Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Susie Wolff

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Scottish driver Susie Wolff.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Susie Wolff

Suzanne Wolff is a British former professional racing driver and CEO of Venturi Racing in Formula E.

Sir Stirling Moss, who said that women don't have the mental aptitude to take part in F1, is from a different generation. There's no reason why women can't rise to the top in F1. If you're not good enough you don't survive.
If I was to turn around now and say that motorsport should be segregated, then my whole career would have been for nothing. Every result that I have achieved on my own would stand for nothing, if I couldn't compete against male drivers.
As soon as you start listening to the gossip surrounding you, you just get dragged down by it. — © Susie Wolff
As soon as you start listening to the gossip surrounding you, you just get dragged down by it.
We need to get more women into sport, whether that's young girls in karting or off the track. The more we get into sport, the more you are going to get rising to the top of the sport.
When you're eight, you're not thinking about the future. But karting was always the big passion, the big love.
A woman can be physically fit enough to drive a Formula 1 car. I did the race distance in Barcelona so I have proved that it is possible.
We are going to have to go through generations of change before we see the impact of females taking a role in the workplace and Formula 1 is no different.
I'm not like other females. I'm obviously different because of the path I've taken. I'm just as aggressive as the guys when I get my helmet on. Plus F1 is not just about taking risks, but knowing when to take risks and when to back off. It's also about strategy and managing your tyres.
My progression into F1 came to represent so much more than a racing driver simply trying to reach the pinnacle of the sport. It was also the hope that finally there may again be a female on the starting grid.
There was very little opportunity to carry on in Formula 1. My goal was to get on to the starting grid and that didn't look achievable.
I'm proud of my driver test. So many people were waiting for me to test and fail, so they could say that women would never be able to race in F1. I always view my time in F1 as before and after the test. Beforehand, I could sense everybody asking, 'What's she doing in the F1 paddock? Is she good enough?' After my test, that attitude changed.
All the Formula 1 teams that Dare To Be Different has come into contact with - Ferrari, McLaren, Force India, Williams - they're all very proactive in supporting us. They allow us to contact their female staff members and they're very conscious of wanting to help increase their percentage of women in the industry.
I think we all, as drivers, come to the table with a package. It's either your speed and raw talent, your sponsorship money, your nationality. For me, one of my unique selling points is my gender, without a doubt.
In Formula E, because it has that structure of being quite cost-controlled and partly standardised, it means a small team or big manufacturer, if you get it right you have a chance for success which is great.
We have two issues - not enough young girls starting in karting at a young age and no clear role model. Sometimes you just have to see it to believe it. — © Susie Wolff
We have two issues - not enough young girls starting in karting at a young age and no clear role model. Sometimes you just have to see it to believe it.
I was always an adrenaline junkie, always competitive, always a speed freak.
The decision to retire was very easy. The timing had come to the point where it was very clear that my time was up.
My big break came at 22 years old when I joined the Mercedes Benz touring championship team.
I was very lucky in that my parents supported my racing so much - they just said 'whatever you want to achieve, if you work hard enough you can achieve it.' They never, ever let me believe that, as a female, I couldn't compete in a man's world.
I never let my gender define me but in my whole driving career I only ever did one interview not being asked about being a female.
When I decided to stop racing, I really wanted to give something back to the sport and for me it was always going to be about inspiring young girls and women.
Throughout my whole racing career, I was always asked about being a woman in a man's world. Interestingly when you are in that world, there's no reason for it to be a man's world, there are successful women and I didn't find there to be any barriers to stop me from being successful.
It's very important to me to give something back - to pass on my know-how, to give all the lessons I learned onto the next generation so they don't make the same mistakes.
As F1 is a male-dominated environment, you have to prove yourself. And first of all that means being given the chance to prove yourself.
I'm not doing what I do to prove what a woman is capable of. I'm not doing what I do to make Formula E more diverse. I'm doing what I do to be successful. If that's inspirational, then great.
