'Frank Biela' (born
August 2 1964 in
Neuss,
Germany) is an
auto racing driver, mainly competing in
touring cars and
sportscar racing. He has raced exclusively in cars manufactured by the
Audi marque since
1990.
Biela started his career in 1983 in
karting before joining the
Ford ''Youngster Team'' programme in 1987 alongside
Manuel Reuter and
Bernd Schneider. He drove for the team in
Formula Ford and the
Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft (the German touring car championship), where he won the race at
AVUS in 1987. Biela continued to compete in the DTM in 1988, and also raced a limited season in German
Formula 3, scoring two wins.
In 1990, he moved to
Audi, winning the DTM race at the
Nürburgring and the DTM championship in 1991 before Audi left the DTM in mid-season of 1992. Biela stayed with the company, and with the rise of the two-litre Class 2 (
Super Touring) rules in other series across Europe, he was entered in various European touring car series over the following few seasons. In
1995, he won the Touring Car World Cup race at
Paul Ricard in the new
Audi A4, which quickly became one of the dominant touring cars of the mid-1990s.
For 1996, Audi decided to enter a works team of two A4s in the
BTCC. Biela was selected to lead the team; alongside team-mate
John Bintcliffe, the new Audi team dominated the competition. Biela comfortably won the title, finishing every single race and being classified in the top ten in all but two races (an eleventh-place finish and a disqualification). He also capped an astonishing season by taking first place in the international
Macau Guía touring car race.
Because of the Audis' dominance in 1996, the BTCC organisers imposed a heavy ballast weight "penalty" on all four-wheel-drive cars for the 1997 season. With his Audi badly handicapped by the penalty, Biela initially struggled to make a serious impact. The weight penalty was halved at the midpoint of the season, and results immediately improved to the point where Biela finished second overall to eventual champion
Alain Menu. Biela then left Britain to return to the German series for 1998, but was largely ineffective. He finished a lowly 14th in the final standings as the A4 (in a new two-wheel-drive racing configuration) became outclassed by rival manufacturers.
In 1999, Biela abandoned touring cars in favour of joining the
Audi R8 sportscar project, racing under the Audi Sport Team Joest name. It was a good match, and Biela excelled in
sportscar racing over the next few seasons, winning several classic events at the wheel of the R8 as well as three
ALMS races. The highlight of Biela's time with the R8 team was three successive victories (2000-2002) in the
24 Hours of Le Mans alongside
Emanuele Pirro and
Tom Kristensen. Audi began to scale back support for the R8 programme after the 2002 season. After winning the
ALMS series in 2003, Biela returned to the revamped German touring car series, driving an Audi for
Joest Racing (the team which had run Biela's R8 for his three Le Mans wins); the season was not a success.
Biela continued to race an R8 at Le Mans each year but with very little success in 2003 where he miss the pit lane af just 15 laps and ran out of fuel.
[1] In December 2005 he participated in the first runs of the new
Audi R10 diesel sportscar, the R8's successor. Driving an R10 in the
2006 24 Hours of Le Mans, alongside Pirro and new team-mate
Marco Werner, Biela took his fourth victory to date in the classic race. He repeated the vicory with the same car and the same team in the
2007 24 Hours of Le Mans.
His greatest achievements include winning:
★ 1991
Deutsche Tourenwagen Meisterschaft German Touring Car Championship with an
Audi V8 (he has also finished 2nd and 3rd in DTM)
★ 1993 French Touring Car Championship
★ 1995 short-lived Touring Car World Cup one-off race
★ 1996
BTCC in 1996 (finishing as runner-up the year after)
★ 1996
Macau Grand Prix Guia Race
★ 2000, 2001, 2002
24 Hours of Le Mans with an
Audi R8
★
2006,
2007 24 Hours of Le Mans with an
Audi R10
References
1.
Le Mans 2003
External links
★
Official Website