Pascal Wehrlein (German pronunciation:[pasˈkalˈveːɐ̯.laɪ̯n]; born 18 October 1994) is a German and Mauritian racing driver currently competing in Formula E for TAG Heuer Porsche Formula E Team. He previously raced in Formula One for the Sauber and Manor teams. Holding dual nationality of Germany and Mauritius, he raced under the German flag in Formula One.[1] He had previously raced in DTM, winning the title with the Mercedes-Benz team HWA AG in 2015. In 2013, Wehrlein became the youngest driver to start a DTM race at the age of 18,[2] in 2014, he became the youngest driver to take pole position and a race win at the age of 19,[3][4] and the following year, he was the youngest to win the title, at the age of 20.[5]
In February 2016 he began driving full-time in Formula One for Manor, scoring his first and the team's only championship point at the Austrian Grand Prix. During the season, he regularly outperformed his lesser rated team mate Rio Haryanto, until Haryanto was replaced mid-season by Esteban Ocon.
Manor folded in early 2017 and Wehrlein moved to Sauber. Before the season began, he broke three thoracic vertebrae in an accident at the Race of Champions, which left him unable to compete in the first two races of the season.[6] Despite scoring all of Sauber's points that year, he was not retained for the 2018 season, his seat going to Ferrari Driver Academy member Charles Leclerc instead.[7]
In 2018, Wehrlein returned to DTM with Mercedes while also acting as their reserve driver in Formula One, but parted ways with the German manufacturer at the end of the year. He then worked as a development driver for Ferrari in 2019 and 2020.
Wehrlein was born in Sigmaringen to a German father and Mauritian mother. His father Richard Wehrlein, who entered German boxing championships, owns a CNC machining company in Ostrach.[10][11]
Early career
Karting
Wehrlein began karting in 2003 and raced only in his native Germany in his early career. He worked his way up from the junior ranks to progress through to the KF2 category by 2009, when he finished on fifth position in ADAC Kart Masters.[12][13]
Wehrlein made his Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (DTM) debut with the Mercedes-Benz team Mücke Motorsport in 2013, becoming the youngest driver in DTM history at the age of 18.[2] In a career spanning three seasons Wehrlein managed to be one of the leading drivers in the field despite his youthful age.
He qualified eighth for his debut race at the season opener in Hockenheim and led the race for 16 laps after an early safety car period, but dropped back to the midfield after his mandatory pit stop, finishing his first DTM race just outside the points in 11th.[18] He scored his first points with two 10th place finishes at the second and third round in Brands Hatch and Spielberg respectively. Wehrlein qualified a season best fifth at Norisring but had to retire from the race with rear axle problems after making contact with the wall.[19] Round seven at Nürburgring saw him achieve his first fastest lap and another 10th place finish in a race heavily affected by a sudden downpour of rain on the formation lap.[20] Wehrlein finished his rookie season 22nd in the championship.
In 2014, he switched teams to HWA where he became the youngest driver in the series history to claim pole position and win a race on route to 8th in the championship with 46 points collected. Besides his stand out victory at Lausitz, Wehrlein's second best result of the season was a fifth-place finish at Norisring.
In 2015, DTM returned to running two races per race weekend, resulting in 18 rounds in the 2015 championship. Due to the inconsistency of most teams and drivers, Wehrlein won the title easily, having scored in all rounds except for three. He achieved 5 podiums, one fastest lap and two wins. He is the first driver to win the championship having not claimed a pole position throughout his championship season while also being the youngest ever DTM champion.
Return to DTM (2018)
On 7 February 2018, it was announced that Wehrlein would return to DTM with Mercedes-AMG's HWA Team after Mercedes were unable to find him a seat in Formula One.[21][22] During the 2018 DTM season, Wehrlein achieved one podium and finished the championship in 8th.
On 14 September 2018, it was announced that after six seasons together, Wehrlein and Mercedes would part ways by the end of the 2018 season.[23][24]
Formula One
In September 2014, it was announced that Wehrlein would act as a reserve driver for the Mercedes F1 Team and was signed up to be their first junior driver.[25] He took part in preseason testing in Barcelona, driving for both Force India and Mercedes.
