RACING DRIVER

Hideki Noda

1969 - Today

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Hideki Noda (野田 英樹, Noda Hideki; born 7 March 1969) is a Japanese professional racing driver. He participated in three Formula One Grands Prix, debuting in the 1994 European Grand Prix, but did not score any championship points. He replaced Yannick Dalmas in the Larrousse car for the last three Grands Prix of the season, but failed to finish in any of the three races. In 1995, he joined Simtek as a test driver, hoping to get some races in. Read more on Wikipedia

His biography is available in 19 different languages on Wikipedia. Hideki Noda is the 894th most popular racing driver (down from 834th in 2024), the 2,676th most popular biography from Japan (down from 2,002nd in 2019) and the 26th most popular Japanese Racing Driver.

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Among RACING DRIVERS

Among racing drivers, Hideki Noda ranks 894 out of 1,080Before him are Yvan Muller, Franco Morbidelli, Paul di Resta, Jörg Müller, Carl Edwards, and Charles Pic. After him are Emilio Alzamora, Juuso Pykälistö, Jordi Gené, Anthoine Hubert, Felipe Nasr, and Dan Wheldon.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1969, Hideki Noda ranks 731Before him are Elvis Brajković, Xu Xing, Conan Stevens, Rick Fox, Jörg Müller, and James DeMonaco. After him are Ken Doherty, Jesús Ángel García Bragado, Dylan Neal, Robert Změlík, Taro Goto, and Stig Inge Bjørnebye.

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In Japan

Among people born in Japan, Hideki Noda ranks 2,676 out of 6,245Before him are Yoshiki Okamura (1977), Yoshiharu Habu (1970), Takako Shirai (1952), Issei Yoshimi (1982), Hayato Ochi (1982), and Sumire Uesaka (1991). After him are Toru Oniki (1974), Nobuhide Akiba (1985), Tomoyuki Sakai (1979), Ryoji Ikeda (1966), Kyogo Furuhashi (1995), and Genki Ishisaka (1993).

Among RACING DRIVERS In Japan

Among racing drivers born in Japan, Hideki Noda ranks 26Before him are Shinji Nakano (1971), Tetsuya Harada (1970), Kazuto Sakata (1966), Toranosuke Takagi (1974), Noriyuki Haga (1975), and Shoya Tomizawa (1990). After him are Tohru Ukawa (1973), Toshi Arai (1966), Hiroshi Aoyama (1981), Shinya Nakano (1977), Makoto Tamada (1976), and Haruchika Aoki (1976).