O'Sullivan – Motorsport Week https://www.motorsportweek.com Your daily source of motorsport news, features, results and images Sun, 23 Jul 2023 07:05:10 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://www.motorsportweek.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/cropped-favicon-1-32x32.png O'Sullivan – Motorsport Week https://www.motorsportweek.com 32 32 O’Sullivan cruises to F3 Feature Race win from Budapest https://www.motorsportweek.com/2023/07/23/osullivan-cruises-to-f3-feature-race-win-from-budapest/ Sun, 23 Jul 2023 07:05:10 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=116444 Zak O’Sullivan took his fourth win of the 2023 Formula 3 season after dominating the Feature Race in Budapest. Taking the start from pole position, O’Sullivan chopped across the track to cover off PREMA Racing team-mate Dino Beganovic. O’Sullivan successfully held onto the lead on the opening lap and from there was unchallenged, slowly increasing […]]]>

Zak O’Sullivan took his fourth win of the 2023 Formula 3 season after dominating the Feature Race in Budapest.

Taking the start from pole position, O’Sullivan chopped across the track to cover off PREMA Racing team-mate Dino Beganovic.

O’Sullivan successfully held onto the lead on the opening lap and from there was unchallenged, slowly increasing the gap across the 19 laps of racing.

It was the Williams junior driver’s first points score since the Feature Race at the Red Bull Ring – an event where he also took victory.

Although he was unable to keep up with his team-mate, Beganovic wasn’t troubled in second place to secure another 18 points in the standings.

Taking the final spot on the podium was Franco Colapinto, who made an overtake on Leonardo Fornaroli midway through the race for the final spot on the rostrum.

One year on from his debut in the FIA F3 championship, Oliver Goethe was fourth ahead of the third PREMA Racing car of Paul Aron.

Aron came under pressure late on from Pepe Marti, who progressed strongly throughout the race, climbing from P13 on the grid to sixth at the chequered flag.

Championship leader Gabriel Bortoleto ensured that he still holds a sizeable lead at the head of the standings, securing his 13th point-scoring result in a row.

Jonny Edgar was eighth, while Fornaroli crossed the line in ninth place after descending down the order in the closing stages.

Mari Boya for MP Motorsport picked up the final point on offer.

F3 will return next weekend at Spa-Francorchamps, where Bortoleto will have his first chance to seal the 2023 title.

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The company behind Zak O’Sullivan’s motorsport rise https://www.motorsportweek.com/2022/11/24/the-company-behind-zak-osullivans-motorsport-rise/ Thu, 24 Nov 2022 11:30:42 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=96270 Go through the list of promising, upcoming racing drivers, and Formula 3 driver Zak O’Sullivan sits high as a talent to watch. After success at the Autosport BRDC Awards at the start of 2022, O’Sullivan received an outing in Aston Martin’s 2021 Formula 1 challenger last month, which provided him with his first taste of […]]]>

Go through the list of promising, upcoming racing drivers, and Formula 3 driver Zak O’Sullivan sits high as a talent to watch.

After success at the Autosport BRDC Awards at the start of 2022, O’Sullivan received an outing in Aston Martin’s 2021 Formula 1 challenger last month, which provided him with his first taste of the pinnacle of motorsport.

The Williams-backed driver made his debut in the F3 Championship in 2022, finishing 11th having claimed podiums in Silverstone and Zandvoort. He will return to the series in 2023, this time competing for PREMA Racing.

Supported for the last four years by Kokoro Performance coach and former racer Kieren Clark (who founded the company), O’Sullivan secured a pole position in Silverstone with Carlin last season, narrowly missing out on the win to Arthur Leclerc. Another podium appearance followed in the Netherlands, en route to an eventual 11th-placed championship finish.

In the highly competitive F3 environment, some may view the year as a successful maiden campaign – but Clark and the O’Sullivan camp were left slightly unsatisfied, highlighting the tremendous ambition possessed by the driver and coach.

