Daniel Woolhouse

Daniel Woolhouse, also known as "Fanga Dan", is a three-time D1NZ Champion and professional drifting driver from Whangārei, New Zealand.

Daniel Woolhouse
Born (1983-03-31) 31 March 1983
Hastings, New Zealand
D1NZ Championship Series career
Debut season2005
Current teamDriftcorp Driftcorp
Car number01
Former teamsCastrol Edge

Goodyear Racing

Dunlop Direzza
Best finish1st in 2006, 2013, 2022
Previous series
2010Formula Drift Asia NZ Drift Series
Championship titles
2006, 2013, 2022D1NZ Drift King
Awards
20132013 New Zealand Champion

2nd Place BP Triple Crown

2012 D1NZ Drift Ambassador

Competing with the iconic Driftcorp team, Woolhouse began drifting competitively in 2003, entering his first full season in 2005 driving a Nissan Laurel C33 in the D1NZ National Drifting Championship and finishing third overall in his rookie year.[1] Moving to a purpose-built Nissan S15 Silvia, he would go on to win the 2006 D1NZ Championship in just his second year of competition, also becoming the third Driftcorp driver to win a national title.[1]

In 2008, Woolhouse built and drove one of the first Holden VZ Commodores in competitive drifting, powered by a 2.6-litre (160-cubic-inch) Nissan RB engine.

In 2010, Woolhouse represented New Zealand and competed in Thailand, Singapore and Malaysia driving for Goodyear Racing in the Holden VZ Commodore, claiming wins and podium finishes in Formula Drift Asia and the Goodyear International Drift Series.[2] He competed overseas again in 2011 and 2012, driving for Castrol Edge in the Tectaloy International Drift Challenge as part of the annual World Time Attack event in Sydney, Australia.[3]

After retiring his championship winning Nissan S15 in 2010, now driven by Driftcorp team-mate Robee Nelson, Woolhouse went on to compete an LS2 V8-powered Holden VZ Commodore in the 2013 D1NZ Championship Series for his naming rights sponsor, Castrol Edge, in which he became the 2013 New Zealand drift champion.[4]

References

  1. Archived 1 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine at D1NZ.com, Retrieved 1 May 2013
  2. , at formuladriftasia.com Retrieved 1 May 2013
  3. , at worldtimeattack.com Retrieved 1 May 2013
  4. Archived 30 August 2013 at the Wayback Machine, at Fangadan.com Retrieved 1 May 2013
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