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Kazuki Nakajima

Born in 1985 and raised in the Japanese city of Aichi, little singled out Kazuki Nakajima for a Formula One career more than his pedigree. The son of legendary Japanese driver Satoru Nakajima, who raced for Lotus and Tyrrell in the mid 1980s and early ‘90s, Nakajima was destined for a life on four wheels almost from birth.

As such, he began his racing career early, under his father’s tutelage from the age of 11. Within three years, Nakajima had been named the Suzuka Formula ICA karting champion. He then graduated through a variety of karting championships, honing his race craft with each and every step.

His performance in the All Japan Formula A kart championship in particular attracted the attentions of the Toyota Motor Company and he was invited to become a member of the Toyota Young Driver programme. A switch to single-seater racing resulted and in 2003 he competed in - and won - the Formula Toyota series.

As champion, he made the move to Japanese Formula Three in 2004. He would win two races that first year and stuck around for a second season, when his performance would be even stronger. He eventually finished runner-up - impressive given that he was also racing in selected Japan GT events at the same time.

In 2006, he took the important step of demonstrating his talent outside of his native Japan, contesting the Formula 3 Euro Series. He did comparatively well, winning one race, and as a result was invited to join the Toyota-engined Williams team as an official tester for 2007.

He made his debut a little earlier, however, in the December test at Jerez, impressing with several competitive performances. After testing a further four times, he was invited to the first race of the ‘07 Formula One season in Melbourne as Williams’ Friday driver. Though he made a further five Grand Prix practice appearances, with testing limited his time in the car was kept to the minimum.

He kept his race skills fresh by combining his Williams duties with a drive in the GP2 for the DAMS squad, scoring six podiums and one pole position. Then, when news broke after the Chinese Grand Prix that Williams race driver Alexander Wurz would retire with immediate effect, Nakajima was immediately promoted to a race seat for the season finale in Brazil.

It was a quick turn around for the then 22 year-old, and despite running over several mechanics during a pit stop, he performed well on his competitive Formula One debut, finishing tenth and scoring the fifth-fastest lap of the race. Williams were certainly impressed and late in 2007 it was confirmed he would continue to race for the team in 2008 alongside Nico Rosberg.

Kazuki Nakajima (JPN) Williams.
Formula One World Championship, Rd17, Brazilian Grand Prix, Preparations, Interlagos, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Thursday, 18 October 2007 Kazuki Nakajima (JPN) Williams FW29. Formula One Testing, Day One, Barcelona, Spain, Tuesday, 13 November 2007. World © Hartley/Sutton Kazuki Nakajima (JPN) Williams FW29 
Formula One World Championship, Rd17, Brazilian Grand Prix, Practice Day, Interlagos, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Friday, 19 October 2007 Kazuki Nakajima (JPN) Williams FW29 
Formula One World Championship, Rd17, Brazilian Grand Prix, Practice Day, Interlagos, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Friday, 19 October 2007 Kazuki Nakajima (JPN) Williams FW29 
Formula One World Championship, Rd17, Brazilian Grand Prix, Practice Day, Interlagos, Sao Paulo, Brazil, Friday, 19 October 2007
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01 Lewis Hamilton 70
02 Felipe Massa 64
03 Kimi Räikkönen 57
04 Robert Kubica 55
05 Heikki Kovalainen 43
06 Nick Heidfeld 41
07 Jarno Trulli 26
08 Fernando Alonso 18
09 Mark Webber 18
10 Timo Glock 15
11 Nelsinho Piquet 13
12 Rubens Barrichello 11
13 Nico Rosberg 9
14 Sebastian Vettel 9
15 Kazuki Nakajima 8
16 David Coulthard 6
17 Jenson Button 3
18 Sebastien Bourdais 2
19 Giancarlo Fisichella 0
20 Takuma Sato 0
21 Adrian Sutil 0
22 Anthony Davidson 0