“I think if he hadn’t had the success that he had in the other championships, you’d say it was a good season,” was Clark’s candid reaction. “We knew what we were going in with, we knew it was going to be a hard season. We didn’t expect to jump in and start winning, purely because the competition is high, but also the level of competition with the teams and stuff like that.

“But, I think by the end of the season, we expected to be there or thereabouts, but for numerous reasons, it just didn’t work out.”

Drivers have limited time to prepare before they are thrust into the F3 season, and with no time in-season to tune their set-ups, finding success throughout the venture is a monumental task.

“It’s a hard championship, because there’s just no testing,” Clark said. “There’s no running, you can’t run with the team, you can’t run in the car. I wouldn’t say anyone did a bad job, it’s just hard. You’re learning every weekend, and although you’ve got a 45-minute practice on a Friday, you’ve only actually got 12 laps.

“So, you’ve got 12 laps to get your install laps done, you’ve got to do a tyre run, get your base lap, see where you’re at, and then work on the car for your next run. And then you’re into qualifying.

“So, there’s a lot of work that’s going in behind the scenes to try and evolve the set-up and move in the right direction, and sadly, we just ran out of time. I think what we can do is take away the positives. He had a pole at Silverstone and a podium in Zandvoort, which is fantastic.

“Zak will definitely disagree with me, but I think we could have had a win at Silverstone. He’ll disagree with me until the cows come home, but that’s fine! Then obviously he had the podium at Zandvoort which was quite good, and we were top 12 in a lot of qualifyings, which put him onto reverse grid poles and stuff like that.

“It definitely wasn’t a bad season. I think it’s just when you compare to some of our competition – which I always say you shouldn’t compare – but looking at it in hindsight, we’d have liked to be a little bit closer. It is what it is. You can look at it and say it wasn’t an amazing season in terms of his results, but I think in terms of a character-building season, it was very good.”

 

O’Sullivan’s junior category experience prior to F3 was highly successful – second in the 2019 Ginetta Junior Championship, second in the 2020 British F4 Championship before taking the title in the 2021 GB3 Championship.

The step to F3 was his biggest leap yet, and the challenge was made all the more evident when analysing his results across the opening stages of the campaign.

“I think it’s always easy to be happy and work well when you’re winning, and that’s what Zak’s had the luxury of over the last few years,” Clark said. “This is the first year it’s been a real, real challenge, and I think he definitely needed that before he goes to those next steps, which is not long before he gets to that Formula 1 step.

“And, when you look at the F1 grid, you can’t always be in the best car, and sometimes you have to accept that and just work with what you’ve got.

“So, it’s definitely been a character-building season for him, and for me to be fair, because I hate losing. I am a really sore loser, not in a way that I throw my toys out the pram, but I can’t let it go. I spend the next week analysing it to understand what we can do better.

“I think that’s why Zak and I get on really well, because he’s much the same. If there’s something he needs to work on, Monday morning we’re working on it.

“It’s like, ‘let’s go, what can we do? How can we capitalise on this?’ So, character-building I would say, but it sounds really bad, doesn’t it? Because we’re poo-pooing the results he did get, but that’s just sadly our nature. That’s just how we work, and I think that’s why we get on so well.”

O’Sullivan overcame the challenges of Oliver Bearman, Louis Foster and Jonny Edgar to earn a priceless go in an F1 car in Towcester at the end of last year.

The drivers competed in an MSV Formula 2 car, a Garage 59-run Aston Martin GT3, and a BBM Sport Ginetta LMP3 challenger, putting their skills to the sternest of tests.  Informed by his aforementioned philosophy, Clark’s preparation with O’Sullivan was no different to what they have become accustomed to.

“It was [the same],” he affirmed. “Again, the fundamentals were there. Nothing really changed in terms of what we trying to work on in how he needed to drive the car and what he was looking for from each car.

“I’d say that’s what we spent time doing, understanding, ‘right, you’ve got an Aston Martin GT3 car, you’ve never driven one of those. What can you expect? What’s it going to feel like?’

