‘Want to give back to sports without indulging in politics’

Karun’s motto is not to get involved in the politics of Indian motorsport, instead stay outside and use his connections and knowledge to help the youngsters develop their careers.

Published : Oct 18, 2015 16:57 IST , Greater Noida

Karun Chandok is helping out Maini brothers — Arjun and Kush — apart from mentoring six other drivers at GT academy.
Karun Chandok is helping out Maini brothers — Arjun and Kush — apart from mentoring six other drivers at GT academy.
lightbox-info

Karun Chandok is helping out Maini brothers — Arjun and Kush — apart from mentoring six other drivers at GT academy.

After splitting with Mahindra Racing, Karun Chandhok is yet to figure out where the next season will take him but the ace Indian racer has a clear vision about how to mentor the next generation of country’s drivers.

Karun’s motto is not to get involved in the politics of Indian motorsport, instead stay outside and use his connections and knowledge to help the youngsters develop their careers.

This is exactly what 31-year-old Chandhok is doing. He is helping out Maini brothers — Arjun and Kush — apart from mentoring six other drivers at GT academy.

“The situation in Indian motorsport is hugely complex and complicated. Which is why I got involved with GT academy, outside federations. I prefer not to get involved in that. I don’t want politics and drama, better to get directly involved with the drivers,” Chandhok told PTI on the sidelines of JK Tyre Racing Championship, where he is performing the role of Race Director.

“By trying to do it in official way, it slows down the process. Talking directly is better and easier. I don’t have time to deal with tonnes of people. I would like to get to a stage where I have 5-6 boys (to guide).”

Chandhok, only the second Indian driver to reach the level of F1, recently took Arjun to F1 team Williams factory and introduced him to the bigwigs there.

“I have been working with Arjun for the last two years. I don’t hold his hand. He has to grow up. I take him to gym, I make him do training at home. He also stays in my home sometimes. I like guiding him. He is only 17, very talented.

Then there are GT academy drivers,” he said, emphasising that he wants to “give back to sport which has given him a lot in the last 15 years“.

Elaborating on his role as a mentor, Chandhok made it clear that he can’t get sponsors for the drivers.

“I want to pick and choose people, who have potential and mentally have a drive to do it. I have spent too many years chasing the sponsors. I am not in the game to find sponsorships for these guys. So, where I like to get involved is that if they have a budget to do some racing, then I help them to choose that this is the championship you should do and this is the team you should do it with. This is the engineer I can help you hire and this is how you should train,” he explained.

Sign in to unlock all user benefits
  • Get notified on top games and events
  • Save stories to read later
  • Access to comment on every story
  • Sign up / manage to our newsletters with a single click
  • Get notified by email for early bird access to discounts & offers to our products
Sign in

Comments

Comments have to be in English, and in full sentences. They cannot be abusive or personal. Please abide to our community guidelines for posting your comment