Current Williams

Williams Grand Prix Engineering

FIA Entry: AT&T Williams
Car 11: Rubens Barrichello
Car 12: Pastor Maldonado
Engine: Cosworth V8
Team Principal: Frank Williams
Director of Engineering: Patrick Head
Technical Director: Sam Michael
Race Engineer Car 11: Tony Ross
Race Engineer Car 12: Tom McCullough

Stats as of end 2010

First Entered 1977
Races Entered 539
Race Wins 113
Pole Positions 126
Fastest Laps 130
Driver World Championships 7
Constructor World Championships 9

Team History

The Early Years

Like many team owners and principals Frank Williams started life as a driver and mechanic. Realising his ability as a driver wouldn't allow him to reach the levels he hoped Williams set up Frank Williams Racing Cars and in 1969 entered a Brabham chassis for Piers Courage. Through to 1976 Williams entered customer cars from other manufacturers before settings up Williams Grand Prix Engineering in 1977 with Patrick Head.

Williams Grand Prix Engineering

In 1977 Williams GPE entered a March 761 for Patrick Neve. In 1978 Patrick Head designed his first Williams car, the FW06, driven by Australian Alan Jones The car scored it's first points at the South African Grand Prix and Jones took Williams first podium at Long Beach, finishing 2nd behind Carlos Reutemann in a Ferrari.

In 1979 the FW07 chassis debuted and Williams had grown into a 2 car team with Clay Regazzoni joining Alan Jones. Regazzoni scored Williams first Grand Prix victory at Silverstone and Jones took another 4 victories that season. Continuing with the FW07(in A and B spec) in 1980 Jones, now partnered by Carlos Reutemann, won 6 races (5 for Jones and 1 for Reutemann) with Jones winning the drivers title and Williams the Constructors Championship.

With the FW07 in C & D spec Williams won 4 more races and again took the Constructors Championship in 1981 but missed out on the Drivers Title. Continuing with Cosworth power in 1982 Williams moved onto the FW08, a car originally designed as 6 wheeler, and Keke Rosberg joined Carlos Reutemann. Reutemann retired 2 races into the season and Mario Andretti stood in for a single race before Derek Daly permanently replaced Reutemann. Rosberg only managed a single win at the Swiss Grand Prix 1982 but it was enough for him to win the Drivers Championship.

Having driven for Frank Williams back in 1974 and 1975 Jacques Laffite partnered Keke Rosberg in 1983. Rosberg won the Monaco Grand Prix with Cosworth power and by the end of the season Williams had moved to Honda turbo power and the FW09 chassis. 1984 continued the pattern of 1 win per season for Rosberg and the Williams team with Keke taking first place in Dallas.

The Honda Era

Nigel Mansell joined Williams in 1985 and the team, still with Honda turbo engines, won 4 Grand Prix. Piquet replaced Rosberg for 1986 and between them Mansell and Piquet won 9 of the 16 races and Williams the Constructors Championship. 1987 saw another 9 victories for the team and another victory in the Constructors Championship as well as Piquet winning the Drivers Title

The departure of Honda as engine supplier and Piquet as a driver in 1989 saw Williams move temporarily to Judd engines and Mansell, now partnered by Riccardo Patrese, had a very lean season with their highest finish only 4th.

Renault Power

Williams secured Renault V10 power for 1989 and the next 9 season proved to be Williams most successful. They won 63 Grands Prix, 5 Constructors Championship (1992, 93, 94, 96 & 97) and 4 Drivers Titles (Mansell 92, Prost 93, Hill 96 and Villeneuve 97). Other winners for Williams in this period of dominance included Riccardo Patrese, Thierry Boutsen, Heinz Harald Frentzen and David Coulthard. This period was also touched by tragedy when Ayrton Senna lost his life in a Williams car at the San Marino Grand Prix at Imola in 1994

The withdrawal of Renault from F1 in 1998 moved Williams into another barren spell as the cars were powered by ageing Renault engines produced by Mecachrome (98) and Supetec (99).

BMW Williams

Williams changed to BMW V10 engines in 2000 and returned to the winners circle in 2001 with Ralf Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya at the wheel. The partnership with BMW continued until 2006 with Williams winning 10 Grands Prix and were runners up in the Constructors Championship in 2002 and 2003. Ralph Schumacher drove for Williams for 6 season and was partnered by Alex Zanardi, Jenson Button (debuting in F1 in 2000) and Montoya with Mark Gene and Antonio Pizzonia making occasional appearances as stand in drivers. BMW's final season with Williams saw Mark Webber and Nick Heidfeld taking podiums but able to not challenge for wins.