“Well, first of all, it’s not going to feel like a GB3 car round the corners. Obviously, we’d been doing GP3 testing, so it’s not going to feel like that. We worked on understanding how to maximise the tyre, what it’s like with tyre blankets, how slow it’s going to feel, how to work around the ABS.

“LMP3 – much of a muchness – it’s the same as a GB3 car, just heavier. So, how are we going to maximise that? I’d say that’s probably the car we struggled with most in the award.

“The Formula 2 car, I’ve got quite a lot of experience with over the years. I’ve coached drivers when it was actually running, so I knew a lot about the car, so we were able to give him a lot of information.

“It was more a case of how are you mentally going to prepare to approach the event? In your first run, what are you focusing on? Are you focusing on learning the car on the first lap, or are you focusing on just ragging the back end out of it? What are you going to try and do?

“And it was about having that mental plan really, and visualising that. When I say visualise, I don’t mean we sit here thinking about what we’re going to do, but lap one, you’ve got to make sure you’re confident and happy with that car. Lap two, you’ve got to put a lap in, you’ve got to commit. You’ve got to deliver.”

As a result of his win, the 17-year-old got the chance to return to Silverstone and jump into the AMR21.

The step up to F1 machinery is a sizeable leap for any junior – with preparation for the drive proving to be difficult due to the mammoth speeds that the cars possess.

“I don’t think you can really prepare, because the step, even for an F2 driver, is so big,” explained Clark.

“I don’t think you can really prepare for it, but obviously we went through the motions and did what we could. Fortunately, because of Zak’s support from Williams, we’ve done a lot of sim – I say we, he’s the one that’s doing the job! – we’ve done a lot of sim work with Williams, understanding the downforce levels and how the car works, and what to expect from the brakes and stuff like that.

“He’d done a lot of that in the simulator, so then it’s the same process. It’s about then controlling the mind. This is going to be probably 50 per cent faster than anything you’ve ever driven before, so what are the things that are going to get in the way?

“Because it’s going so much faster, your vision’s going to be a bit slow, so you need to make sure your vision’s up. Whatever you do, make sure that vision is far ahead, every single corner, every single time. Because that’s what’s giving you the feedback and the information of what’s coming ahead.

“We know that the braking is going to be mega, and we know that you’re going to brake too early initially, so when you hit the brakes, hit the brakes, and accept that you’ve slowed it down.

“Use the correct technique, don’t get on the throttle, just keep focusing on the correct braking technique, and then just apply it later the next corner, the next lap. And then you’ll build up faster, rather than just trying to drive as fast as you can from lap one.”

Naturally, O’Sullivan was ecstatic at the opportunity to drive F1 machinery.

“Driving the F1 car as my prize for winning the Autosport Award was amazing,” he said. “The speed and power were immense, and to be honest just starting the car was complex! In order to hit the ground running I prepared in advance with my coaching team at Kokoro Performance. In particular we looked at the fitness side of things, because driving the F1 is a huge physical challenge. I hope that all the learnings from that experience will help me get even more out of the car the next time I’m offered the opportunity.”

But as is often the case with drivers that have no F1 experience, there was one particular area where O’Sullivan struggled.

“I think the only thing I would say we probably didn’t do enough of is neck work,” Clark admitted. “Lateral was fine, but longitudinal braking with his neck going down, that was definitely the biggest issue. I think he could have gone faster if he could keep his head up.

“But, what I love about Zak is he’s so critical of himself. He’s like, ‘I could have gone faster if I’d sorted my neck out.’ So Wednesday morning, we were like, ‘right, onto neck, let’s go.’ We’ve got a trainer we’re working with now to make sure we’re maximising that, so the next time he gets in the car, that doesn’t hold him back.

“I think, after the install, when he came back in, he got out the car and went, ‘holy cow, that’s really fast!’ When he first went to full throttle, he said he was a bit surprised. He thought, ‘is that it?’ sort of thing.

“What he didn’t realise was that the car was in regen mode, and then he went through Maggots and Becketts, went full throttle and went, ‘oh wow, this is really fast, I actually feel a little bit sick.’

