Born in Moscow, Markelov began karting in 2006 and raced mostly in his native Russia for the majority of his karting career, working his way up through the junior ranks to progress into the KF2 category by 2010.[2][3]
Markelov and Motopark – now under the Lotus moniker – elected to compete in the German Formula Three Championship in 2012.[6] He finished seventh in the standings, scoring three podiums, including sprint-race wins at Lausitz and Hockenheim.[7]
2013
Markelov stayed in the German series for another year in 2013, remaining with Motopark.[8] He had eighteen podiums in twenty-three races, including wins in both main races at Lausitz.[9][10] He finished as runner-up to his teammate Marvin Kirchhöfer.[11]
Markelov made his GP2 Series debut in 2014 with Russian Time, where he joined Mitch Evans.[12] Markelov had only one point-scoring finish at Spa, finishing the season 24th, twenty positions behind Evans in the drivers' championship.
2015
Markelov and Evans remained with Russian Time in 2015.[13] Markelov took his first podium at Spa, when he started from the 22nd position on the grid.[14] He made the progress in the championship to the thirteenth place, being more consistent, but he was still eight positions behind the Evans in the standings.
2016
Markelov continued to race with Russian Time in 2016, but this time he was joined in the team by Raffaele Marciello.[15] Markelov claimed his first GP2 Series win in the feature race in Monaco, starting from the fifteenth starting position.[16] But he wasn't stable as Marciello, finishing tenth in the drivers' championship.
2017
For the 2017 season, the GP2 Series was rebranded as the FIA Formula 2 Championship. While Markelov remained with Russian Time for his fourth consecutive season with the Dallara GP2/11 machinery, which was also the final year of use for the chassis in the championship, being joined by Luca Ghiotto.[17] Markelov won the first race in the FIA Formula 2 Championship history.[18] He also collected wins at Spielberg, Spa, Jerez and Abu Dhabi[19][20][21][22] While it wasn't enough to prevent Charles Leclerc winning the drivers' championship, he brought the teams' championship to Russian Time with the help of Ghiotto.
Markelov remained with Russian Time in 2018.[23] He finished the season in fifth.
2019
Following the 2018 season, Markelov was left without a drive in the 2019 Formula 2 season after Russian Time withdrew from the series. However, following Jordan King's participation in the 2019 Indianapolis 500, Markelov was called up by MP Motorsport for the Monaco round as a one-off replacement. He scored points in both races, with a sixth place in the first race and a fourth place in the second race.
As a result of the weekend at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps following the Lap 2 feature race crash that killed BWT Arden driver Anthoine Hubert, the team signed Markelov to finish out the season at Sochi and Abu Dhabi, although the car number changed from 19 to 22.
2020
In 2020, Markelov continued to race in F2 with the same team, now HWA Racelab.[24] He was joined by Giuliano Alesi, son of former Formula One driver Jean Alesi, who left Trident at the end of the 2019 season. However Markelov had a disappointing season scoring only 5 points compared to championship winner Mick Schumacher's 215.
Formula One
In February 2018, Markelov was announced as Renault development driver for the 2018 FIA Formula One World Championship and drove in an official Formula One session for the first time at the 2018 Russian Grand Prix.[25][26] He then made an appearance for the team at the 2018 Abu Dhabi Young Driver Test. It was rumoured that Markelov was a contender for a drive at Williams for 2019, but it ultimately went to Robert Kubica.
Personal life
Markelov is married to former TV show host Katya Zhuzha. Their son Max was born in 2020. He is also the step father of Katya Zhuzha's child from another marriage, Nicole Markelova.[27]
^Allen, Peter (25 February 2018). "2015 GP2 Series season review". formulascout.com. Formula Scout. Retrieved 26 February 2018. As soon as things improved again, he scored a maiden podium in the Spa feature race from 22nd on the grid – a fine drive even with a large slice of luck on the strategy side.