Japanese racing driver
Kiyoto Fujinami (藤波清斗, Fujinami Kiyoto, born 13 April 1995) is a Japanese professional racing driver who currently competes in Super GT for Team Mach. He is a two-time champion in the series, having won the GT300 class title with Kondō Racing in 2020 and 2022.
Career
Following success in karting, headlined by the 2010 CIK-FIA Asia Pacific KF2 Championship, Fujinami entered the Formula Challenge Japan in 2012 as a member of the Nissan Driver Development Programme (NDDP). He scored 2 points in his first season on the way to 13th in the championship. Returning for 2013, he scored 5 pole positions and 3 podiums over the 12 races, ending with 29 points and 6th in the championship.[citation needed]
Fujinami transitioned to sports car racing in 2014, racing in the ST-3 class of the Super Taikyu Series with Techno First Racing Team. He scored his first class win at Autopolis aboard the #34 Nissan Fairlady Z34. In 2015, Fujinami moved up to the ST-X (GT3) class with Team Mach, and won at Okayama in the #5 Nissan GT-R NISMO GT3. The entry was acquired by GTNET Motor Sports in 2016 where Fujinami continued to race in the ST-X class.[citation needed]
He helped lead GTNET Motor Sports to consecutive ST-X championships in 2018 and 2019, with overall victories in the Fuji Super TEC 24 Hours in each of these seasons. Fujinami added a third Fuji 24 Hours win in 2021.[citation needed]
For 2018, Fujinami returned to single-seaters with B-Max Racing in the Japanese Formula 3 Championship, but over seven races scored no points finishes.[1] He fared better in the 2019 F3 Asian Championship, with 14 points in three races for the team.[2][3]
Super GT (2017-2022, 2024)
Fujinami made his Super GT debut in 2017 with Team Mach, driving the #5 Toyota 86 MC (MC86). That season, he earned three points in seven races, and finished 22nd in the standings with a best finish of eighth at Autopolis. He did not receive a full season contract for 2018, but returned to Team Mach as a third driver at the Fuji GT 500 Mile Race.
Fujinami earned another part-time contract in 2019, this time driving for JLOC in their #87 Lamborghini Huracan GT3. At the Fuji GT 500 Mile Race, Fujinami, Andre Couto, and Tsubasa Takahashi took the GT300 class win, ending a five-year winless drought for JLOC.[4][5]
In 2020, Fujinami signed a full-time contract and won the Super GT GT300 class championship alongside Joao Paulo de Oliveira in their #56 Nissan GT-R. Fujinami and Oliveira won two races at Twin Ring Motegi and Fuji Speedway, securing a further podium and finishing with 71 points.[6] In 2021, Fujinami and Oliveira fell short of a repeat championship, despite winning at Okayama and two further podiums at Sugo and Motegi.[7][8][9] They finished second in the standings to the Subaru R&D Sport team of Takuto Iguchi and Hideki Yamauchi.
Fujinami continued racing with Oliveira and Kondo Racing in 2022.[10] For the second straight season, the pair won the opening round at Okayama and led the championship at the half way point of the season.[11] In the final round at Motegi, Fujinami and Oliveira won their second title in three years, despite Oliveira losing a wheel late in the race. They won the championship after championship rival Riki Okusa's teammate Ryuichiro Tomita conceded fifth place on the last lap.[12]
After missing the 2023 season entirely, Fujinami returned to Super GT in 2024 with Team Mach alongside new co-driver Yusuke Shiotsu.[13]
2022-23 off-season controversy
After two championships in three seasons, Fujinami tested a Nissan Z GT500 at Fuji Speedway in December 2022.[14] Fujinami then joined Kondo Racing for a private manufacturers test in their GT500 car on 24 January at Suzuka Circuit, with the expectation that he would be named as a GT500 driver for the upcoming season.[15] But when Nissan announced its 2023 driver line-ups, Fujinami was omitted from the list of drivers.[16]
It later emerged that Fujinami, who also owns a privateer team called KF Motorsports that competes in the FCR-Vita Series, had physically attacked a member of his team.[17] On 17 February, the same day that Nissan confirmed Teppei Natori as his replacement at the Kondo Racing GT300 team,[18] Fujinami apologised for the incident through his social media accounts. Fujinami signed a reserve driver contract with Nissan for the 2023 season, and was retained at GTNET Motor Sports in the Super Taikyu Series.[19] He left Nissan after the 2023 season, ending a 12-year affiliation with the manufacturer.
Racing record
Career summary
‡ Teams' standings.
Complete Super GT results
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
References