David Beckmann – Wikipedia

German racing driver

David Alexander Beckmann (born 27 April 2000) is a German professional racing driver currently competing as a substitute driver in Formula E with Avalanche Andretti Formula E.

Karting[edit]

Beckmann began karting in 2008, collecting major karting wins in 2009, 2012 and 2014. He remained in karting until 2014.[1]

Formula 4[edit]

In 2015, Beckmann graduated to single seaters in ADAC Formula 4 and Italian F4, racing with Mücke Motorsport. He ended the seasons fourth in Italian F4 and fifth in ADAC Formula 4, as well as taking the rookie championship in the latter.[1][2]

FIA European Formula 3 Championship[edit]

In December 2015, it was announced Beckmann would graduate to European Formula 3 for 2016, whilst continuing his collaboration with Mücke. On account of his age, Beckmann was forced to miss the first two rounds of the season, making his debut at the third round at Pau.[3] Nonetheless, Beckmann claimed a fastest lap and two podiums to finish seventh in the Rookie Championship and fifteenth overall. For 2017, Beckmann continued to race in European Formula 3, but switched to Van Amersfoort Racing.[4] After three rounds where he failed to score a point with the outfit, Beckmann made a mid-season change to Motopark where he fared better, amassing 45 points and ending up 16th in his second year in the category.[5]

GP3 Series[edit]

For 2018 Beckmann partnered Juan Manuel Correa and Tatiana Calderón at Jenzer Motorsport in the final year of the GP3 Series. Having scored 12 points after the fourth round of the championship, Beckmann switched over to Trident. His results improved drastically, and the German achieved three race wins as well as another podium, which led him to fifth in the standings.

FIA Formula 3 Championship[edit]

2019[edit]

In 2019, Beckmann competed for the French team ART Grand Prix in the newly formed FIA Formula 3 Championship.

2020[edit]

In 2020, he returned to Formula 3, this time with Trident, and finished sixth overall after two wins and four further podium finishes.

FIA Formula 2 Championship[edit]

2021[edit]

In 2021, Beckmann moved up to the FIA Formula 2 Championship with the Czech team Charouz Racing System, where was joined by Guilherme Samaia.[6] Throughout the first half of the season Beckmann showed impressive performances, such as a third-place finish in his debut race at Sakhir and second place in race 2 in Baku, which, along with two further points finishes, propelled him to 13th in the standings after four rounds.[7][8] At the start of September however it was announced Enzo Fittipaldi would replace Beckmann from the next round at Monza, due to the German having to shift his focus to the family business for financial issues.[9] But just a few days before the start of that weekend Beckmann signed up to race for Campos in place of Matteo Nannini.[10] He competed for the Spanish team in the next two rounds, scoring a best finish of fifth at Monza, although Beckmann would ultimately be unable to finish his season, being replaced by Olli Caldwell. The German ended the campaign 15th in the standings.

2022[edit]

In 2022, Beckmann originally made four cameo appearances, but had later been announced as a permanent driver. The first of which he drove for Charouz’s No. 23 car at Imola in place of Cem Bölükbaşı, finishing 8th in the feature race. He then drove for Van Amersfoort Racing’s No. 25 car at Silverstone in place of Amaury Cordeel. He would then compete again for the same team, but in the No. 24, at Le Castellet and Budapest in place of Jake Hughes.[11] However, Van Amersfoort Racing decided to replace Hughes with Beckmann for the rest of the season, starting at Spa-Francorchamps, thus his cameo deputization driver role would become a permanent driver role until the final round at Abu Dhabi, where he would be replaced by Juan Manuel Correa.[12]

Formula E[edit]

In February 2022, on the week of the Mexico City ePrix, Beckmann was announced to be the test and reserve driver of the Avalanche Andretti Formula E team.[13]

For the 2022-23 season, Beckmann continued his duties with Andretti, whilst also joining Porsche as a reserve driver.[14]

Avalanche Andretti Formula E (2023)[edit]

2022–23 season[edit]

Karting record[edit]

Karting career summary[edit]

Season Series Team Position
2008 ADAC Kart Masters — Bambini B 3rd
2009 DMV Landesmeisterschaft — Bambini B TR Racing 1st
ADAC Kart Bundesendlauf — Bambini B 11th
ADAC Kart Masters — Bambini B Hagen 1st
2010 ADAC Kart Masters — Bambini A Hagen 13th
2011 Euro Wintercup — KF3 4th
Belgian Championship — KF5 3rd
SKUSA SuperNationals — TaG Junior 19th
2012 Euro Wintercup — KF3 6th
Bridgestone Cup Europe — KF3 Keijzer Racing 1st
ADAC Kart Masters — KF3 10th
DMV Kart Championship — KF3 1st
2013 South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 4th
German Karting Championship — Junior Reenergys Racing Team 2nd
CIK-FIA International Super Cup — KFJ 23rd
WSK Super Master Series — KFJ Keijzer Racing 27th
WSK Final Cup — KFJ 14th
WSK Euro Series — KFJ Zanardi 3rd
CIK-FIA European Championship — KFJ 43rd
CIK-FIA World Championship — KFJ 25th
2014 South Garda Winter Cup — KF3 10th
German Karting Championship — Junior 1st
WSK Super Master Series — KFJ Energy Corse Srl 12th
CIK-FIA European Championship — KFJ Beckmann, Robin 5th
CIK-FIA World Championship — KFJ 28th
WSK Champions Cup — KFJ Ricky Flynn Motorsport 11th

Racing record[edit]

Racing career summary[edit]

* Season still in progress.

Complete Italian F4 Championship results[edit]

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

Complete ADAC Formula 4 Championship results[edit]

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

Complete FIA Formula 3 European Championship results[edit]

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

Complete Macau Grand Prix results[edit]

Complete GP3 Series results[edit]

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

Complete FIA Formula 3 Championship results[edit]

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers)

Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as he completed over 90% of the race distance.
Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.

Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results[edit]

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

References[edit]

External links[edit]