Ollie Hancock

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Ollie Hancock (born 25 August 1987) is a British racing driver. Hancock is the son of historic racing driver Anthony Hancock, and the younger brother of sportscar racer Sam Hancock.

Career

Formula Ford

Hancock was born in Windsor, Berkshire, and began karting at the age of eight. He competed in five races before having to give up because of a shortage of funds. In the meantime, he rode motorcycles around the Hancock family home.Template:Fact He eventually moved into single-seaters in 2003, competing in the winter series of the Classic Formula Ford 2000 championship, campaigning a Van Diemen RF82. He would go on to win the championship.

Hancock moved up into the series full-time in 2004, and would finish up second overall, just a point behind the champion; achieving four pole positions, a win and ten podiums in the process. He did not acquire a sufficient budget for the 2005 racing season, but instead of sitting out the whole season, Hancock chose to improve his technical ability by taking the No. 2 mechanic role at the Formula Renault UK team Welch Motorsport, in the hope of returning to racing in 2006. He did return to the series in 2006 but again finished as runner-up, despite three wins, three poles and podiums in every race.[1]

Formula Renault

Hancock moved up to the Formula Renault BARC Championship for 2007, competing for Mark Burdett Motorsport. He finished as the best rookie driver in the championship, in third overall, with two pole positions and a win all coming at Silverstone. He continued in the series in 2008, and dominated the championship, wrapping up the title with a round to spare. Five wins, three poles and six fastest laps allowed him to sit out the Silverstone finale, as he already had a 44-point lead over closest challenger Johannes Seidlitz.[2] During the season, the British Racing Drivers' Club awarded him with a Rising Star invitation to that particular scheme.[3]

Hancock planned to graduate the main Formula Renault UK championship for the season finale at Brands Hatch,[4] but decided to focus on his 2009 campaign instead. He raced in the first twelve rounds of the championship, before encountering budgetary troubles.[5] His best finish was fourth in the second race at Donington Park.[6]

Formula Two

Hancock moved up to the FIA Formula Two Championship starting with the rounds at Oschersleben. He replaced the late Henry Surtees in the championship, but did not drive his No. 7 machine.[7] He instead competed in car number 44.[8] He finished 25th in the championship, with no points.

Racing record

Career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles F/Laps Podiums Points Position
2003 Classic Formula Ford 2000 Winter Series 3 ? ? ? 1 ? ?
2003 Monoposto Racing Club (1800 class) 2 2 (class) 2 (class) 1 (class) 2 (class) 31 6th
2004 Classic Formula Ford 2000 ? 1 4 ? 10 ? 2nd
2006 Classic Formula Ford 2000 10 3 3 ? 10 ? 2nd
2007 Formula Renault BARC Mark Burdett Motorsport 12 1 2 1 4 85 3rd
Sports Racing Masters 1 0 1 0 0 ? ?
World Sportscar Masters 1 1 0 1 1 ? ?
2008 Formula Renault BARC Apotex Scorpio Motorsport 10 5 2 6 9 130 1st
Formula Renault UK Winter Series 3 0 0 0 0 41 10th
2009 FIA Formula Two Championship MotorSport Vision 6 0 0 0 0 0 25th
Formula Renault UK Apotex Scorpio Motorsport 12 0 0 0 0 64 22nd

Complete FIA Formula Two Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 DC Points
2009 VAL
1

VAL
2

BRN
1

BRN
2

SPA
1

SPA
2

BRH
1

BRH
2

DON
1

DON
2

OSC
1

10
OSC
2

18
IMO
1

Ret
IMO
2

11
CAT
1

18
CAT
2

18
25th 0

Complete 24 Hours of Le Mans results

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Pos.
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2021 Template:Flagicon TF Sport Template:Flagicon Ross Gunn
Template:Flagicon John Hartshorne
Aston Martin Vantage AMR GTE
Am
332 35th 8th

References

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External links

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  • Template:DriverDB driver
Sporting positions
Preceded byTemplate:S-bef/checkTemplate:Succession box/check Formula Renault BARC
Champion

2008 Template:S-ttl/check
Template:S-aft/check Succeeded by