Women drivers can succeed in
Formula E, says Venturi's Wolff
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[November 21, 2019]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Formula E starts its
sixth season in Saudi Arabia on Friday with an all-male cast of
drivers but Venturi's Susie Wolff, the only woman to run a team in
the electric series, says change will come.
While a woman has not started a Formula One grand prix since the
late Italian Lella Lombardi in 1976, three have competed in Formula
E since the city-based championship began in 2014.
None have had staying power, however, with only Swiss Simona de
Silvestro completing a season in 2015/16 for the U.S. Andretti team
and scoring four points.
Britain's Katherine Legge and Italian Michaela Cerruti lasted two
and four races respectively in 2014/15 before being dropped.
"I think there’s no reason why a woman can’t be successful in
Formula E," Wolff told Reuters in a telephone interview ahead of the
opening race. "I definitely see that coming in the future."
British racer Jamie Chadwick, winner of the inaugural all-female W
Series this year, has expressed interest and tested with the Nio
team in Saudi Arabia a year ago and in Morocco last January.
Beitske Visser, the Dutch racer who was runner-up to Chadwick, was
Formula E test and reserve for BMW Andretti last season.
De Silvestro, 31, drove a Venturi when nine women joined the men in
testing after last year's inaugural Saudi race. The Swiss is now
with Formula E newcomers Porsche as a test driver.
"If I had a gap in my driver lineup and there was a woman capable,
like Jamie, have no doubt I would put her in the car," said Wolff, a
former Williams F1 development driver whose husband Toto runs
Formula One champions Mercedes.
"And I would hope that would be the case for other manufacturers."
BIGGEST ISSUE
Wolff, who competed in the German Touring Car Championship (DTM) but
has now hung up her helmet, wants to see more women racing against
men generally.
A critic of the W Series single sex concept when it was announced,
she recognized women needed more track opportunities.
"Overall, there is a positive to those women racing," she says now.
"Our biggest issue is the lack of young talent coming up the ranks.
And that’s at every level. There’s a real lack of young girls
entering the sport.
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Former Williams test driver Susie Wolff of Britain during practice
at the 2015 British Grand Prix. Reuters / Paul Childs/File Photo
"What’s changed massively in the last three years is that there are
now a lot of opportunities for women. Before there hadn’t been but
now the opportunity’s there.
"The truth is we don’t always have the talent there to put forward.
That’s the worrying thing and where we’ve got to be very proactive
now to get enough young women coming into the sport so they can rise
through the ranks."
All of the Formula E champions to date have been ex-F1 drivers and
the field draws heavily from that world, with nine of the current 24
having previous grand prix experience.
Venturi have Brazilian Felipe Massa, Formula One championship
runner-up with Ferrari in 2008, along with Swiss-Italian ex-DTM
driver Edoardo Mortara who won a race last year.
The Monaco-based team are using the same powertrain as Mercedes,
effectively giving them identical cars to the German manufacturer's,
and announced on Thursday a new title sponsor in telecoms company
ROKit.
ROKiT are also title sponsors of Williams F1, coincidentally the
only Formula One team to be run by a woman.
Wolff said her past Williams connections had played no part,
however.
"Actually it all came about because one of the businesses that ROKiT
has, called Smart Cities, basically puts internet connections into
city centers," she said.
"I think Formula E is attractive because of the new technology and
the fact that it's sustainable."
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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