“But then, Zak doing what Zak does, he sat down, processed it and went back out. Then he was absolutely fine, no issues.”

O’Sullivan’s solid performances this year earned him a seat at PREMA for the 2023 campaign, in light of Oliver Bearman’s step up to Formula 2 with the Italian side.

It makes the Briton one of the drivers to watch in the context of next year’s championship, and with the milestone of his first F1 drive ticked off his bucket list, he can now target much more regular outings behind the wheel of F1 cars.

Right with him, as they have been for the last several years, will be the Kokoro team.

“The name ‘Kokoro’ is a Japanese – I really liked the sound of it and what it represents,” Clark said. “It represents bringing all the elements together to have the ultimate health, and for us it’s not about health, it’s about bringing all the elements together to get the best results. When I set the company up, I always wanted to it to stand for something rather than just be ‘Kieren Clark Driver Coaching’, because at the end of the day, driver development is not about one person; it’s about a group of people.”

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O’Sullivan joins PREMA for 2023 season https://www.motorsportweek.com/2022/11/16/osullivan-joins-prema-for-2023-season/ Wed, 16 Nov 2022 09:34:08 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=95817 Zak O’Sullivan’s Formula 3 adventure will continue with PREMA next season, having made his debut with Carlin in 2022. The Williams-backed driver finished 11th in the standings this year, claiming two podiums at Silverstone and Zandvoort, having taken a pole position at the former. Having moved Ollie Bearman up to Formula 2, PREMA have now captured […]]]>

Zak O’Sullivan’s Formula 3 adventure will continue with PREMA next season, having made his debut with Carlin in 2022.

The Williams-backed driver finished 11th in the standings this year, claiming two podiums at Silverstone and Zandvoort, having taken a pole position at the former.

Having moved Ollie Bearman up to Formula 2, PREMA have now captured the services of O’Sullivan, who recently tested an Aston Martin Formula 1 car at Silverstone.

READ MORE: Boschung remains with Campos for 2023 F2 season

The 19-year-old is “excited” to take on the new challenge, with the team that has won three of the last four teams’ championships in the series.

“I am really excited to be joining PREMA for the 2023 FIA Formula 3 season,” he said in a press release.

“It will be a new environment for me, but PREMA’s history says all we need to know so I’m confident we can have a good year together. 

“The first impressions from testing were good, and the pace was pretty strong. I was still learning the car as there are a few differences, and I focused on getting to know all the team and the engineers, as well as learning some Italian as well!”

Sven Smeets, sporting director at Williams, is looking forward to seeing his driver jump into his new surroundings.

“We’re looking forward to seeing Zak compete in his second season of Formula 3 with PREMA and working alongside them to develop and highlight Zak’s talents on and off the track,” added the Belgian.

“Zak is an integral part of our Driver Academy since joining at the beginning of 2022 and has shown his capabilities throughout his rookie season in F3. Following a productive test with PREMA, I’m sure he’ll adapt to his new surroundings quickly and hit the ground running in 2023.”

TeamNo.Drivers
Prema Racing1
2
3


Paul Aron
Dino Beganovic
Zak O'Sullivan
Trident4
5
6


Leonardo Fornaroli
Gabriel Bortoleto
Oliver Goethe
ART Grand Prix7
8
9


Kaylen Frederick
Gregoire Saucy
Nikola Tsolov
MP Motorsport10
11
12


Franco Colapinto
Mari Boya
Jonny Edgar
Hitech Grand Prix14
15
16



Sebastian Montoya
Gabriele Mini
Luke Browning
Van Amersfoort Racing17
18
19


Caio Collet
Rafael Villagomez
Tommy Smith
Rodin Carlin20
21
22


Hunter Yeany
Oliver Gray
Ido Cohen
Campos Racing23
24
25


Pepe Martí
Christian Mansell
Hugh Barter
Jenzer Motorsport26
27
28


Nikita Bedrin
Taylor Barnard
Alex Garcia
PHM Racing by Charouz29
30
31


Sophia Floersch
Roberto Faria
Piotr Wiśnicki
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Williams F1 junior O’Sullivan has Aston Martin test outing https://www.motorsportweek.com/2022/10/25/williams-f1-junior-osullivan-has-aston-martin-test-outing/ Tue, 25 Oct 2022 12:11:53 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=94542 Zak O’Sullivan, who is part of the Williams driver academy, is having his maiden F1 outing on Tuesday, driving the Aston Martin AMR21 at Silverstone. O’Sullivan has been handed the opportunity after winning the Aston Martin Autosport BRDC Award in 2021. Drivers who are named the winner of the competition get a test outing in […]]]>