It's not a man's world any more.
These race cars are dangerous and you don't put someone in one unless you are 100 per cent certain that they can do what they need to do and be safe in the car.
If there's 10,000 little boys racing around the world and there's only 10 girls, best case 100, the numbers are stacked massively against us. If you don't increase the talent pool of young girls, you're not going to get the best drivers at the top.
There's no prize for being the best woman.
It doesn't bother me if I'm getting attention because I'm a girl.
Racing's in my blood. My mum met my dad when she went to buy her first motorbike in his shop.
People have different ideas on how to increase female racing driver participation. My belief is that men and women should compete together.
I am someone that relies on my gut feeling.
I never really thought about being a woman in a man's world. Then at the World Championships in 2000 I finished 15th. I was called on to the podium just for being a woman, and I realised things were going to be different.
I hated reading - I was not a 'good kid' - but I was determined when I put my mind to something.
Nobody says Nico Rosberg is only in F1 because his dad was a famous racing driver who funded his karting career and helped him get into F1. It s a bit unfair just to focus on the fact that my husband is in F1 and it's the only reason I'm in an F1 car.
Motorsport has always been my passion, and speaking about being a female in a man's world is part of my responsibility.
I think from a driving perspective, the great thing of being in a simulator a lot is that you can constantly work on areas. Of course it's not like being in a real car, and you always have to remember that, but it means there are all these things that you can work on.
Men are much more egotistical. But that means women can accept criticism and improve easier than men can. — © Susie Wolff
Men are much more egotistical. But that means women can accept criticism and improve easier than men can.
You have to be ready to pounce when a rare chance comes.
I'm a realistic person, but I'm also a person who believes a lot in goals.
People will say I'm only where I am because of my husband or because the team might want to employ a woman, but you don't get to drive a Formula 1 car unless you're good enough, especially with a top team like Williams.
What many people don't realise is the first F1 test I was offered by Frank Williams and the team was a one-off. It was never planned that I would become part of the team or it would lead to more.
I dared to be different, I want to inspire others to do the same.
We have to stop this stereotype that for girls it's about being in pink and horse riding. We need to teach kids to think outside the box, to dare girls to be different.
I never thought of myself as a role model, but I've had so many messages from girls, women, mothers saying I was an inspiration.
I've never played on my gender.
As a sports person, you are always aware that at some point your career is coming to an end and you have to do something else. I always knew it had to end one day, and I was very determined to make sure I wasn't going to be known as an ex-racing driver.
I was asked to do some studies to see if I was different. And I do have more male testosterone than the average woman does. Whether that makes me more aggressive, I don't know.
Every racing driver in the world dreams of making it to F1, there's only 22 spots on the grid. — © Susie Wolff
Every racing driver in the world dreams of making it to F1, there's only 22 spots on the grid.
I was always a very competitive little kid. I did swimming very competitively, downhill skiing very competitively. Everything was competition.
I have to perform every time I'm in the car, and show that I'm capable, and I need a little bit of timing and luck to come together.
You need to get female talent which is good enough to compete at the right level because no team is going to compromise on on-track performance just to tick a gender box.
I loved the speed of go-karting, but didn't have a lot of natural talent. The first time I went out on the track I found it scary; other karts were flying past and bumping into me.
When I did my first media interviews after I was announced as a team principal, the first question was, what qualifies you for the job? The second question was, did your husband place you in the role? And the third was, how are you going to do your job as a mother? I was speechless to think that we were not making any progress.
If you are a successful woman, that can inspire the next generation.
Ultimately, a women's only championship is not going to get more females into motorsport as a whole.
I think there's nobody closer in the world than your own husband. And we are very passionate about what we do, very competitive.
I like being feminine, it's my way of not conforming to the stereotype that if you're a racing driver you don't care how you look.
It's not a gender thing. You can pick anyone off the street and it depends on his or her own character how they can drive a car.
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