Luis Diaz is a racing driver who last raced in WEC for Greaves Motorsport. Diaz has recorded 0 wins and 0 podiums from 2 starts.[1]
A Racer Rating of 2,900 ranks Diaz 3152th of 15,348 indexed drivers, on an Elo scale where the strongest reach the low five figures. It is built from every indexed race in the driver's file, decayed for time since their last race.
| 2016-09-03 | AUTODROMO HERMANOS RODRIGUEZ · LMP2 | P5 | +14 |
| Season | Series | Team | Races | Wins | Podiums | DNFs | Poles | Points | Pos | Gain/Loss | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2016 | ▸WEC | Greaves Motorsport | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | P42 | +13 | 2,901 |
| 2012 | ▸WEC | Level 5 Motorsport | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | P60 | −11 | 2,896 |
Luis Diaz is a retired endurance racing driver who competed in the World Endurance Championship between 2012 and 2016. His professional racing career comprised two starts; both came in WEC rounds, where he raced for Greaves Motorsport. He finished classified in one race, placing 42nd overall at the 2016 running.[1]
Diaz's limited record nonetheless included competitive outings against established professionals. He finished ahead of René Rast, a Platinum-graded three-time champion; Scott Sharp, a Platinum-graded driver; Roman Rusinov, a Gold-graded two-time champion; and Ho-Pin Tung, a Gold-graded former champion. These results demonstrate that despite his brief tenure in professional motorsport, he operated within a field of much stronger drivers and held his own in at least isolated instances. His average finishing position across classified starts was fifth place.
Greaves Motorsport, which fielded Diaz, held two race wins across its full record and counted among its drivers Alexander Rossi, a front-running professional in the endurance ranks. The headlines from his active years noted his work as a development driver and his participation in major endurance events including Le Mans and the Sebring 12 Hours. Diaz has since retired from competition.