
Bath student racing driver aims for F1 Academy after spine injury
Ms Hobeika, who has been racing competitively since the age of 15, started karting as a child in Lebanon and Dubai."I think motorsport for women has come so far," she said. "When I started I was the only girl."A friend's dad knew I loved motorsport and that I also did painting as a hobby, so I did a painting for him in exchange for his old kart. I haven't stopped since."Before coming to the UK I had never driven in the wet before but now I've got used to it," she added.
In January, she took part in the karting O-Plate race in Dubai where a kart behind her crashed and landed on top of her, fracturing her spine."I couldn't do a lot, I had to rest and go to the gym. It was really boring," she said."I went from going to the gym in the week, driving the track on Thursday and racing the rest of the week, to nothing."I was so bored and missed it so much I just wanted to back to racing so badly."When she had fully recovered Ms Hobeika moved from karting to car racing and secured third place in the Class C category of the 750 Motor Club Radical Club Challenge at Brands Hatch."I've been karting competitively for a few years now, including representing Bath in the British Universities Karting Championship, but I felt it was time to take the next step," said Ms Hobeika."The big goal for next year would be to race in F1 Academy, which is the all-female championship and raced on the same weekend as F1," she added.
'Perfect fit'
Ms Hobeika is also programme manager for Team Bath Racing Electric, the Formula Student racing team based out of the university's faculty of engineering and design."It was Formula Student that brought me to Bath. I loved Bath and the university, so getting to work in motorsport with Formula Student too was the perfect fit."I want to go into motorsport management at some point and it has given me a different profile as I know what it is like to be a driver and run a team," she said.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
30 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Max Verstappen makes huge decision over his Red Bull future after Christian Horner's sudden sacking
Max Verstappen has confirmed he'll be staying at Red Bull beyond this season. It puts an end to uncertainty over the four-time F1 world champion's future after he was linked to a move to Mercedes earlier this month.


Top Gear
5 hours ago
- Top Gear
The BMW M3 CS Touring is now the fastest estate around the Nürburgring
Motorsport The hot M3 wagon has blitzed its predecessor's time. Because of course it has Skip 10 photos in the image carousel and continue reading The BMW M3 CS Touring is now the fastest estate car to have lapped the Nürburgring, having beaten the previous record-holder by half a second. That previous record holder being… itself. Well, the non-CS version of itself. Back in 2022, on the eve of its debut, the not-at-all-regular M3 Touring lapped the 'Ring in 7m 35s. Then again earlier this year, Mr Jorg Weindinger somehow shaved five whole seconds off that time for a 7m 30s lap. Advertisement - Page continues below Now, we learn the harder, more powerful and really very marginally lighter M3 CS Touring has managed a time of 7m 29.490s. Look, it matters, not just for the few people able to purchase one, but to the boss, too. 'From the very beginning, it was clear that the BMW M3 CS Touring would set new standards in dynamics,' said BMW M boss Frank van Meel. He added that the new record demonstrates how the CS 'perfectly combines racing DNA with everyday usability'. You might like Still a way off its siblings, mind: the M4 CSL holds a 7m 18.1s Nürburgring lap time, while the M4 CS did it in 7m 21.9s. And yet, it's only a second slower than the four-door M3 CS saloon, which recorded a lap time of 7m 28.7s. BMW reckons the M3 CS T is therefore 'the perfect 'one car solution''. A very powerful one car solution. The M3 Touring's 3.0-litre has been ramped up to 542bhp for the CS iteration, allowing a 0-62mph time of just 3.5s and top speed of 186mph. Other tweaks include a new exhaust, special chassis settings, big M carbon brakes, and a few external design changes. It's 15kg lighter, too, but you could achieve more by eating less. Advertisement - Page continues below Turns out, all these changes turn it into something quite special indeed. 'The CS shows every other fast estate how it should be done,' we concluded. You can read the full review of the M3 Touring – including this new CS – here. Now, time to petition BMW to make a properly leichtbau , full-blown M3 CSL Touring… Thank you for subscribing to our newsletter. Look out for your regular round-up of news, reviews and offers in your inbox. Get all the latest news, reviews and exclusives, direct to your inbox.


The Sun
7 hours ago
- The Sun
‘You saw what Mike Tyson was like' – Ricky Hatton, 46, warned ‘sell-by date' has gone and comeback shouldn't happen
RICKY HATTON has been told his best days are behind him after announcing his return to boxing. The 46-year-old British legend is set to face Eisa Aldah in Dubai on December 2 in what will be his first fight in 13 YEARS. 4 But his former promoter Dennis Hobson told the Sheffield Star: 'Obviously, his 'sell-by' date has gone. "I love Ricky and what he brings to the table, and he's still got a lot of support, but you know his best days are behind him.' Last November, heavyweight great Mike Tyson came out of retirement aged 58 and after 20 years to fight Jake Paul. And he laboured to defeat against the YouTuber-turned-boxer over eight shorter two-minute rounds. Hobson added: "You saw what Mike Tyson was like when he fought Jake Paul, it was sad to watch, and I don't want the same for Ricky because I've got a lot of time for him." Hatton - one of the UK's most beloved boxers - won world titles at 140lb and 147lb. But he struggled to cope with losses to Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao - first retiring in 2012 after defeat to Vyacheslav Senchenko. Hatton overcame a fight with depression and substance abuse when his career ended and later became a trainer. And he did return to the ring in 2022 for an exhibition against Mexican great Marco Antonio Barrera. Now he takes on the Gulf's first ever professional fighter in Aldah - who is also 46 and has not boxed professionally since 2021. Campbell Hatton Retires from Boxing at 24: A New Chapter Begins The bout with Hatton is set to go on their records as a middleweight contest. Hobson said: "Unless he's doing it for charity, I don't get the point of it all. "If it were for charity, that's something I'd get involved with, but I don't want to see him in a competitive match." 4 4