Paul Warwick was born in
Alresford, Hampshire, and was the younger brother of fellow racing driver
Derek Warwick. He began his junior career in
British stock car racing in 1981 in the Ministox formula, before progressing to
Superstox for the 1984 season, aged just 15 (due to altering his age on his race licence) racing against many older and much more experienced racers, under the
Spedeworth organisation at tracks such as his local
Aldershot Stadium and Foxhall Stadium, Ipswich. His brother Derek was the English and World Champion in the formula. Paul became National Champion in 1984 at Ipswich, East Anglian Champion and also British Champion in 1985 at Wisbech. In his first season of Formula Ford 1600 in 1986, he won eight of the 12 Dunlop-Autosport Star of Tomorrow rounds on his way to the title and scored a championship double by claiming the Townsend Thoresen Junior FF1600 series. In 1987, Warwick moved up to Formula Ford 2000 and was the Euroseries runner-up to future Grand Prix driver
JJ Lehto. In October 1987, Warwick took part in a
Ford Escort Celebrity race at Brands Hatch and finished 5th, sharing with
Barry McGuigan.
British F3 Warwick spent three seasons in British
Formula 3 from 1988 to 1990. In 1988 he raced for
Eddie Jordan Racing, transferring to Intersport Racing in 1989 and Superpower in 1990. Although tipped as a possible championship contender, Warwick fell short of expectations. During the 1990 season, he quit Formula 3 and contested some Formula 3000 races in the Leyton House backed March
Formula 3000 team. The car was poor and Warwick was unable to shine at the rounds he contested, but he adapted to the power increase with some competitive showings. The rounds he took part in were at
Brands Hatch,
Birmingham,
Le Mans and
Nogaro.
Honda in Tin-tops During the 1990 season, Paul briefly tried his luck in tin-top racing, contesting a few rounds of the
Honda CRX Challenge with his brother's team.
British F2 In 1991 he signed with
Nigel Mansell's Mansell Madgwick British Formula 2 racing team. Warwick dominated the first five races of 1991, scoring five pole positions, five fastest laps, four lap records and five wins, but he was killed in an accident at the fifth event of the season at
Oulton Park race circuit, Cheshire. The win was awarded posthumously as he was leading the race when the accident took place. Warwick had scored enough points in the races he had contested to allow him to win the British Formula 3000 championship. The car left the circuit at the
Knickerbrook right hand corner and slammed almost head-on into the outer circuit
Armco barrier at . The car disintegrated and Warwick was thrown from it. Investigations concluded that a front
wishbone failure caused the crash. == Awards and tributes ==