JJ Lehto

Driver

Birthday January 31, 1966

Birth Sign Aquarius

Birthplace Espoo, Finland

Age 58 years old

Nationality Finland

#54842 Most Popular

1966

Jyrki Juhani Järvilehto (born 31 January 1966), better known as "JJ Lehto", is a Finnish racing driver.

1982

He was a protégé of Finnish 1982 Formula One World Champion Keke Rosberg, who first suggested that Jyrki Järvilehto should abbreviate his name to the more manageable JJ Lehto.

Like many racing drivers Lehto began in karts at age 8, winning numerous events, before graduating to Formula Ford at the early age of 15.

A switch to single seaters saw him dominate the Scandinavian Formula Ford.

1989

In 1989 Lehto drove in Formula 3000, again for Pacific Racing.

The season was not successful and he failed to score any podium finishes.

He did not participate in the last race which was held in Dijon-Prenois.

In 1989 Lehto tested for Ferrari before making his Formula One debut for the Onyx team as a late-season replacement for Bertrand Gachot.

Though he failed to prequalify for his first race at Estoril he impressed with his speed in the tough sessions and made his first start in the following meeting.

In the wet season finale at Adelaide he ran as high as 5th before retiring with waterlogged electrics.

Over the summer Onyx were sold to Swiss racer turned businessman Peter Monteverdi.

Lehto, marked by many as a star of the future, was paired with Gregor Foitek but financial difficulties hampered his season, leading to the team's withdrawal after the Hungarian Grand Prix (one of five events the Finn failed to qualify for – though he had been hindered by the team's poor preparation, including a driveshaft being fitted the wrong way around for several meetings, and favouritism towards Foitek, whose father was involved with the buyout).

1990

Due to poor results in 1990 the cars had to prequalify but soon established themselves as decent midfield runners.

In the wet San Marino Grand Prix Lehto impressed by lasting in a race of attrition to finish 3rd, scoring his first F1 points.

He impressed elsewhere but did not score again through poor reliability and bad luck (only finishing on four other occasions).

1991

For 1991 he was signed by the ambitious Scuderia Italia team, financed by Beppe Lucchini with a Dallara chassis, Judd V10 engines and Emanuele Pirro in the second car.

1992

He stayed with the team in 1992, now paired with Pierluigi Martini and using Ferrari V12 engines but the new Dallara B192 chassis had severe handling problems.

Lehto's best result was 7th at Spa, his worst a failure to qualify at the Hungaroring.

1993

He landed the second seat (alongside Austrian Karl Wendlinger) at the new, much-anticipated Sauber team for 1993, running Ilmor engines.

The season started very well as Lehto survived a late downpour at Kyalami to score 5th place on the team's debut, then finished 4th at Imola despite a late engine failure.

However, after a collision with Wendlinger at Monaco his relationship with both his teammate and Sauber became frosty and his season tailed off with no more points scored.

1994

For 1994 he saw off competition from Michele Alboreto and Luca Badoer to land the second seat at Benetton alongside Michael Schumacher.

However, he injured his neck testing the new B194 in pre-season with test driver Jos Verstappen taking his place for the first two rounds of the championship.

Lehto returned to the cockpit for the ill-fated San Marino Grand Prix despite some question marks over his fitness.

He qualified 5th but stalled on the grid, his car being struck from behind by Pedro Lamy's Lotus.

Despite running 3rd in Spain before an engine failure and scoring a point in Canada (after the disqualification of Christian Fittipaldi) it was clear his injuries had not healed fully and he was replaced once again by Verstappen for the French Grand Prix.

He returned to the cockpit for the Italian and Portuguese rounds in place of the suspended Schumacher but did not impress and was released entirely soon afterwards when the team signed Johnny Herbert.

This freed him up to drive in the last two rounds for Sauber – Wendlinger's injuries from an accident in practice before the 1994 Monaco GP had failed to heal and his previous replacement Andrea de Cesaris was unreachable.

1995

He won the 24 Hours of Le Mans twice, in 1995 and 2005.

He is also a former Formula One driver.

After his Formula One career stalled, and advised by his manager Keke Rosberg, Lehto joined the German Touring Car Championship, DTM, in 1995 and 1996.

Even though rated highly, victories eluded him, but this loss was probably made up by his successes in GT and sports car racing.

He was a late addition to the 1995 edition of the 24 Hours of Le Mans in a McLaren F1 GTR, but he won the race outright, at his third attempt, sharing the car with Yannick Dalmas and Masanori Sekiya.

Lehto was an integral part of the win, gaining the lead for the team by driving a few stints during the rainy night.

While others were driving cautiously, Lehto was seen to be sliding the car, lapping at times 30sec faster than everyone else.

He had three more guest appearances in the same car the next year, winning another race, before he got picked up by BMW to join the factory squad in the inaugural FIA GT season, partnering Steve Soper.

Even though success came initially easily, including a win in front of his home crowd at the Thunder In Helsinki event, the might of Mercedes-Benz caught up with the McLarens and left Lehto conceding the title to former DTM rival Bernd Schneider.

1998

After an unsuccessful 1998 campaign as a Mercedes-Benz factory driver in the American-based single-seater CART series with Team Hogan, Lehto stayed Stateside but returned to the BMW camp, which entered their V12 LMR sportscar racer in the American Le Mans Series, ALMS.

Even though he ended up winning four races, Lehto lost the title on the account of a formality (he was not awarded the points gained for winning the 12 Hours of Sebring because he did not have an American racing license at that time).

2000

He then won the British and European Formula 2000 championship in 1987 and went on to win the coveted British Formula 3 title in 1988, driving for Pacific Racing.