Inès at Le Mans
Inès Taittinger is best known for her appearance at Le
Mans in 2016. She mostly races sportscars in her native France.
She made her debut in 2009,
driving a Ligier prototype in the VdeV championship, at Magny-Cours. This was
her only race of the year, and she was 22nd, driving the car with
her father, Hugues. They were sixteenth in class. She had been encouraged by
her godfather, Philippe Alliot, who had let her drive a Ferrari a few years
earlier.
She continued in this car in 2010,
supported by the Blue One team, and scored her first points at Aragon. She
entered five races that year. In the first race, at Jarama, she and Hugues
finished, but were unclassified. Inès did not race at Mugello, but was eleventh
overall at Aragon, tenth in class. Another non-classified finish followed at
Lédenon, then a line-up change for the Paul Ricard race gave her a fourteenth
place. Olivier Dupard partnered her instead of Hugues. Back together with her
father, she did not finish at Dijon. Blue One entered two Ligiers at
Magny-Cours, and Inès was seventeenth,
with Philippe Alliot and David Tuchbant. The last round, at Estoril, led to
another DNF.
In 2011, she remained in VdeV,
driving another Ligier JS51 for two rounds, for Springbox Concept this time.
She and Amandine Foulard were nineteenth overall at Dijon, seventh in the Open
class. At Magny-Cours they were tenth and third in class, one above Hugues in a
similar car.
Driving for a different team, she
also raced a Formula Renault in the VdeV series’ Monoplace (single-seater)
Challenge, at Magny-Cours. She took part in three races, with a best finish of
seventeenth.
Away from VdeV, she drove in the
SPEED Euroseries for Springbox, partnering Amandine Foulard in a Ligier again
for four rounds, at Paul Ricard and Silverstone. Their best finish was seventh,
at Paul Ricard, and they were 49th in the championship.
2012 proceeded in a similar
manner, with Springbox, although the car had been updated to a Ligier JS53. She
raced at Dijon and Paul Ricard, sharing the car with Amandine Foulard and
Jonathan Cochet respectively. She and Amandine were twentieth, but Inès and Jonathan
Cochet did not finish. In the SPEED Euroseries, she entered the Paul Ricard and
Spa races, four in all. She was eighth at Paul Ricard and ninth at Spa, leaving
her in 37th in the championship.
For 2013, she returned to VdeV
full-time, in the modern Endurance Challenge. Her car was a Norma prototype,
run by CD Sport, and her team-mate was Kvin
Bole-Besancon. She started well, qualifying second at Catalunya, and finishing
in eighth place. Despite qualifying quite well at Mugello and Paul Ricard, she
did not finish at either circuit. She and her team-mates were then sixth at
Dijon, and an impressive third in the Aragon 12-hour race. Inès finished the
season with a sixth at Magny-Cours and a fifteenth place at Estoril. She and Kvin
Bole-Besancon were eighth in the championship.
As well as a full season in VdeV,
she took part in the TTE touring car series, which confusingly has a prototype
class. She won one race at Albi in the Norma, and was third in a six-hour race
at Magny-Cours. Proving that she had a taste for real endurance, she drove in
the Fun Cup 25 Hours at Spa, as part of a six-driver Kronos Racing team that
included Margot
Laffite.
She drove the CD Sport Norma in
VdeV again, in 2014. Her season started well enough with ninth at Barcelona. By
the fourth round, at Dijon, she was really getting into her stride, and was
third overall. She was then a disappointing 23rd at Aragon, where
she had run so well the year before. A little later, she was back on the podium
at Magny-Cours, with second place. Her inconsistent but not bad season was
enough for thirteenth in the championship.
2015 was the year that she started
setting her career sights higher. She stated her aim to race at Le Mans in
2016. For the past few seasons, she had been working on her fitness and
stamina, which had paid off in VdeV. Grabbing any chance she could for a Le
Mans race seat, she signed up for a racing reality TV show called “Race to 24”,
where the prize for the winning driver was to compete at the Sarthe classic.
The show never made it into production, but Inès used the publicity generated
to raise her public profile, with several TV appearances. This made her a more
attractive prospect for sponsors, especially when public reaction to her was
very positive.
She did do some racing in 2015,
competing for CD Sport in VdeV, in the Norma again. Barcelona was a forgettable
race for her and her team-mates, and Mugello was slightly more encouraging,
despite being far from what Inès was capable of doing. Things improved at Dijon
with an eighth place, but then she did not finish at Paul Ricard. The season
ended well, with sixth place at Magny-Cours and tenth at Estoril. She was 23rd
in the championship.
Everything changed at the start of
the 2016 season. Inès left the CD Sport set-up and joined Pegasus Racing. Her
former team-mate, Amandine Foulard, had been part of the team for some time a
few seasons ago. She would be racing a Nissan-engined Morgan in the LMP2 class,
both in the European Le Mans Series and at Le Mans itself. Her team-mates were
Léo Roussel and Rémy Striebig. In interviews, she stated that her aim for 2016
was to learn, and it was certainly a tough beginning to the season, when the
car only lasted 90 laps at Silverstone, after setting some strong times. She
was twelfth at Imola, again setting very competitive lap times. The Austrian
round was another disappointment, retiring after 123 laps. A seventeenth place
at Paul Ricard was a little more promising. Her best finish in the LMP2 class was eighth, at Estoril, and she was 21st in the championship.
Inès’s individual performance at
Le Mans itself was barely criticised, but during one of her stints, the Morgan
caught fire, meaning a risky trip back to the pits and instant retirement.
Still, she was the only Frenchwoman to race that year, and her profile was
higher than ever, which bodes well for future sponsorship.
In October, she returned to the VdeV series for two races, in the Norma. She was eighth at Magny-Cours, and seventeenth at Estoril.
She did not come back to Le Mans in 2017, but she did race in VdeV again, in the Norma. It was a competent year, with a best finish of fifth at Jarama. Portimao, where she was sixth, was her other best circuit.
At the start of 2019 she attempted to resurrect her career via the all-female W Series, but she was rejected after the first selection event.
In October, she returned to the VdeV series for two races, in the Norma. She was eighth at Magny-Cours, and seventeenth at Estoril.
She did not come back to Le Mans in 2017, but she did race in VdeV again, in the Norma. It was a competent year, with a best finish of fifth at Jarama. Portimao, where she was sixth, was her other best circuit.
At the start of 2019 she attempted to resurrect her career via the all-female W Series, but she was rejected after the first selection event.
She did get back on track in 2021, racing in the Le Mans Cup. Her car was a Nissan-engined ADESS-03 Evo LMP3 prototype run by Revere Racing. Her only appearance in the car was at Le Mans,
Throughout her racing career, she
has supported the French charity, Mécénat Chirurgie Cardiaque, which helps
children born with heart defects. This is a cause close to her own heart, as
she was born with cardiac problems herself. This has not stopped her from
pursuing a sporting career at the highest level.
(Image copyright Frédéric Veille)
This is the first time that I have heard of the VW FunCup - a rolling start with over 120 Beetles is an amazing site!
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