Guillaume Moreau

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Guillaume Moreau 2011 at Le Mans
Guillaume Moreau in a Pescarolo 01 , at the Petit Le Mans 2011

Guillaume Moreau (born March 8, 1983 in Limoges ) is a French racing driver .

Career

Moreau began his motorsport career in karting in 1995 , where he was active until 2001. In 2002 the young racing driver switched to the French Formula Renault , in which he finished twelfth overall at the end of the season. He also took part in a Formula Renault 2.0 Eurocup race. In 2003 Moreau stayed in the French Formula Renault and he improved to fourth place in the drivers' championship with four podium finishes. He also started again in some races in the Eurocup, in which he finished 17th overall this season. In 2004 Moreau contested his third season in the French Formula Renault and managed to achieve third place overall with three wins. He also improved in the Eurocup, although he did not win, to seventh place overall.

In 2005 the Frenchman switched to the Formula 3 Euro Series . With a win in Zandvoort , he finished eighth overall at the end of the season. In 2006 he stayed in the Formula 3 Euro Series, but this year he had to settle for second place as the best result and tenth place in the overall standings. He let u. a. his team-mate and later Formula 1 driver Romain Grosjean behind him. In 2007 Moreau left the Euro Series and started for KTR in the World Series by Renault . In the new series, he decided one race for himself and finished 14th overall at the end of the season. He also made his debut in the Le Mans Series and the 24 Hours of Le Mans that year . In 2008 Moreau stayed with KTR in the World Series by Renault. However, after five racing weekends he was replaced by Sergei Afanassjew . Nevertheless, at the end of the season he finished 16th overall. His successor Afanassjew was in last place in the drivers' standings with no points. In addition, Moreau started again in the Le Mans Series, in which he won the championship title with Patrice Goueslard , and he took part in the 24 Hours of Le Mans. In 2009 Moreau returned to the World Series by Renault for the fifth race weekend. With a third place as the best result, he finished 18th overall at the end of the season. In addition to another start at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, he took part in two races in the FIA GT Championship .

statistics

Career stations

Le Mans results

year team vehicle Teammate Teammate placement Failure reason
2007 FranceFrance Courage Compétition Courage LC70 FranceFrance Jean-Marc Gounon SwedenSweden Stefan Johansson failure Engine failure
2008 FranceFrance Luc Alphand Aventures Chevrolet Corvette C6.R FranceFrance Luc Alphand FranceFrance Jérôme Policand Rank 15
2009 FranceFrance OAK Racing Pescarolo 01 FranceFrance Matthieu Lahaye SyriaSyria Karim Ajlani failure malfunction
2010 FranceFrance OAK Racing Pescarolo 01 FranceFrance Matthieu Lahaye Czech RepublicCzech Republic Jan Charouz Rank 7
2011 FranceFrance OAK Racing Pescarolo 01 PortugalPortugal Tiago Monteiro FranceFrance Pierre Ragues failure malfunction

Sebring results

year team vehicle Teammate Teammate placement Failure reason
2011 FranceFrance OAK Racing Pescarolo 01 FranceFrance Matthieu Lahaye FranceFrance Pierre Ragues failure mechanics
2012 FranceFrance OAK Racing Pescarolo 01 AustriaAustria Dominik Kraihamer BelgiumBelgium Bertrand baguette failure malfunction

Web links

Commons : Guillaume Moreau  - collection of images, videos and audio files