Susie Wolff height-Former Scottish racing driver, Suzanne Wolff was born on December 6, 1982, in Oban, Scotland.
How tall is Susie Wolff?
Susie Wolff stands at a height of 5ft 6 inches or 168 centimeters/1.68 meters and weighs 53kg or 123lb.
Susie Wolff career
At the tender age of eight, Wolff entered her first karting competition and won the British Woman Kart Racing Driver of the Year award in 1996.
She participated in and won the majority of the karting classes in 1997. She won the Scottish Junior Intercontinental “A” and Scottish Open Junior Intercontinental “A” classes, finished first in the 24-hour Middle East Kart Championship, and was once again awarded British Woman Kart Racing Driver of the Year.
After advancing from kart racing to single-seater racing in 2001, Wolff participated in the Formula Renault Winter Series as a member of the Motaworld Racing team and earned her first taste of the action.
The next year, she returned to represent Motaworld in the Formula Renault Winter Series and made her debut in the entire Formula Renault UK Championship for DFR Racing.
As one of the finalists for the coveted BRDC McLaren Autosport Young Driver of the Year Award, Wolff achieved her first podium position in the 2003 season by finishing ninth overall in the Formula Renault UK Championship. In addition, Wolff won the title of BRDC Rising Star of the Year.
Wolff progressed to the British Formula 3 Championship in 2005, where he was a Championship Class competitor for Alan Docking Racing.
An ankle ailment she had in the winter interfered with her season. In June, Wolff also participated in a single race at Brands Hatch, the Porsche Carrera Cup GB.
Wolff started racing in the DTM in 2006. Driving a 2004-spec Mercedes-Benz C-Class Coupe for Mücke Motorsport, she finished her rookie season with a best finish of ninth overall in the Hockenheimring final round.
Wolff was announced as a development driver for the Williams Formula One team on April 11, 2012. Wolff will participate in two free practice sessions at the British and German Grand Prix, Williams announced in 2014.
Wolff made history during the British Grand Prix at Silverstone, being the first female participant in a Formula One weekend since Giovanna Amati’s three failed efforts at Grand Prix qualification in 1992.
Williams revealed on November 28, 2014, that Wolff would remain with the team in 2015, taking on a more advanced role as a test driver and participating in two test trips and two Friday practice runs.
Wolff, who had participated in Formula One pre-season testing, completed a 1:29.708 lap in the Spanish Grand Prix’s first practice session. He then returned to the cockpit for the British Grand Prix, where he finished in 13th place out of 20 cars with a 1:37.242 time.
As part of his ambassadorship with Mercedes, Wolff tested the Mercedes-AMG One before anyone else did in 2016.
Wolff became a shareholder in Venturi Racing and joined the Formula E squad as a team principal in 2018. Venturi and Mercedes-EQ partnered on powertrains for the 2019–20 season.
The 2020–21 season was the most successful for the Monegasque team under Wolff’s leadership, with 146 points, with Edoardo Mortara finishing second in the Drivers’ World Championship, trailing the winner Nyck de Vries by just seven points.
She was elevated to the position of CEO in November 2021, and Jérôme d’Ambrosio was named Team Principal for the 2021–2022 campaign.
She declared her intention to leave Venturi in August 2022, citing the team’s intention to change its name to Maserati MSG Racing starting in the 2022–2023 season.
Wolff was named managing director of the recently established F1 Academy, an all-female racing series, on March 1, 2023.
Source: www.Ghgossip.com
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