Move over, Lewis Hamilton: An 18-year-old speed queen from Japan who is ruffling feathers in the male-dominated world of motor sport wants to take on the big boys in Formula One.
Once teased by fellow drivers and fans, Miki Koyama has silenced her critics by securing a full-time drive for the new Formula Four season, which is to begin its Japan Championship series in Okayama this weekend.
“I love speed,” Koyama told reporters in an interview during testing at Fuji Speedway. “There’s no sport like it. I got hooked on the thrill of it when I was little and I knew there was nothing else I wanted to do.”
“My dream is to be a Formula One racer,” she said, sitting in the cockpit of her car as mechanics tinkered with the engine. “I think it’s good to have big dreams. I’ll keep fighting until I get there.”
Koyama, who began in karting as a five-year-old after dabbling with tennis and karate, made her Formula Four debut last season with a handful of top-30 finishes.
“People ask me if it isn’t dangerous, but I’ve done nothing but race cars since I was little,” Koyama said after roaring down the home straight at 230kph against the backdrop of a snow-covered Mount Fuji. “That’s the best bit, it’s awesome”
“I was given a hard time when I first started, but I’ve always thought gender was irrelevant. If I get results, people will just stop noticing I’m a girl. I hate being called a girl,” she said.
Koyama lines up alongside 21-year-old Ayaka Imahashi for the Minami Aoyama team.
“My parents were against me racing at first because they said it was too dangerous, but they agreed to come and watch me race last year and finally gave me their blessing,” Imahashi said. “My mom was crying as she watched, she was so worried. She was just glad I finished in one piece.”
Neither Koyama nor Imahashi look like your average petrol-head, even in racing overalls.
However, neither gave an inch as they jostled with the men at Fuji.
“I don’t want to lose to the guys,” said Koyama, who used to clean racing cars just to be able to pick up tips. “They are there to be beaten, but obviously it’s important to get results.”
Japan has produced nine Formula One drivers to date, the most successful being Kamui Kobayashi, who raced for Toyota, Sauber and Caterham from 2009 to 2014.
Koyama and Imahashi are part of an exclusive club of female Japanese racers including Formula Three driver Ai Miura, Kumi Sato, who competed in last year’s 24-hour race at Nurburgring, and Keiko Ihara, who finished on the podium at the 2002 Macau Grand Prix.
Italian Lella Lombardi was the last woman to race in Formula One, in 1976, though women have driven in other major motor racing championships, notably in the US.
“I do think about the dangers,” Imahashi said, insisting nevertheless that the odd brush with disaster was not enough to dampen the adrenalin rush she gets from racing. “When you’re cornering at more than 100kph and you spin and hit a wall, yes, it’s dangerous, but I can’t get enough of the buzz you get.”
“I’ve crashed in practice, but it didn’t hurt that much,” she added. “You’re well protected and you don’t get shaken about too much.”
Imahashi and Koyama agree that the physical battering their bodies take is the most challenging aspect of the sport.
“Physically, women are built differently to men, so we have to train twice as hard to develop the strength in our legs for braking and our arms for steering under stress for 30 minutes,” said Imahashi, who follows a punishing daily gym routine.
“Hopefully if more women drivers actually begin to compete, people’s attitudes will change, but if we don’t get results, people will continue to think women are simply stealing the limelight or are just here for decoration” Imahashi said. “Once we start winning, they will see we’re serious and the jokes will stop.”
Unlike Imahashi — who claims she still does “girlie things like cook and make sweets” — Koyama spends most of her spare time with her car.
“I don’t have any heroes,” she said. “I just want to win. When I don’t, my mum and dad get angry at me and tell me to go faster.”
“There’s nothing like that blur of the world outside flashing past your field of vision. There are no words to describe it,” she said.
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