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Ana Beatriz

Ana Beatriz Caselato Gomes de Figueiredo, known as both Ana Beatriz and Bia Figueiredo (born March 18, 1985), is a racing driver from Brazil. Figueiredo has previously raced in the IndyCar Series and Stock Car Brasil, and was the first woman to win a race in the Indy Lights series.


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Ana Beatriz
Figueiredo in 2023
Brazilian
Ana Beatriz Caselato Gomes de Figueiredo (1985-03-18) March 18, 1985São Paulo, Brazil
FIA Gold (until 2018) FIA Silver (2019–)
29 races run over 4 years
29th
21st (2011)
2010 São Paulo Indy 300 (São Paulo)
2013 Iowa Corn Indy 250 (Iowa)
Wins
Podiums
Poles

0 0 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | | 0 | 0 | 0 | | | Statistics up to date as of March 31, 2014. | | | | | | | | | | 2008 Firestone Indy Lights Rookie of the Year2003 Formula Renault 2.0 Brazil Rookie of the Year | | | |

Ana Beatriz Caselato Gomes de Figueiredo, known as both Ana Beatriz and Bia Figueiredo (born March 18, 1985), is a racing driver from Brazil. Figueiredo has previously raced in the IndyCar Series and Stock Car Brasil, and was the first woman to win a race in the Indy Lights series.

Figueiredo started her career in karting at the age of eight.

At the age of twelve, racing coach Nailor Campos – who had previously worked with Tony Kanaan, Rubens Barrichello, Enrique Bernoldi and Andre Ribeiro – became her coach and chief mechanic. When Figueiredo's family could no longer fund her racing endeavors at the age of 15, Campos helped her attain sponsorship from the Medley pharmaceutical company, owned by former racer Xandy (Pollini) Negrão, father of racer Alexandre Sarnes Negrão.

With formal sponsorship, Figueiredo finished as runner-up in a variety of karting championships and won the Sorriso Petrobrás Kart Cup championship in 2003.

After three seasons in the Brazilian Formula Renault championship, Figueiredo started competing in Formula Three Sudamericana in 2006, driving for the Cesario Formula team. In 2006, she also drove a Volkswagen Touareg for PPD Sports, owned by Pedro Diniz.

Ana driving in the Firestone Freedom 100 in 2008

In 2008, De Figueiredo began racing in the American Indy Lights Series for defending championship-winning team Sam Schmidt Motorsports under the name Ana Beatriz. Prior to racing in the United States, she was referred to as "Bia" (a nickname for Beatriz), not Ana, causing some confusion in the media.

De Figueiredo placed fifth in the Freedom 100 at Indianapolis Motor Speedway on 23 May 2008, the highest finishing position by a female driver in that race. On 12 July 2008, she led the most laps and won her first Indy Lights race at Nashville Superspeedway, becoming the first woman to win a race in Indy Lights.

De Figueiredo was awarded Rookie of the Year honors as well as the Tony Renna Rising Star Award.

De Figueiredo returned to the No. 20 Sam Schmidt car for 2009. She was forced to miss the Milwaukee Mile race following a hard crash in the Freedom 100 the prior week. On 20 June 2009, De Figueiredo won her second Indy Lights race at Iowa Speedway. She skipped the final race of the season due to funding issues, finishing eighth in points despite missing the two races.

Bia at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway in May 2010.

De Figueiredo's official Portuguese language site revealed on 23 February 2010 that she would drive a third car for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing in the São Paulo Indy 300 in March 2010. Further participation in the 2010 IndyCar Series season was confirmed and announced on May 12, 2010. De Figueiredo qualified for the 2010 Indianapolis 500 but was involved in an accident with Ryan Hunter-Reay and teammate Mike Conway on the final lap of the race.

For the 2011 IndyCar Series season, De Figueiredo competed full-time for Dreyer & Reinbold Racing in the No. 24 car. De Figueiredo broke her wrist in the opening laps of the first race at St. Petersburg, causing her to miss the next race and requiring her to compete with a brace for the large part of the season.

On March 8, 2012, De Figueiredo tested for Andretti Autosport, driving James Hinchcliffe's car No. 27 during a session of the open test at Sebring, with an eye to her running that team's fourth car at April's IndyCar Series event in her home town of São Paulo. On April 5, it was announced that she would compete in the 2012 São Paulo and Indianapolis races for Andretti Autosport with assistance from Conquest Racing.

In 2014, De Figueiredo began competing in Stock Car Brasil. Competing in around 120 races, she scored two top-five race finishes and a best championship result of 24th in 2018 before taking maternal leave. De Figueiredo returned to racing full-time in 2023 via the Copa Truck series.

In June 2020, De Figuereido's husband and father-in-law were charged with embezzling BR$9 million from the Lagos Rio Health Institute, around a sixth of which was alleged to have funded her career in Stock Car Brasil.

SeasonSeriesPositionTeamCar
Formula Renault 2.0 Brazil11thCesário FórmulaTatuus-Renault FR2000
Formula Renault 2.0 Brazil5thBassani RacingTatuus-Renault FR2000
Formula Renault 2.0 Brazil3rdCesário FórmulaTatuus-Renault FR2000
Formula 3 Sudamericana5thCesário FórmulaDallara-Berta F301
Indy Lights3rdSam Schmidt MotorsportsDallara IP2
Indy Lights5thSam Schmidt MotorsportsDallara IP2
IndyCar Series30thDreyer & Reinbold RacingDallara IR-05
IndyCar Series21stDreyer & Reinbold RacingDallara-Honda IR-05
IndyCar Series29thAndretti AutosportDallara-Chevrolet DW12
IndyCar Series29thDale Coyne RacingDallara-Honda DW12
Stock Car Brasil32ndProGPChevrolet Sonic
Stock Car Brasil32ndBassani RacingPeugeot 408
Stock Car Brasil26thBassani RacingPeugeot 408
Stock Car Brasil29thFull Time SportsChevrolet Cruze
Stock Car Brasil24thA.Mattheis MotorsportChevrolet Cruze
IMSA SportsCar Championship – GTD16thMeyer Shank RacingAcura NSX GT3
Stock Car Brasil25thA.Mattheis MotorsportChevrolet Cruze
IMSA SportsCar Championship – GTD51stEarl Bamber MotorsportPorsche 911 (991.2) GT3 R
TCR South America Touring Car Championship17thCobra Racing TeamCrown RacingAudi RS 3 LMS TCR (2017)Honda Civic Type R TCR (FK8)
Copa Truck3rdASG MotorsportMercedes-Benz Actros
Copa Truck1stASG MotorsportMercedes-Benz Actros
Copa Truck*ASG MotorsportMercedes-Benz Actros

(key)

YearsTeamsRacesPolesWinsPodiums(Non-win)Top 10s(Non-podium)Indianapolis 500WinsChampionships
4329000000
YearChassisEngineStartFinishTeam
2010Dallara IR-05Honda HI7R V82121Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
2011Dallara IR-05Honda HI7R V83221Dreyer & Reinbold Racing
2012Dallara DW12Chevrolet IndyCar V6t1323Andretti Autosport/Conquest Racing
2013Dallara DW12Honda HI13TT V6t2915Dale Coyne Racing

† Driver did not finish the race, but was classified as she completed over 90% of the race distance.

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

  • Official website
  • Ana Beatriz driver statistics at Racing-Reference
  • Ana Beatriz at IndyCar.com
  • Torcida Bia Figueiredo fan site
  • New York Times feature on Bia, October 2006
  • IndyCar 11 in '11 video
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