Daniel Buxton
British racing driver (born 1977)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Danny Buxton (born abt. 1978)[1] is a British auto racing driver. He won the Ford Fiesta championship in 1997 and the National Championship in 2001. In 2003, he won the Renault Clio Cup. In 2011, co-founded Scuderia Vittoria. He worked with McLaren Automotive as its Head of the Professional Drive Team, before moving in October 2020 to Head of Customer Racing for McLaren Motorsport.
| Danny Buxton | |
|---|---|
| Nationality | |
| BTCC record | |
| Teams | VLR |
| Drivers' championships | 0 |
| Wins | 1 |
| Podium finishes | 3 |
| Poles | 0 |
| First win | n/a |
| Best championship position | 8th |
Career
In 1997, Buxton won the Ford Fiesta championship, before finishing third in the National Championship the following year. In 2000, he was runner up in the Renault Clio Cup, winning the championship a year later in 2001,[citation needed] with Jim Sugden Motorsport.[2] He drove in the championship for a third year in 2002 for Mardi Gras Motorsport, finishing third with four race wins.
In 2003, Buxton got a drive in the British Touring Car Championship for the Vic Lee ran Team Halfords in a Touring Class Peugeot 307. He joined the season at the halfway point with his first race at round eleven at Croft. He replaced Carl Breeze who had gone to GA Motorsport. He finished fourth in the independents championship with two wins.
In 2003, Buxton came from behind to win the Renault Clio Cup.[3][4]
From 2011, Buxton and fellow former BTCC driver Tom Ferrier formed Scuderia Vittoria, and entered a team in both the AirAsia Renault Clio Cup (4x Renault Clio Cup Cars) and the British GT (1x Ginetta G55, 1x Ferrari 458 Italia GT). At the conclusion of the 2011 season, the team had achieved 14 wins over both classes, in their debut season.
Buxton started working with McLaren Automotive in 2010, assisting on road car development. Then moved into the role as Head of the Professional Drive Team, before moving in October 2020 to Head of Customer Racing for McLaren Motorsport. His brother Will was also a racing driver, but today he works for F1TV.[citation needed]
Racing record
Complete British Touring Car Championship results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position - 1 point awarded in first race) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap - 1 point awarded all races) (* signifies that driver lead race for at least one lap - 1 point awarded all races)
| Year | Team | Car | Class | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | Pos | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | Team Halfords | Peugeot 307 | T | MON 1 |
MON 2 |
BRH 1 |
BRH 2 |
THR 1 |
THR 2 |
SIL 1 |
SIL 2 |
ROC 1 |
ROC 2 |
CRO 1 ovr:12 cls:12 |
CRO 2 Ret |
SNE 1 Ret |
SNE 2 Ret |
BRH 1 ovr:15 cls:15 |
BRH 2 ovr:14* cls:14 |
DON 1 ovr:13 cls:13 |
DON 2 ovr:15 cls:15 |
OUL 1 ovr:14 cls:14 |
OUL 2 Ret |
18th | 1 |