing TechnologySHI
FEA
SHI
SPR
DUB
FEA
DUB
SPR
BHR1
FEA
BHR1
SPR
LSL
FEA
LSL
SPR
SEP
FEA
SEP
SPR
BHR2
FEA
9
BHR2
SPR
Ret
26th0

Complete Formula One results

YearEntrantChassisEngine12345678910111213141516171819WDCPoints
Hispania Racing F1 TeamHispania F110Cosworth CA2010 2.4 V8BHR
Ret
AUS
14
MAL
15
CHN
17
ESP
Ret
MON
14†
TUR
20†
CAN
18
EUR
18
GBR
19
GERHUNBELITASINJPNKORBRAABU22nd0
Team LotusLotus T128Renault RS27 2.4 V8AUS
TD
MALCHNTUR
TD
ESPMONCANEUR
TD
GBR
TD
GER
20
HUNBEL
TD
ITA
TD
SINJPN
TD
KOR
TD
IND
TD
ABUBRA28th0

Driver did not finish the Grand Prix, but was classified as they had completed over 90% of the race distance.

24 Hours of Le Mans results

Complete FIA World Endurance Championship results

Complete FIA GT Series results

Complete Formula E results

YearTeamChassisPowertrain1234567891011PosPoints
2014–15Mahindra RacingSpark SRT01-eSRT01-eBEI
5
PUT
6
PDE
13
BUE
Ret
MIA
14
LBH
12
MCO
13
BER
18
MSC
12
LON
12
LON
13
17th18

Complete European Le Mans Series results