Bio Excerpt: Patricija Stalidzane is a Latvian-German racing driver who traded ballet slippers for racing boots at eight and has spent her career proving herself through sponsorship droughts and category jumps. After moving from Latvia to Germany for karting, she cleverly leveraged her Latvian license to debut in... (full bio below ↓↓)
Patricija Stalidzane
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(last updated 2026-01-25
Patricija Stalidzane is a Latvian-German racing driver who traded ballet slippers for racing boots at age eight and has since carved out a career battling sponsorship gaps, category jumps, and the relentless grind of proving herself in a sport that doesn’t hand out second chances—especially not to women.
EARLY YEARS
Born April 17, 2002, in Riga, Latvia, Patricija Stalidzane grew up in a family with rallying in its DNA, though the specifics of who did what behind the wheel remain frustratingly vague. What’s clear is that motorsport wasn’t a foreign language in her household—it was the first one she learned. At eight years old, her parents made a decision that would define her trajectory: they moved her to Germany so she could pursue karting seriously. That’s not a casual weekend hobby move. That’s packing up your life because your kid showed promise in something most parents would dismiss as a phase.
Before the racing boots, though, there were ballet shoes. Stalidzane did ballet at an early age, which makes for a tidy narrative contrast—graceful pirouettes to aggressive apex hunting—but the truth is simpler: she found something she liked better and never looked back. By the time she was tearing around German karting circuits, ballet was a memory, and motorsport was the only stage that mattered.
OTHER INTERESTS
Outside of racing, Stalidzane keeps her personal life relatively private. She’s in a relationship with DTM driver Maximilian Paul, which means dinners probably involve a lot of tire compound talk and minimal small talk about reality TV. Beyond that, the public record is sparse—no hobby farms, no pottery Instagram, no passionate advocacy for endangered sea turtles. Either she’s exceptionally good at keeping her off-track life under wraps, or racing really is the whole show.
EARLY SUCCESS
Stalidzane’s karting career in Germany ran from 2010 to 2017, and while the details are patchy, the results speak for themselves: a title win in an unspecified category, a third-place finish in KF-Junior (now OK-Junior), sixth in the 2015 ADAC Kart Masters, and thirteenth in the 26° Trofeo Andrea Margutti the same year. Not earth-shattering, but solid enough to suggest she had the goods.
The jump to cars came early and through a licensing loophole that would make any motorsport lawyer squirm. At just 15, Stalidzane leveraged her Latvian license—which allowed younger drivers to compete—to make her car racing debut in the 2017 Renault Clio Cup Central Europe with FSR Performance. It was a clever workaround, the kind of hustle that separates drivers who want it from drivers who really, really want it. She ran six races that season and finished 34th in the standings, which sounds underwhelming until you remember she was still figuring out what a clutch pedal was for.
The following year, 2018, she stuck with the Clio Cup, racking up more experience and learning the brutal truth of professional racing: talent gets you in the door, but money keeps it open. That lesson would hit hard soon enough.
NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENTS
- PRE-2017: Won a karting title in an unspecified category, placed third in KF-Junior (now OK-Junior).
- 2015: Finished sixth in ADAC Kart Masters in KF-Junior, thirteenth in the 26° Trofeo Andrea Margutti.
- 2017: Made car racing debut at age 15 in Renault Clio Cup Central Europe using Latvian license, competed in Latvian Karting Championship.
- 2018: Continued in Renault Clio Cup Central Europe with FSR Performance, finished 34th overall across six races.
- 2019: Moved to ADAC GT4 Germany with racing one in an Audi R8 LMS GT4, scored a podium at Hockenheim in the penultimate round, finished 21st overall with 15 points.
- 2020: Returned to ADAC GT4 Germany with Dörr Motorsport in a McLaren 570S GT4, but ran only four races after losing her major sponsor due to COVID-19, finished 25th with 9 points.
- 2021: Competed part-time in the final rounds of the BMW M2 Cup Germany with no financial backing, best finish of 12th across three races.
- 2022: Continued part-time BMW M2 Cup Germany participation.
- 2024: Competed in Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie with WS Racing in Class VT2R (BMW 328i Racing) and finished fourth in Class SP8T with Giti Tire Motorsport by WS Racing in a BMW M4 GT4 (G82) with 170 points; made NXT Gen Cup debut in an LRT NXT1 electric car, became the first female driver to score a podium in the series at Sachsenring, recorded one fastest lap, twelve top-10 finishes, and five top-5s across thirteen races.
- 2025: Joined WS Racing’s “Girls Only” project for the Nürburgring 24 Hours debut, confirmed return to NXT Gen Cup.
INSPIRATIONS
Stalidzane credits her family’s rallying background as her gateway into motorsport, but beyond that, she hasn’t gone on record naming heroes or citing pivotal races that made her want to be a racing driver. Maybe she doesn’t have a poster of Ayrton Senna on her wall. Maybe she does and just doesn’t feel like sharing. Either way, her path seems less about worshipping idols and more about showing up, putting in the work, and figuring it out as she goes.
REPUTATION
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