Manor (2016)
On 10 February 2016, it was announced that Wehrlein would make his F1 debut with Manor Racing. It is understood that Manor would receive access to Mercedes's wind tunnel in exchange for hiring Wehrlein.[26] He picked number 94, in reference to his birth year. Wehrlein scored his and Manor's only point of the season at the Austrian Grand Prix with a tenth-place finish.[27]
Sauber (2017)
On 16 January 2017, Wehrlein signed with Sauber.[28] He was forced to miss the first test in Barcelona due to an injury he sustained while competing in the Race of Champions.[29] He was replaced by Antonio Giovinazzi before returning for the second test at the same circuit.[30] Despite being fit to take part in the Australian Grand Prix, he later withdrew after participating in the first two practice sessions, with Giovinazzi replacing him for the rest of the race weekend.[31] On 3 April 2017, Sauber F1 announced Wehrlein would again be replaced by Giovinazzi for the 2017 Chinese Grand Prix.[32] He proceeded with entry into the following Bahrain Grand Prix, qualifying 13th and finishing the race in 11th.[33] He finished eighth in the Spanish Grand Prix after running a one-stop strategy. He did not lose a single one of the places he gained, although a five-second penalty for a pit entry violation cost him seventh to Carlos Sainz Jr.[34] His race at the Monaco Grand Prix ended when, on the 57th lap, Jenson Button tried to lunge down the inside at Portier but succeeded in flipping the Sauber onto its side against the barriers, necessitating another scan of his back.[35] He scored his second points finish of the season in the chaotic Azerbaijan Grand Prix after fighting hard with his teammate Marcus Ericsson for 10th position. This took his points tally to 5 points. Despite having beaten Ericsson in both qualifying and the majority of races, plus being the only driver who scored points for Sauber that season, on 2 December 2017, Sauber announced that Wehrlein would not be renewed for the 2018 season and that he would be replaced by Charles Leclerc.[36]
Ferrari development driver (2019–2020)
Wehrlein joined Ferrari as a simulator driver for the 2019 season.[37][38] He was retained for 2020[39] but did not continue the following year, citing his commitments as Porsche factory driver.[40]
Formula E
Mahindra Racing (2019–2020)
2018–19 season
Wehrlein moved to Formula E for the 2018–19 season, driving for Mahindra Racing alongside Jérôme D'Ambrosio.[41] He did not contest the opening round of the season in Diriyah, with Felix Rosenqvist replacing him, instead making his debut at the Marrakesh ePrix. Wehrlein earned his first pole position in just his third race in the series at the Mexico City ePrix.[42] In the race he crossed the finish line in second, 0.210s behind Lucas di Grassi after being overtaken in the last corner, but was given a 5-second time penalty for cutting a corner earlier in the race which relegated him to sixth position.[43] He set the fastest qualifying time in the qualifying session for the Paris ePrix, but he and teammate d'Ambrosio had their times disallowed for underweight cars, promoting Oliver Rowland to pole position.
2019–20 season
On 8 June 2020, Wehrlein announced his departure from the Mahindra team in a post on Instagram.[44]
TAG Heuer Porsche (2021–present)
2020–21 season
Wehrlein was signed up to drive for the Porsche Formula E team for the 2020-21 Formula E World Championship. Wehrlein replaced Neel Jani and partnered with fellow countryman André Lotterer.[45] Wehrlein took pole at the Puebla ePrix and crossed the finish line first, before being disqualified after his team failed to declare his tyre set.[46]
2021–22 season
Both drivers were retained for the 2021-22 season. Wehrlein took pole in the championship's third round at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez in Mexico City and went on to win the race, claiming his and Porsche's maiden Formula E victory as well as Porsche's first 1-2 finish, with Lotterer crossing the line in second place, making him the first black person and first person of colour to win a Formula E race.[47]
2022–23 season
For the 2023 season, Wehrlein remained with the German manufacturer, entering the Gen3 era alongside António Félix da Costa. His season began in style as, having finished second in the season opener in Mexico City, Wehrlein managed to charge through to victory during Race 1 in Diriyah after starting from ninth place.[48] Wehrlein continued his successful weekend in Saudi Arabia, winning the second race and taking the championship lead.[49][50] A fourth place in Hyderabad extended his advantage to Jake Dennis in the standings, however the German crashed out of the Cape Town ePrix on the opening lap, missing his braking point and colliding with the back of Sébastien Buemi's car.[51] Wehrlein went on to finish in the points in all remaining races, though he would fall back in the title battle with just one further podium coming in the form of a victory in Jakarta.[52] He and Porsche ended up fourth in the respective championships, as a perceived qualifying weakness was held responsible for the team losing to its customer Andretti.[53]
2023–24 season: World Champion
Wehrlein, Porsche, and da Costa returned for the 2024 season.[54] The German began strongly once again, scoring pole for the season-opener and securing the first win of the season at the Mexico City ePrix.[55] He then scored points in the subsequent four races, even taking pole at São Paulo.[56] The maiden Misano ePrix proved to be a double-edged sword for Wehrlein, who after crashing into Jean-Éric Vergne in race 1 profited from an energy miscalculation by Oliver Rowland and the Nissan team to inherit victory on the last lap.[57][58][59] Wehrlein took his third pole of the campaign at Monaco, though he dropped back to fifth in a dominant race for Jaguar.[60] Following a scrappy Berlin weekend, one in which Wehrlein came to blows multiple times with reigning champion Jake Dennis, the German finished second in the first race at Shanghai, losing the lead on the final lap to Mitch Evans but keeping second against Nick Cassidy with an aggressive defence that led to contact between the two cars.[61][62][63] On Sunday, a clash with Sam Bird forced Wehrlein to pit for a new front wing, leaving him to finish outside of the points.[64]
Wehrlein gained points against championship leader Cassidy with two top ten finishes at Portland, going into the final round at London with a 12-point deficit to the Kiwi.[65] During a frantic Saturday race Wehrlein battled past polesitter Evans to win the race, thus gaining the championship lead.[66] The following day, Wehrlein drove a conservative race, keeping himself between the two Jaguars of Evans and Cassidy for the majority of the contest. When Cassidy retired following a puncture and Evans missed his second attack mode activation, Wehrlein, who by that stage had been passed by Rowland for the race lead, was able to finish second, therefore clinching the title by being six points ahead of Evans.[67][68]
2024–25 season
Wehrlein and da Costa would continue with Porsche into the 2024–25 season.[69]
^Tischer, Alexander H.H. (3 October 2010). "Fahrer – Meisterschaftsstand"(PDF). Wige Performance (in German). ADAC. Archived from the original(PDF) on 19 October 2010. Retrieved 9 April 2012.
^"Mücke mit Wehrlein 2012 in der Euroserie" [Mücke with Wehrlein in the 2012 Euro Series]. Motorsport-Total.com (in German). Motorsport-Total.com GmbH. 23 December 2011. Archived from the original on 19 February 2012. Retrieved 23 December 2011.