Zak O’Sullivan, who is part of the Williams driver academy, is having his maiden F1 outing on Tuesday, driving the Aston Martin AMR21 at Silverstone.

O’Sullivan has been handed the opportunity after winning the Aston Martin Autosport BRDC Award in 2021.

Drivers who are named the winner of the competition get a test outing in an F1 car, with McLaren once the long-standing partner of the award.

Aston Martin replaced it in 2019, and for the 2021 edition, O’Sullivan bested Oliver Bearman, Jonny Edgar and Louis Foster for the accolade.

Previous winners of the competition, which has run since 1989, include high-profile names such as David Coulthard, Dario Franchitti, Jenson Button and George Russell.

O’Sullivan will now receive laps in the AMR21, which was driven throughout the 2021 F1 season by Sebastian Vettel and Lance Stroll.

The 17-year-old raced full-time in the 2022 FIA Formula 3 Championship, taking two podiums en route to 11th place in the Drivers’ standings.

He was present at the post-season test at Jerez, testing with Teams’ champions Prema Racing.

In 2021, O’Sullivan won the title in the GB3 Championship, finishing with a margin of 154 points at the top of the standings.

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Williams signs O’Sullivan to F1 Driver Academy https://www.motorsportweek.com/2022/02/04/williams-signs-osullivan-to-f1-driver-academy/ Fri, 04 Feb 2022 14:13:49 +0000 https://www.motorsportweek.com/?p=80641 Williams has announced the signing of Zak O’Sullivan to the team’s Driver Academy. O’Sullivan emerged victorious in the 2021 GB3 Championship, taking seven wins and 14 podiums en route to the title. The 16-year-old will take part in the upcoming FIA Formula 3 Championship, competing with Carlin Racing. “I’m honoured to have been selected as […]]]>

Williams has announced the signing of Zak O’Sullivan to the team’s Driver Academy.

O’Sullivan emerged victorious in the 2021 GB3 Championship, taking seven wins and 14 podiums en route to the title.

The 16-year-old will take part in the upcoming FIA Formula 3 Championship, competing with Carlin Racing.

“I’m honoured to have been selected as a Williams Racing Academy Driver,” O’Sullivan said. 

“This is an incredible opportunity and I can’t thank Jost, Sven and the whole team enough for their faith in me. 

“Williams Racing is one of the most successful and respected teams in Formula 1 and have nurtured some of the greatest talents in the sport. 

“I’m also so pleased to be continuing my relationship with Carlin and stepping up to FIA F3 with them this season. This will be my third year working with the team and I am looking forward to the challenge ahead.”

As part of his duties, Williams says O’Sullivan will be integrated into the team “both trackside and at the factory at Grove, where he will conduct simulator work and provide effective feedback for car development”.

Prior to his success in last year’s GB3 Championship, O’Sullivan had a strong campaign in the 2020 F4 Championship, ending the year second in the standings.

Sven Smeets, Williams Racing Sporting Director, added: “We are all very pleased to welcome Zak to the Williams Racing Driver Academy. 

“His incredibly successful GB3 Championship campaign speaks to his natural talent, and the team can attest to his capability, drive and professionalism having seen him drive the simulator in Grove.

“I’m very much looking forward to seeing him take on FIA Formula 3 next year; I know he’ll prove a formidable competitor. 

“We’re now looking forward to working alongside Zak to support his development and progression, a role that we’re proud to play in a talented young driver’s career.”

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