Toyota Customer

A season of Cosworth power in 2006, with Mark Webber joined by F1 new boy Nico Rosberg, proved very unsuccessful and in 2007 Williams became customers of Toyota. As one of the few truly independent teams still competing in F1 Williams struggled to compete with the factory supported teams and were probably best categorised as "the best of the rest". Webber left at the end of 2007 and Rosberg, initially partnered by Alex Wurz and then by Toyota "works" driver Kazuki Nakajima, managed a highest finish of 2nd in Singapore 2008 with Williams finishing 4th, 8th and 7th in the Constructors Championship whilst using Toyota power.

In 2009 Williams sold a minority share in the company to an Austrian investment company led by Toto Wolff.

Williams Cosworth

In 2010 Williams returned to Cosworth engines and signed up Rubens Barrichello and Nico Hulkenberg to drive for them. Hulkenberg took a surprising pole in changeable weather conditions in Brazil to give Williams their first such grid position since Nick Heidfeld in 2005. Although regular points finishers Williams weren't challenging for wins and finished the season 6th in Constructors Championship.

2011 sees Rubens Barrichello retain his seat at Williams with GP2 Champion Pastor Maldonado alongside him. They will continue with Cosworth engine power.
 
I doubt Merc would have blinked if Massa managed to sneak the win. Of course he would have needed to catch Hamilton


Although I suspect that if Massa had gotten close enough to have a go, Hamilton would've let him by, as in the grand scheme of things he wasn't worth fighting...
 
I'm not sure I agree. With Nico out of the points completely my money would be that Hamilton wouldn't make it easy, but then I'd agree he probably wouldn't have done anything particularly risky either.
 
There is no way Massa could have won on Sunday as we know Hamilton had his engine turned down and the moment Massa got anywhere near he would have turned the engine back up and pissed off into the distance by a second a lap..

It was like watching a cat playing with a mouse but with the mouse thinking he had a chance of winning.
 
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Pat Symonds was getting very racey on the pit wall on Sky. Not to the point of asking Bottas to crash it, but still...

I think WMR were reticent about beating the works team in the same way that all the others were; it didn't require you to give up for them to beat you.
 
I'm starting to get the sinking feeling that Williams have bought their return to form by agreeing to be Mercedes B Team as they really seem to have gone out of their way to put no pressure on the Mercs at all in 2014 despite having the car to do so on various occasions.

With Wolff still be involved with Williams ownership, a driver he manages being their top race driver and his wife being the 3rd driver its hard not to jump to conclusions. I hope they show I'm wrong next year.
 
If there was such an agreement (being Mercedes B team), I certainly hope that it was for one season only, since Williams is my favorite team. The way that they came on in the last part of the season, after Merc had essentially clinched the WCC does make you wonder about such an arrangement.

I hope that their late-season form continues next year. I would also like to see Massa win a WDC. I have always thought that he has the talent, but contractual arrangements always resigned him to no. 2 status.
 
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Williams have got a 7 year contract with Mercedes which I think is longer than either Force India and Lotus

The engines cost $15m plus at the moment
Toto is helping the team offset some of the cost by putting Bottas in one of the cars and getting his wife to have a bigger role :snigger: in the team

I do get the feeling it is a B team and would be the team to go to breed the young drivers that Mercedes have rather than Force India

I hope Williams do go back to winning again because it would be good for F1 and the team. They will need better drivers than the current two at the moment .

I know Bottas has done well this season but was it down to the car remains to be seen
 
They will need better drivers than the current two at the moment .

I know Bottas has done well this season but was it down to the car remains to be seen


I would agree with you ll_leone when it comes to Massa about the need for better drivers, but Bottas has had some pretty impressive performances this season, especially at Australia.
 
Talk of Williams being Mercedes B team is losing sight of quite how bad they've been for the last 2 to 3 years.

They have the history to want the best but they can't have the finance yet. Let us ask this in a couple of years time.
 
lets hope Pat Symonds can drill the engineering team and they just need a world class driver to come home with the results to prove it

This season there were many missed opportunities you feel for the team
 
While I don't believe it's the case, I think there are worse things for Williams to be than the Merc B team (certainly as long as the engine is as good as it is), they could relatively easily faded away out of F1 entirely given the long period since any good results. Personally I'm delighted to see them doing well again, they were my first love back in the early 80s, but simply enough they don't have the financial muscle you need to be at the very top and attract the very best drivers.
 
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