Van Kalmthout started karting in 2009. The eight-year-old won races in the 4-stroke cadet championship with a DR chassis. He finished second in the championship.[1] During the 2009-2010 winter season Van Kalmthout won the 4-stroke cadet series. The following season the young driver graduated into the Briggs & Stratton World Formula 4-stroke class winning the Dutch and Benelux championships.[2][3] He also focused on the Rotax Max Minimax class winning the Dutch championship in 2012 and Junior championship in 2013.[4][5] Throughout 2014 and 2015 van Kalmthout raced in various Rotax Max racing series. He finished second in the Rotax Max Euro Challenge Senior class, behind Australian driver Pierce Lehane.[6]
After winning the 2018 Pro Mazda Championship with Juncos Racing, VeeKay stepped up to the Indy Lights championship for 2019 again with Juncos Racing.[9] He finished second in the championship, again behind Askew.
IndyCar Series
In July 2019 it was announced that VeeKay would join the IndyCar test at Portland with Ed Carpenter Racing.[10] On 20 November the team officially signed him as the replacement for Spencer Pigot.[11]
In his first IndyCar race in the Genesys 300 at Texas Motor Speedway he crashed in practice. He missed qualifying as the team couldn't fix the car in time. In the race, he crashed out on lap 38 and collected Alex Palou. At Iowa Speedway, confusion over a postponed restart led Colton Herta to launch over VeeKay's car from the rear; both drivers were unharmed due to a new laminate aeroscreen introduced for 2020.[12] VeeKay achieved his first top 5 finish in IndyCar at the IndyGP[citation needed] and his first podium in the Harvest GP. He was confirmed for a return to ECR in 2021 on October 25, 2020.[13] He won the Indy GP, scoring his first win, 5 seconds ahead of second-placed Romain Grosjean. VeeKay ran as high as fourth place in the championship after back to back top ten finishes including a second-place finish in Detroit before he fractured his clavicle during a cycling accident, forcing him to miss the following race at Road America.[14] After the season VeeKay and ECR announced he had re-signed with the team for another season.
Shortly after the 2024 season, in which VeeKay placed 13th in the championship with a best race finish of 5th, it was reported by Racer that Ed Carpenter Racing had cut ties with VeeKay. Reportedly, the decision came as a "surprise" to VeeKay, who was actively negotiating a contract extention with the team.[15]
Karting record
Karting career summary
Season
Series
Team
Position
2009
Dutch 4-Stroke Sprint Championship — Cadet 160
4th
Dutch Championship — Mini
14th
Chrono Dutch Rotax Max Challenge — Micro Max
13th
2010
Chrono Rotax Max Winter Cup — Micro Max
6th
Dutch 4-Stroke Winter Championship — Rookie
1st
Dutch 4-Stroke Sprint Championship — Cadet 160
Redeker Racing Team
2nd
Chrono Dutch Rotax Max Challenge — Micro Max
15th
2011
Euro Wintercup — Rotax Mini Max
Team TKP
3rd
Dutch 4-Stroke Sprint Championship — World Formula
Speedsupport
1st
Benelux 4-Stroke Sprint Championship — World Formula
† As van Kalmthout was a guest driver, he was ineligible for points. ‡ Points only counted towards the Michelin Endurance Cup, and not the overall LMP2 Championship.
* Season still in progress.