Tadasuke Makino

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

NationalityJapan Japanese
Born (1997-06-28) 28 June 1997 (age 28)
Osaka, Japan
Debut season2016
Current teamTeam Kunimitsu
Tadasuke Makino
Makino in 2024
NationalityJapan Japanese
Born (1997-06-28) 28 June 1997 (age 28)
Osaka, Japan
Super GT - GT500 career
Debut season2016
Current teamTeam Kunimitsu
Racing licence FIA Gold
Car number100
Former teamsDrago Corse, Nakajima Racing
Starts59
Wins4
Podiums16
Poles3
Fastest laps2
Best finish1st in 2020
Super Formula career
Debut season2019
Current teamDocomo Team Dandelion Racing
Car number5
Former teamsNakajima Racing
Starts60
Wins4
Podiums17
Poles4
Fastest laps0
Best finish3rd in 2024
Previous series
2018
2017
2016
2015
FIA Formula 2 Championship
FIA European F3
All-Japan F3 Championship
F4 Japanese Championship
Championship titles
2020Super GT

Tadasuke Makino (牧野任祐, Makino Tadasuke; born 28 June 1997) is a Japanese racing driver for Honda Motor Company who currently competes in Super GT for Team Kunimitsu and in the Super Formula Championship for Dandelion Racing. A feature race winner in the FIA Formula 2 Championship during his time abroad in junior categories, Makino has competed in the top level of Japan's domestic racing scene since 2019. Alongside teammate Naoki Yamamoto, he won the GT500 class championship in Super GT in 2020.[1]

Early career

Makino started karting in 2004 at the Kansai Kartland circuit in Sakai and made his race debut the following year. He remained in karting until 2013, winning the All-Japan Karting Championship's FS-125 class in 2011 and making his international karting debut during the same year.

In 2014, Makino stepped up to formula racing, entering the Okayama series of the entry-level Super FJ category as well as select races in JAF Formula 4. He would go on to dominate Super FJ and JAF F4 for the next two years, winning all but one race he competed in against the likes of Yūki Nemoto and Shunsuke Kohno.

Formula 4

In 2015, Makino made the move to Japan's new official Formula 4 Championship, and raced for the Rn-sports team. He won four of the championship's first five races at the Okayama International Circuit and Fuji Speedway (both two wins) straight away, but then had to wait until the final race weekend at Twin Ring Motegi to add two more wins to his name. At the end of the season, he finished second with 192 points, just three points fewer than eventual champion Sho Tsuboi.[citation needed]

Formula 3

In 2016, Makino made his Formula 3 debut in the Japanese Formula 3 Championship as a driver from Honda's training program. In this he raced for the TODA Racing team. He took four podiums and was fifth in the championship with 41 points. At the end of the season, he competed in three races of the Super GT for Drago Modulo Honda Racing GT500, taking one podium finish alongside Hideki Mutoh at the Chang International Circuit. He also drove for Toda Racing in the Grand Prix of Macau, in which he finished fourteenth.[citation needed]

In 2017 Makino continued to drive in Formula 3, but made the switch to the European Formula 3 Championship as a driver for Hitech GP. He had a difficult start to the season, scoring only twice in the first half of the year before breaking his wrist and finger in an accident with Harrison Newey at the Norisring. Despite his injury, he only missed the race weekend at Spa-Francorchamps. After his return, he regularly finished in the top-ten with a podium finish at the Red Bull Ring as the highlight. In the end, he finished fifteenth in the final standings with 57 points.[citation needed]`

Formula 2

Makino at the 2018 Monza Formula 2 round

In 2018, Makino made his Formula 2 debut with the Russian Time team.[2] He scored points regularly until he surprisingly won the feature race at the Monza in the second half of the season thanks to good strategy. He finished thirteenth in the standings with 48 points.

Super Formula

In 2019, Makino returned to Japan to participate in the Super Formula for the team Nakajima Racing. In the end of 2020, Makino suffered from meningitis and thus skipped the Super Formula finale, where he was replaced by Hiroki Otsu.[3] For the 2021 season, Makino moved from Nakajima Racing to Dandelion Racing. But he did not enter the first two rounds, due to still being in healing phase, which meant Ukyo Sasahara covered for him in those races. Makino returned at the third round in Autopolis. Makino then stayed with the same team till now and he grabbed couple of podiums every year.

Makino at the 2025 Super GT Malaysia Festival

Super GT

In 2019, Makino stepped up to Super GT GT500 along with his Super Formula program. He competed with Nakajima Racing alongside Narain Karthikeyan. The next season he replaced Jenson Button as he competed with Team Kunimitsu alongside former GT500 title winner Naoki Yamamoto. Both Yamamoto and Makino won the Super GT title, beating Ryo Hirakawa in the last race. Makino continued racing with the team for the next couple of seasons, but had to skip one round due to illness in 2021 and was covered by Hideki Mutoh.

Karting record

Karting career summary

Season Series Team Position
2006 SL Osaka Series - Comer 2nd
M4 All-Japan Championship - Cadets 1st
2007 SL Biwako Series - Yamaha Junior 1st
SL Osaka Series - Yamaha Junior 1st
M4 WEST Series - Cadets 1st
2008 SL All-Japan Kart Meeting - TIA Junior 1st
2010 JAF Junior Karting Championship - FP-Jr Akiland R 5th
2011 All-Japan Karting Championship - FS-125 Akiland Racing 1st
Rotax Max Euro Challenge — Junior Intrepid Force Rotax 31st
Rotax Max Challenge Grand Finals — Junior EIKO Japan 29th
WSK Final CupKF3 Tony Kart Racing Team 14th
2012 All-Japan Karting Championship - KF1 TOYOTA/YAMAHA RT 4th
Rotax International Open — Senior 33rd
IAME International Final — X30 Senior 18th
Rotax Max Euro Challenge — Senior 19th
CIK-FIA Asia Pacific Championship — KF2 25th
2013 All-Japan Karting Championship - KF1 TOYOTA/YAMAHA RT 6th
Florida Winter Tour — Rotax Senior 5th
CIK-FIA Asia Pacific Championship — KF TAKAGI PLANNING 19th
2014 All-Japan Karting Championship - KF ADVAN HIROTEX RACING 26th

Racing record

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI