WilliamsF1, the trading name of
Williams
Grand Prix Engineering Ltd., is a
Formula One (F1)
motor
racing team and constructor. It was founded and run by
Sir Frank Williams and
Patrick Head. The team was formed in
1977 after two earlier and, compared
with WilliamsF1's achievements, unsuccessful F1 operations,
Frank Williams Racing
Cars and
Walter Wolf Racing.
All of WilliamsF1 chassis are called "FW" then a number, the FW
being the initials of team owner, Frank Williams.
Williams' first race was the
1977 Spanish Grand Prix, where the
new team ran a
March chassis for
Patrick Nève.
Williams started
manufacturing its own cars the following year, and Switzerland
's Clay Regazzoni won
Williams' first race at the 1979
British Grand Prix. At the 1997 British Grand Prix, Canadian
Jacques Villeneuve won the team's 100th
race, making Williams one of only three teams in Formula One,
alongside Ferrari and fellow
British team McLaren
, to win 100
races. Williams won nine
Constructor's
titles between
1980 and
1997. This stood as a record
until
Ferrari surpassed it in
2000.
Many
famous racing drivers have driven for Williams, including Australia's Alan Jones; Finland
's Keke Rosberg; Britain's
Nigel Mansell,
Damon Hill and Jenson Button; France
's Alain Prost; Brazil
's Nelson Piquet and Ayrton Senna, and Canada
's Jacques Villeneuve, each of whom, with
the exception of Senna and Button, have captured one Drivers' title
with the team. After Senna died in a Williams car in a crash
at the
1994 San Marino Grand
Prix, Frank Williams, Patrick Head and designer
Adrian Newey were all accused of
manslaughter. The trial finally closed in 2005,
when Williams, Head and Newey were cleared of any wrongdoing.
Williams
have worked with many notable engine manufacturers, most
successfully with Renault
: Williams
won five of their nine constructors' titles with the French
company. Along with Ferrari, McLaren, and Renault
(formerly
Benetton), Williams is one of the
"Big Four" teams that won every constructors' championship between
1979 and 2008 and every driver's championship from 1984 to
2008.
It was reported on 20th November 2009 by
Reuters that Williams and Patrick Head had sold a
minority interest in their team to an investment company led by
Austrian
Toto Wolff who has stated that
it is purely a commercial decision.
Origins
- Related Articles: Frank Williams Racing Cars &
Walter Wolf Racing
Frank Williams started the current
Williams team in 1977 after his previous outfit,
Frank Williams Racing Cars,
failed to achieve the success he desired.
Despite the promise of
a new owner in the form of Canadian
millionaire
Walter Wolf, the team's 1976 cars were not
competitive. Eventually Williams left the rechristened
Walter Wolf Racing and moved to
Didcot
to rebuild his team as "Williams Grand Prix
Engineering". Frank recruited young engineer
Patrick Head to work for the team, creating the
"
Williams-Head" partnership.
Racing history – Formula One
Ford (1976–1983)
.png/180px-Williams_logo_(old).png)
The original Williams logo.
- Related Article: Ford Motor Company
1977
Williams entered a customer
March
761 for the
1977 season.
Lone driver
Patrick Nève appeared
at 11 races that year, starting with the
Spanish Grand Prix. The new team
failed to score a point, achieving a best finish of 7th at the
Italian Grand Prix.
1978
For the
1978 season, Patrick
Head designed his first Williams: the FW06. Williams signed
Australian Alan Jones, who had won the
Austrian Grand Prix the
previous season for a deflated
Shadow team following the death of their
lead driver,
Tom Pryce. Jones’s first race
for the team was the
Argentine
Grand Prix where he qualified the lone Williams in 14th
position, but retired after 36 laps with a fuel system failure. The
team scored its first championship points two rounds later at the
South African Grand
Prix when Jones finished fourth. Williams managed their first
podium position at the
US
Grand Prix, where the Australian came second, some 20 seconds
behind the
Ferrari of future
Williams driver
Carlos Reutemann.
Williams ended the season in tenth place in the constructors’
championship, with a respectable 16 points, while Alan Jones
finished 12th in the drivers' championship.
1979
Head designed the
FW07 for the
1979 season. This was the team’s
first
ground effect car, a
technology first introduced by
Colin
Chapman and
Team Lotus. Williams also
obtained membership of the
Formula One Constructors
Association (FOCA) which expressed a preference for teams to
run two cars, so Jones was partnered by
Swiss driver
Clay
Regazzoni. They had to wait until the seventh round of the
championship, the
Monaco Grand
Prix, for a points-scoring position. Regazzoni came close to
taking the team’s first win but finished second, less than a second
behind race winner
Jody Scheckter.
The next round at
Dijon is
remembered for the final lap battle between
René Arnoux and
Gilles Villeneuve, but also saw both cars
finish in the points for the first time: Jones was fourth with
Regazzoni sixth. The team’s first win came at the
1979 British Grand Prix – their home
Grand Prix - when Regazzoni finished almost 25 seconds ahead of
anyone else.Things got even better when Williams cars finished
first and second at the next round in
Hockenheim, Alan Jones two seconds
ahead of Regazzoni. Jones then made it three wins in a row at the
Österreichring, finishing
half a minute ahead of Gilles Villeneuve’s Ferrari. Three wins in a
row became four wins two weeks later at
Zandvoort, Alan Jones winning again by
a comfortable margin over
Jody
Scheckter’s Ferrari. Scheckter ended the Williams winning
streak when he won Ferrari’s home
Italian Grand Prix, Regazzoni
finishing third behind both Ferraris. Alan Jones managed another
win at the penultimate race at
Montreal to cap off a great
season.
Williams had greatly improved their constructors' championship
position, finishing eight places higher than the previous year and
scoring 59 more points. Alan Jones was the closest driver to the
Ferrari duo of Villeneuve and 1979 champion Jody Scheckter, the
Australian scored 43 points, 17 behind the
South African, while Jones’s team mate,
Regazzoni, was two places behind him with 32 points.
1980
In
1980 Alan Jones partnered
the Argentine
Carlos
Reutemann. The team started well in the championship,
with Jones winning the first round of the season in
Argentina. Jones won four more
races:
Paul Ricard,
Brands Hatch,
Montreal and the final round at
Watkins Glen. Jones
became the first of seven Williams drivers to win the drivers'
championship, 17 points ahead of
Nelson
Piquet’s
Brabham. Williams also won its
first constructors’ championship, scoring 120 points, almost twice
as many as second-placed
Ligier.
1981
The duo won four races for the Williams team in the
1981 season. Alan Jones won at the
first round at
Long
Beach and the final round at
Las Vegas, while
Carlos Reutemann won at the second round at
Jacarepagua and the fifth
round at
Zolder. Williams
won the constructors’ title for the second year running, scoring 95
points, 34 points more than second-placed
Brabham.
1982
Alan Jones retired from Formula One, only to come back a year later
for a single race with the
Arrows team. The
Australian was replaced by
Finnish driver,
Keke
Rosberg, who had not scored a single championship point the
previous year.
He won the Drivers title that year; winning
only one race, the Swiss Grand
Prix at Dijon-Prenois
. Rosberg’s teammate,
Reutemann, finished in 15th place having
quit Formula One after just two races of the new season. His seat
was filled by
Mario Andretti for the
US Grand Prix
West before
Derek Daly took over for
the rest of the year. The Williams team finished fourth in the
constructors’ championship that year, 16 points behind champions
Ferrari.
By the end of the season,
Frank
Williams realised that to compete at the top levels of
Formula One he needed the support of a major
manufacturer, such as
Renault or
BMW who could supply his team with a
turbo engine.
Honda and Judd (1983–1988)
- Related Articles: Honda Racing
F1, Judd
1983
Frank Williams looked towards Honda,
which was developing its own
turbo-charged V6
engine with the
Spirit team. A
deal between Honda and Williams was finally settled early in
1983 and the team used the
engines for the
1984 season.
For the rest of the 1983 season, Williams used the Ford engine
except for the last race of the year in
South Africa where Rosberg
scored an encouraging fifth place. The team finished fourth in the
constructors’ championship, scoring 36 points, including a win for
Keke Rosberg at the
1983 Monaco Grand Prix.
1984
For the
1984 season
Head designed the ungainly
FW09.
Keke Rosberg
won the
Dallas Grand Prix and
managed to get second at the opening race in
Brazil. Rosberg’s team mate,
Jacques Laffite, came 14th in the
drivers' championship with five points. The team finished sixth
with 25.5 points, with Rosberg eighth in the drivers'
championship.
1985
In
1985,
Head designed the
FW10, the team’s first chassis to employ the
carbon-fibre
composite technology pioneered by the McLaren team.
British
driver Nigel Mansell
joined the team to partner Rosberg. The team scored four wins with
Rosberg, winning in
Detroit
and
Adelaide, while
Mansell won the
European Grand
Prix and the
South
African Grand Prix. Williams finished third in the
constructors' championship, scoring 71 points.
1986
In March
1986,
Frank Williams faced the most serious
challenge of his life.
While returning to the airport at Nice
, he was
involved in a car accident which left him paralysed. He did
not return to the pit lane for almost a year. Despite the lack of
his presence in the team, the Williams team won nine Grands Prix
and the constructors’ Championship and came close to winning the
Drivers' championship with Nigel Mansell, but the British driver’s
left-rear tyre blew up along the back straight at the Australian
GP, the final round of the season, while his fellow championship
rival, and teammate, Piquet made a pit stop shortly after Mansell’s
retirement as a precaution. This left
Alain
Prost to defend his title successfully, despite being in an
inferior car.
1987
The
1987 season brought
Williams-Honda partnership its first and only Drivers' championship
title in the form of
Nelson Piquet,
who scored 76 points and won three races, while the
Brazilian’s teammate,
Mansell, was 15 points behind him in second
place with six victories during the season. The Williams team
finished as constructors’ champions for the second year running,
scoring 137 points, 61 points ahead of their nearest rivals
McLaren. Despite this success Honda ended their partnership with
Williams at the end of the year in favour of McLaren and
Lotus.
1988
Unable to make a deal with another major engine manufacturer,
Williams used
naturally-aspirated Judd engines for the
1988 season. This left them with a
significant performance deficit compared with their turbo-powered
rivals.
Piquet left Williams to join
Lotus who had retained their
Honda engines for the 1988 season, mostly
due to
Satoru Nakajima. Williams
brought in
Italian Riccardo Patrese to replace him. The team
did not win a single race that season and finished seventh in the
constructors’ championship, scoring 20 points. The highlights of
the season were two second places by Mansell, at the
British and
Spanish Grand Prix. When Mansell was
forced to miss two races through illness, he was replaced by
Martin Brundle and then
Jean-Louis Schlesser.
Renault and Mecachrome (1989–1999)
- Related Article: Renault F1

The team
secured an engine supply from Renault
in
1989. Renault engines subsequently powered Williams drivers
to another four Drivers' and five constructors’ Championships up
until Renault’s departure from Formula One at the end of 1997. The
combination of Renault’s powerful engine and
Adrian Newey’s design expertise led to a
particularly dominant period in the mid 1990s. Mansell had a record
breaking 1992 season winning the title in record time and leading
many races from pole to finish.Some maintain that the
Williams FW14B and FW15C were "the most
technologically advanced cars that will ever race in Formula
One".
1989

Williams FW12C, the first Renault
engine powered Williams
The
Renault era started in 1989,
with Italian Riccardo Patrese and Belgian
Thierry Boutsen at
the helm of the two Williams cars. The engine’s first grand
prix in
Brazil was one
that the team would prefer to forget, with Boutsen retiring with an
engine failure and Patrese with an alternator failure after
leading, although Patrese did qualify second. The Williams Renault
team managed to get back on track with Boutsen coming fourth in the
next race at
Imola,
earning the team three points in their championship campaign. Two
races later at the
Mexican Grand
Prix, the team managed to achieve their first podium with the
Renault engine, thanks to Patrese, who came second, 15 seconds
behind the race winner
Ayrton Senna.
The next race saw Patrese come second again, having started from
14th on the grid, with Boutsen 6th. At the sixth round in
Canada, Williams not only scored
their first win with the Renault engine but also their first
one-two: Thierry Boutsen came first followed by Patrese, resulting
in 15 points for Williams' championship campaign. Williams came
second in the constructors’ championship, scoring 77 points in
total; 64 points behind winners McLaren. Patrese finished 3rd in
the drivers' championship with 40 points, 41 points behind the 1989
world champion,
Alain Prost. Boutsen
finished 5th in the championship with 37 points after also winning
in
Australia. Boutsen's
win in Australia gave Williams the distinction of having one the
first and last Grands Prix of the
1980s.
1990
In
1990, Williams kept
Patrese and
Boutsen as the team’s drivers. Although
Patrese won the
San Marino
Grand Prix and Boutsen won pole position and the race at the
Hungarian Grand Prix, the
team scored 30 fewer points than the previous year and finished the
constructors’ championship two positions lower, in fourth. In the
drivers' championship, Boutsen finished sixth with 34 points and
Patrese seventh with 23 points.
1991
Boutsen left Williams and joined
Ligier at the start of
1991.
His replacement was
Britain's
Nigel Mansell;
Williams also recruited future 1996 world champion, Damon Hill, as one of their new test
drivers. Williams failed to finish in the first Grand
Prix of the season at Phoenix
, both drivers retiring with gearbox
problems. Patrese got back on track for the team in the next
Grand Prix at
Interlagos,
coming second behind McLaren's
Ayrton
Senna. The
1991 San
Marino Grand Prix saw both cars retiring again: Mansell after a
collision and Patrese with an electrical failure after 17 laps. The
Grand Prix at
Monaco saw
Mansell finally finish in a points-scoring position, coming second,
18 seconds behind race winner Ayrton Senna. At the next race, the
Canadian Grand Prix,
Williams locked out the front row only for Patrese to drop back
with gearbox problems and Mansell to retire from the lead on the
final lap with an electrical fault. At the following race, in
Mexico, Williams finally
broke their 1991 duck with a 1-2, Patrese finishing ahead of
Mansell to score 16 points for the Williams team. Williams then had
two consecutive further victories, with Mansell winning the
French Grand Prix, five
seconds ahead of
Alain Prost’s
Ferrari. Mansell then won again at the
British Grand Prix; it had
been four years since a Briton had won the grand prix, Mansell
having won it in
1987. Three
consecutive victories became four when Mansell won again in
Germany, Patrese was about 10
seconds behind him in second place. Senna ended Williams' run of
victories by winning in
Hungary, finishing five seconds
ahead of Nigel Mansell. Mansell later won the
Italian Grand Prix and the
Spanish Grand Prix, while Patrese
won the
Portuguese Grand
Prix after Mansell's race was ruined by a botched pitstop in
which only three wheel nuts were fitted. Williams finished second
in the constructors’ championship, scoring 125 points in total, 14
points behind McLaren. Mansell finished second in the drivers'
championship, scoring 72 points, 24 points behind Senna.
1992
Williams took a step up for the
1992 season, keeping their
1991 driver line-up of
Patrese and
Mansell. Mansell dominated the first round in
South Africa,
qualifying in pole position and winning the race by 24 seconds from
his team-mate Patrese. Nigel Mansell won the next four rounds for
Williams, at
Mexico City,
Interlagos,
Catalunya and
Imola, Patrese coming second in
all but one (the
Spanish Grand
Prix, where he retired after spinning off). Mansell's five
victories in the opening five races was a new record in Formula
One. Senna won the next race in
Monaco, ahead of both Williams cars,
which finished second and third. In the next race, in
Canada, both Williams cars retired:
Mansell spun off on entering the final corner (he claimed that
Senna pushed him off) and Patrese had a gearbox failure. Mansell
went on to record four more Grand Prix wins, including at the
British Grand Prix. (In the
final round, in
Adelaide,
the two Williams again retired, Mansell after Senna violently
crashed into the back of him, and Patrese with electrical
problems.) Williams won the constructors’ championship with 164
points, 65 points more than second place McLaren. Mansell became
World Champion, scoring 108 points, with Patrese finishing second
with 56 points. In winning nine races in a single season Mansell
had set a new record for the most wins by a single driver in one
season.
Despite capturing the title and nine races,
Nigel Mansell's seat was not safe for 1993.
Alain Prost and
Ayrton Senna were both trying to sign for
Williams. Patrese's position looked to be under threat and he
signed for
Benetton before the end
of the year. Ironically, only Prost was able to agree terms with
Williams for
1993, leaving a
seat free for Patrese had he remained with the team. Upon hearing
that Prost had signed with Williams, Mansell departed for
CART rather than be teammates with the Frenchman
as they did not have a good relationship from their time together
at Ferrari. Prost's contract with Williams included a clause that
forbid the signing of Senna for the 1993 season, and the Brazilian
remained at McLaren.
1993

Williams uniform, 1993
Nigel Mansell left the Williams team
in
1993 for
CART racing, the team hired triple champion
Alain Prost, and promoted test driver
Damon Hill to replace
Riccardo Patrese, who had left to join
Michael Schumacher at
Benetton.
The Williams
FW15C was the dominant
car, with active suspension and traction control systems beyond
anything available to the other teams. Prost won on his debut for
the team in
South
Africa and, like Mansell, dominated the weekend, taking pole
position and finishing a minute ahead of
Senna, who was second. The next Grand Prix in
Brazil saw Prost collide
with Christian Fittipaldi's Minardi in the rain on lap 29, while
Hill went on to his first podium finish: second, 16 seconds behind
Senna. Prost won three of the next four Grands Prix for Williams,
Senna winning the other race. Prost and Hill later scored a 1-2 in
France: the only 1-2 of the
season for Williams. The
Frenchman won
the next two Grand Prix at
Silverstone and
Hockenheim. Prost’s team mate Hill
proved competitive especially in the second half of the season.
Mechanical problems cost the Englishman leads in Britain and
Germany, but he went on to win the next three Grand Prix at
Hungary;
Belgium and
Italy which moved him to second in
the standings, as well as giving him a chance of taking the
drivers' title. After Italy, Williams would not win a Grand Prix
for the rest of the season, as a young
Michael Schumacher won the following race
in
Portugal, and Senna
took
Japan and
Australia to overtake Hill in
points. Williams retained their constructor’s title, 84 points
ahead of second placed, McLaren. Prost clinched the driver’s
championship in Portugal and finished the season 26 points ahead of
second placed Ayrton Senna.
1994
During the
1994 season,
Williams exclusively used version FW16B (developed still during the
pre-season), in which
Ayrton Senna’s
fatal crash occurred and
Damon Hill came
close to winning the season, his third year in
Formula One
From
1994 to
1997 the cars ran in the highly
distinctive blue and white
Rothmans livery,
widely regarded as one of F1’s most popular colour schemes.
Williams secured the signing of
Senna
in
1994, causing Alain Prost
to retire rather than partner his greatest rival, as the contract
prohibiting the signing of Senna covered only the 1993 season.
Given this was the same team that had won the previous two
World Championships with vastly superior
cars, Senna was a natural and presumptive pre-season title
favorite, with second-year driver
Damon
Hill intended to play the supporting role. Between them, Prost,
Senna, and Hill had won every race in 1993 but one, which was taken
by Benetton's
Michael
Schumacher.
Pre-season testing showed the
car had
speed but it was difficult to drive. The FIA had banned electronic
drivers aids, such as
active
suspension,
traction
control and
ABS, to
make the sport more "human". It was these technological
advancements that the Williams chassis' of the previous years had
been built around. With their removal in '94 Williams had not been
a good-handling car, as observed by other F1 drivers, having been
seen to be very loose at the rear. Senna himself had made numerous
(politically careful) comments that the
Williams FW16 had some quirks which needed to
be ironed out. It was obvious that the FW16, after the regulation
changes banning active suspension and traction control, exhibited
none of the superiority of the
FW15C
and
Williams FW14B cars that had
preceded it. The surprise of testing was
Benetton-
Ford which was less powerful but more
nimble than the Williams.
The first four rounds were won by
Michael Schumacher in the
Benetton-
Ford. Senna took pole in the first three
races but finished none of them. In the third race, the
1994 San Marino Grand Prix in
Imola, Senna was involved in a fatal crash at the first corner
after completing five laps.
The repercussions of Senna's fatal accident
were severe for the team itself, as the Italian
prosecutors tried to charge the team and Frank Williams with manslaughter, an episode
which was not over until 2005. At the next race in
Monaco,
Damon
Hill was the only Williams on the grid, this was done as a mark
of respect to Senna, the Brit retired on the first lap. Since
Senna’s death, every Williams F1 car has carried a Senna 'S'
somewhere on its livery in his honour.
The next race in
Spain,
Williams brought in test driver,
David
Coulthard, as Hill’s new teammate. In the race itself, Hill
took the team's first victory of the season, by almost half a
minute over
Schumacher's Benetton, while Coulthard would retire due
to an electrical problem. In
Canada, both Williams cars finished
in the points for the first time that season, with Hill finishing
second and Coulthard finishing fifth. Two rounds later, Damon Hill
did something his father,
Graham, never
did, which was winning the
British Grand Prix. Hill closed the
gap with Schumacher in the championship, after the
German was disqualified from first at
Spa after the Stewards found
floorboard irregularities on his Benetton. He was banned for the
next two races, in which Hill capitalised on with wins in
Italy and a Williams 1-2 in
Portugal. Schumacher would come
back after his suspension for the
European Grand Prix, which he won
by about 25 seconds. By the penultimate round in
Japan, Hill was 5 points behind
Schumacher and if he did not finish ahead of the
German, it would be very unlikely that he would take
the title in the final round in Adelaide, however Hill did win the
rain-soaked restart, by three seconds to Schumacher who finished
second and so to the final round in
Adelaide, where Schumacher led
Hill by one point.
With four races left,
Frank Williams
brought back in 1992 champion
Nigel
Mansell to replace Coulthard. Mansell would get approximately
£900,000
per race, while Hill was paid £300,000 for the
entire season, though Hill remained as lead driver.
Mansell would take pole for Williams, however he had a poor start
which gave way for Hill and Schumacher to fight it out for the lead
and the 1994 title. Mid way through the race, Schumacher’s tactics
for low aerodynamics, would cost him as he clipped the wall coming
into the fifth corner and went wide. Schumacher and Hill would end
up colliding on the next corner, and the double retirement that
resulted meant Schumacher was the champion. This collision has been
controversial. Some, such as Williams'
Patrick Head, have suggested that this was a
deliberate attempt by Schumacher to take Hill out of the race.
However others, such as then BBC commentator Murray Walker,
defended Schumacher, calling the accident a "racing
incident".Williams would end the season as constructors champions
for the third consecutive year, scoring 118 points, while Hill
finished second in the drivers championship with 91 points.
1995
In
1995,
Nigel Mansell left Williams again, this time
he moved to McLaren to leave Williams with
Hill and
Coulthard. At the first round in
Brazil,
Schumacher started off with a win, with
Coulthard coming second. However, both were disqualified from the
race after it was found that their fuel supplier, Elf, supplied the
teams with a type of fuel that was different than the ones they
gave to the
FIA as
samples. So
Gerhard Berger and
Ferrari were declared winners, until Schumacher and Coulthard had
their positions reinstated after appeal, though Benetton and
Williams were not awarded their constructors points. Hill won the
next two races in
Argentina and
San Marino and would later win
two more races, which were at
The Hungaroring and
in Adelaide, the latter where
Hill won two laps ahead of the field in one of F1's most dominating
victories. Coulthard would also record his only win for the
Williams team, at
Estoril, before moving to
McLaren.
Benetton would end
Williams' four year dominance after they won the championship 29
points ahead Williams. Hill would come second for the second year
running, 33 points behind Schumacher.
1996
For
1996, Williams clearly
had the quickest and most reliable car.
Coulthard had left
Williams to join Mika Häkkinen at
McLaren, Williams replaced the Scotsman with Canadian
Jacques
Villeneuve, while Hill remained with
the team. Schumacher left
Benetton to join
Ferrari. Williams won the first five Grands
Prix, Hill winning all but one of them.
Olivier Panis would take victory at the sixth
round in
Monaco after both
Williams cars retired. Hill would retire for the second time in a
row after he spun off in
Spain, while his team mate,
Villeneuve, took third place. Hill and Villeneuve dominated the
next Grand Prix in
Canada,
with a 1-2 in qualifying and a 1-2 in the race. Williams made it a
second 1-2 after Hill won the
French Grand Prix. Villeneuve won his
second race in F1 at
Silverstone after Hill retired with
a wheel bearing failure on lap 26. The Brit would be victorious in
the next Grand Prix in
Germany while Villeneuve would win
the race after that in
Hungary. Schumacher’s Ferrari
would then take the next two Grand Prix at
Spa-Francorchamps and
Monza. Villeneuve mounted a title
challenge going into the final race of the season at
Japan, but Hill reasserted his
dominance to take the race and the 1996 title, while Villeneuve
lost a wheel and retired.
Williams' dominance was such that they had clinched the
constructors' championship and only their drivers had a
mathematical chance of taking the title, several races before the
season concluded. Around that time,
Frank
Williams announced that Hill would not be re-signed after his
contract expired, despite Hill's successes and eventual drivers'
championship, so he joined
Arrows for 1997.
Also,
Adrian Newey had ambitions to
succeed
Patrick Head as technical
director, but this was blocked as Head was a founder and
shareholder of the team. McLaren lured Newey away, though he was
forced to take
garden leave for the
1997 season.
1997
For what would be the final season of Williams-Renault and a car
designed with Newey's input,
Frank
Williams brought in
German Heinz-Harald Frentzen, under the
impression that he could perform better than Hill. Frentzen,
however, proved to be a disappointment and won only one race in his
two year spell at Williams, which was at
1997 San Marino Grand Prix.
Jacques Villeneuve won seven
races during the season, with his main rival,
Michael Schumacher of a resurgent
Ferrari, winning five. Williams also achieved the 100 race win
milstone at the
British Grand
Prix. Coming to the final round of the season at
Jerez, Schumacher lead the Canadian
by 1 point, however on lap 48, Schumacher and Villeneuve collided.
Schumacher was disqualified from second place in the championship
as the accident was deemed by the FIA as "
avoidable",
Williams won the constructors title for the second time in a row,
scoring 123 points, while Jacques Villeneuve won the driver’s
championship by three points to Michael Schumacher, who kept his
points total despite being removed from second place, with Williams
team-mate Frentzen a further thirty six points behind.
1998
After 1997, the team were unable to maintain their dominance in
Formula 1 as Renault ended their full time involvement in Formula
1, and
Adrian Newey moved to rival team
McLaren.
Williams then had to pay for Mecachrome engines, which were old; rebadged
Renault
engines. Both these meant that the car not only featured a
very similar aerodynamic package to their 1997 car, but also
virtually the same engine, leading to some to comment that they ran
what was virtually the same car, adjust for the 1998 regulations.
There were changes on the sponsorship front however as
Rothmans opted to promote their
Winfield brand, which ended the popular
blue and white livery. For
1998, Williams kept the two drivers
from the previous season, the first time since
1983 that a reigning world champion
remained driving for Williams. While Ferrari and McLaren battled
for the constructors' and drivers' titles, Williams fell to the mid
of the field. The team won no races and took 3 podiums during the
season, with Frentzen finishing in third at the first round in
Australia and Villeneuve
finishing third in
Germany
and
Hungary. Williams
finished third in the constructors championship, scoring 38 points,
while Villeneuve finished fifth in the driver’s championship with
21 points and his German team mate, Frentzen, finished 4 points
behind him in seventh.
1999
In
1999, Williams employed a
completely new driver line up,
Villeneuve moved to new team,
BAR and
Frentzen moved to
Jordan. Williams brought in
German Ralf
Schumacher and
Italian Alex Zanardi. The team managed three podiums,
all scored by Ralf Schumacher, with third place in
Australia and
Britain, along with a second place
in
Italy. The team finished
fifth in the constructor’s championship, the lowest finish for
Williams in the 1990s; the team finished behind
Stewart and
Jordan; scoring 35 points (all by
Schumacher), 3 less than the previous season.
BMW and Cosworth (2000–2006)
- Related Articles: BMW, BMW in motorsport
2000
During
1998, the team signed a long term agreement with BMW, with the German
manufacturer
supplying engines and expertise for a period of 6 years. As
part of the deal BMW expected at least one driver to be
German and
Ralf
Schumacher was signed. In 1999, the team had a Williams car
with a BMW engine testing at circuits, in preparation for a debut
in
2000.
Williams sought the
services of Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya as a proven racer for
the up coming season but he was initially unavailable, so Britain's
Jenson Button made his
debut instead.
BMW Williams' first season did not see a single victory during the
season, they did however, manage to get on the podium three times,
Ralf Schumacher responsible for all
three. Williams finished third in the constructor’s championship,
with 36 points; one more than last year.
Ralf Schumacher finished fifth in the
driver’s championship, while Button, in his debut season, finished
three places behind in eighth.
2001
In
2001 Button moved to
Benetton-Renault
due to
Montoya's arrival at the
team. The
FW23 won four races,
three by
Ralf Schumacher at
Imola,
Montreal, and his home Grand Prix
in
Germany. His teammate,
Montoya, was victorious at
Monza, and would have won a few more
races if not for the FW23's unreliability and pit crew blunders.
The car proved to be quicker than the Ferrari and McLaren
counterparts in several races, but Williams' 2001 campaign only
yielded third place in the constructor’s championship.
2002
For
2002, Williams kept
their
2001 driver line up
for the upcoming season.
The team only won one race, which was at
Malaysia
, one of only 2 races not won by Ferrari in a year
dominated by the Ferraris of
Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello. Williams did
improve on their constructor’s championship position, finishing in
second. Montoya finished third in the driver’s championship, eight
points ahead of Ralf Schumacher, who finished fourth.
2003
2003 would see BMW Williams
reach their peak of success, during pre-season,
Frank Williams was very confident that the
FW25 would challenge for the title.
The team won four races, Montoya winning twice at
Monaco and
Germany, while Ralf Schumacher won at
the
Nürburgring and the
following race at
Magny-Cours. Montoya stayed in
contention for the driver’s championship during the season, the
Colombian finished third in the championship, 11 points behind
Michael Schumacher, while the
younger Schumacher finished 24 points astern of Montoya in fifth.
Williams finished second in the constructor’s championship, two
points ahead of McLaren.
2004
At the start of the
2004
season it was announced that Montoya would be moving to McLaren
in 2005. The team began the season with a radical nose-cone design,
known as the "
Walrus-Nose", that proved
uncompetitive and was replaced by a more conventional assembly in
the second half of the year.
Ferrari for the third time running,
dominated the season, winning 15 of the 18 races, Williams did
however pick up a win during the season, which was at the final
race in
Brazil,
Juan Pablo Montoya winning the race by a
second to
Kimi Räikkönen’s
McLaren. Another memorable part of the season was when both
Williams and
Toyota were disqualified
from the
Canadian Grand
Prix after it was discovered that both cars had brake
irregularities, the brake ducts seemingly not conforming to
regulations. Williams finished the season in fourth, scoring 88
points and finishing on the podium six times. While Montoya was the
highest placed Williams driver that year, finishing in fifth
position; scoring 58 points.
2005
For the
2005 season,
Schumacher moved to
Toyota; while
Montoya moved to McLaren. Taking their
places were
Australian Mark Webber and
German
Nick Heidfeld. Initially
Jenson Button was to have driven for Williams
in 2005, but an
FIA
ruling forced Button to remain with his current team
BAR.
Nick
Heidfeld competed with Brazilian test driver
Antônio Pizzonia for the remaining
racing seat during December 2004 and January 2005, and Heidfeld was
chosen, partly in deference to BMW’s wishes for a German driver.
Pizzonia served as the test driver for the team during the 2005
season. Meanwhile, Button signed a contract to drive for Williams
in
2006.
During the course of the
2004 and
2005 F1 seasons,
BMW Motorsport and director
Mario Theissen increasingly became publicly
critical of the WilliamsF1 team’s inability to create a package
capable of winning the constructors championship, or even multiple
victories within a single season. Williams, on the other hand,
blamed BMW for not producing a good enough engine. Williams' failed
attempt to prise
Jenson Button out of
his BAR contract may also have been an issue with Theissen. Despite
Frank Williams' rare decision to cave
in to commercial demands by employing German driver
Nick Heidfeld when he allegedly preferred
Antônio Pizzonia, the fallout
between BMW and Williams continued through the
2005 Formula One season. This public
deterioration of the relationship between BMW and WilliamsF1 was a
factor in the decision by BMW Motorsport to buy
Sauber and rebrand that team to feature the BMW
name.
Williams could have opted to continue with BMW engines in
2006, despite the fact that the
engine manufacturer was about to set up its own team. In the end,
though, WilliamsF1 opted for
Cosworth V8
engines for 2006.
This period ( – ) saw Williams depart from the standard livery
scheme in motorsport, which consists of one colour scheme, either
the teams' or the major sponsors', with smaller logos in their own
scheme. BMW stipulated that, and paid for, the whole vehicle to be
in blue and white, with other sponsors adopting this scheme. Also
in
2000, Williams abandoned
tobacco advertising in favour of
Information technology companies, as
the team’s second major sponsor became
Compaq. That sponsorship lasted until Compaq’s
acquisition by
Hewlett-Packard. At
the
2002 British Grand Prix,
the team debuted the Hewlett-Packard sponsorship. After complaints
about the HP logo on the rear wing it was replaced in
2003 with the sponsor’s tag line,
"
Invent". One of the most memorable results of this
technological partnership was a worldwide television commercial
featured drivers
Ralf Schumacher and
Juan Pablo Montoya seemingly
driving their BMW Williams cars around a track by radio control
from a grandstand.
This
"clean" image allowed Williams to sign a cigarette
anti-craving brand, Niquitin, and Anheuser-Busch
, alternating with the Budweiser beer brand and Sea World
Adventure Parks, in compliance with trademark
disputes or alcohol bans.
2006
- Related Article: Cosworth
The
2006 season saw
Nico Rosberg replace
Nick Heidfeld, who departed for
BMW Sauber, while
Mark
Webber stayed on with the team. Despite having signed a
contract to race for Williams,
Jenson
Button decided to stay with
BAR for 2006 as it was to become a
Honda works team. In September 2005 a deal was reached to allow
Button to remain with BAR, with Williams receiving around £24m,
some of it paid by Jenson himself, to cancel this contract.
WilliamsF1 and
Cosworth entered a
partnership agreement where Cosworth would supply engines,
transmissions and associated electronics and software for the team.
Major sponsors
Hewlett-Packard (HP)
concluded sponsorship agreements one year before their official end
of contract. The WilliamsF1 team also switched to
Bridgestone tyres.
The season started well, with both drivers scoring points in the
opening race of the season, and Nico Rosberg setting the fastest
lap at the
Bahrain Grand
Prix. However, the rest of the season was very disappointing,
with 20 retirements out of 36 starts for the two cars. The team
failed to finish on the podium all season, the first time since
Williams’ first season in 1977. The team eventually finished eighth
in the constructors’ championship, with only 11 points.
Toyota (2007-2009)
- Related Articles: Toyota &
Toyota Racing
Following Williams' worst points tally since
1978, the Grove-based team announced
that Japanese car manufacturer Toyota would be supplying the
engines for the
2007 season.
Along with Toyota supplying engines to the team, a number of other
changes were announced for 2007:
Alexander Wurz, who had been a test driver at
Williams since 2006, became the team’s second driver to replace the
outgoing Mark Webber; Japanese driver
Kazuki Nakajima, son of
Satoru, replaced Wurz as a test driver
alongside Karthikeyan. Sponsorship also saw a change in 2007, as it
was announced that
AT&T would become
the title sponsors for the team from the upcoming season. AT&T
were previously involved as minor sponsors with the
Jaguar and McLaren teams, but moved to
Williams following McLaren’s announcement of a title sponsorship
deal with
Vodafone, a competitor of
AT&T. On February 2, the new FW29 was presented to the media in
the UK. Soon afterwards the team secured a sponsorship deal with
Lenovo who built the team's new
supercomputer.
Rosberg
and Wurz gave Williams a more productive season in terms of points
and in Canada the Austrian
scored the team's first podium finish since Nick
Heidfeld's second place finish at the 2005 European Grand Prix.
Over the course of the year Rosberg was consistently in the points,
scoring 20 during the season, in comparison teammate Wurz who
finished in the points three times. Following the announcement that
Wurz would be retiring from the sport, Williams brought in their
young test driver Nakajima to drive the second car for them in the
final race in
Brazil. The
Japanese driver finished in tenth despite starting from near the
back of the grid, while Rosberg enjoyed his best race of the
season, finishing in fourth. Williams finished fourth in the
Constructors' Championship that year.
For the season, Williams confirmed Nico Rosberg and Kazuki Nakajima
as their race drivers. Rosberg was confirmed as staying with
Williams until the end of on December 9, 2007, ending speculation
that he could take
Fernando Alonso's
vacated seat at McLaren. During the Winter testing sessions, the
team ran six different liveries to celebrate their thirtieth year
in the sport and their 500th Grand Prix.
The 2008 season was a mixture of success and disappointment for
Williams. While Rosberg managed to obtain 2 podiums in Australia
and Singapore, the team struggled at circuits with high speed
corners. The fact that the team was one of the first to switch
development to their 2009 car (where new regulations come in) also
hindered their season, and Williams finished a disappointing 8th in
the constructors championship. Rosberg has stated that unless the
team is more competitive in the near future, he will look for
drives elsewhere. Williams have retained Rosberg and Nakajima for
the 2009 season.
Frank Williams had admitted that he had regretted parting with BMW
but stated that Toyota has tremendous ability to become a top
engine supplier. Speculation had been surrounding Toyota's future
on the Formula 1 grid. This was due to the fact that for a big
budget team, Toyota had only managed 2nd place as their best
result.
In December 2008 Williams confirmed their commitment to F1
following the
Honda withdrawal
announcement.
Ahead of the 2009 Brazilian Grand Prix Williams announced that it
would be ending its three year partnership with Toyota and finding
a new engine supplier for 2010.
Cosworth (2010 - )
After the termination of their Toyota contract Williams announced
that from the
2010 Formula One
season they were to enter into a "long-term partnership" with
Cosworth, and would be using an updated
version of the
CA V8 engine which powered their cars in
2006. Williams also announced a complete driver change for the 2010
season.
Rubens
Barrichello will join from 2009 Constructors Champions Brawn GP
, whilst GP2 champion Nico Hülkenberg will graduate from the
test driver seat. The new test driver for the 2010 season is
currently unknown.
Formula One results
- Main article: WilliamsF1 Grand Prix
results (results for Williams Grand Prix
Engineering/WilliamsF1, 1977–2009)
See
Frank Williams Racing
Cars for that team’s results from 1975 to 1976.
Other motorsports and Williams-branded cars
Formula 2
Williams have developed the car for the revived Formula 2
championship, beginning in 2009. The design was originally created
for a new, more powerful off-shoot of the Formula Palmer Audi
series, however the car was re-purposed when
Jonathan Palmer's
MotorSport Vision successfully bid for the
rights to run the new Formula 2 series.
Group B rallying
The
Metro 6R4 rally
car was developed by Williams in 1984 on commission from
Rover. The
rally
car was a
Rover Metro with a
completely new
V6 engine (
mid-engined) and
four-wheel drive, developed to the
international
Group B rallying regulations.
Williams developed the car in just six months.
British Touring Car Championship
Williams Touring Car Engineering were
Renault's official entry to the
British Touring Car
Championship between 1995 and 1999.
The Renault Laguna based cars were produced at
Williams' Didcot
factory (the
Formula One team having recently moved to new premises at Grove
). The touring car venture was very successful,
Williams-Renault won the Manufacturers title in 1995 and
1997
and the BTCC drivers title with Swiss
Alain Menu in 1997.
Le Mans 24 Hours
Prior to their F1 partnership, Williams Motorsport built
Le Mans Prototypes for
BMW, known as the
V12 LM and
V12 LMR.
The V12 LMR won the 24 Hours of
Le Mans
in 1999. The car was driven by
Pierluigi Martini;
Yannick Dalmas and
Joachim Winkelhock, and operated by
Schnitzer Motorsport under the
name of
BMW Motorsport.
Renault Clio Williams
Williams's name and logo were used on the
Renault Clio Williams. However,
no input was provided by Williams into the development of the
car.
Image:Metro6r4.jpg|The
Metro 6R4 was developed by
Williams for the 1986 World Rally Championship.Image:Alain Menu
1996 BTCC cropped.jpg|The Williams engineered
Renault Laguna BTCC car ran between
1995–1999 and won two manufactures titles and one drivers
title.Image:Clio Williams.jpg|The Renault Clio Williams.
Footnotes
- http://uk.reuters.com/article/idUKTRE5AJ16I20091120
- http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/80255
- Constructors: Williams F1 www. Retrieved 21 August 2006
- Williams Grand Prix Engineering - 1977 results
www.f1db.com Retrieved 22 August 2006
- Grand Prix Results: French GP, 1979 .
Retrieved 27 July 2006
- The changing face of F1 . Retrieved 12
July 2006
- Interview - Frank Williams (1 July, 1993) .
Retrieved 14 July 2006
- 1999 - Color In Sport ssur.org.. Retrieved 14 July 2006
- Formula One History: After Tamburello F1-GrandPrix.com/History. Retrieved 13 June 2006
- On This Day: 1st May. Retrieved 13
July 2006
- Top designers acquitted on Senna .
Retrieved 13 July 2006
- ' 'WilliamsF1.com > Seasons > 1994 .
Retrieved 14 July 2006
- Senna 'S' Senna 'S' Retrieved 1 May 2009
- Hamilton, Maurice Frank Williams page 244 Macmillan
ISBN 0-333-71716-3
- Reflections on a Racing Rivalry
- 'Ruthless' Schumi blasted. Retrieved 2 August
2006
- GP.Com > Features > News Feature > Review of
1996
- Review of 1997 . Retrieved 14 July 2006
- News Feature > Mecachrome . Retrieved 14
July 2006
- Technical > FW20 . Retrieved 14 July
2006
- Schumacher paints F1 red . Retrieved
13 July 2006
- Williams launch new car . Retrieved 13
July 2006
- Webber signs to BMW WilliamsF1 .
Retrieved 13 July 2006
- BMW sign Heidfeld for new F1 team .
Retrieved July 13 2006
- Williams firm on Button . Retrieved 13 July 2006
- Williams: BAR can have Button but... .
Retrieved 13 July 2006
- Williams give Heidfeld more time .
Retrieved 13 July 2006
- BMW: Williams must improve . Retrieved
13 July 2006
- Williams criticises partner BMW .
Retrieved 27 July 2006
- BMW buys Sauber to form own team .
Retrieved 13 July 2006
- Hewlett-Packard Corporate- HP Technology and
BMW Williams F1 Team. Retrieved 19 July 2006
- GlaxoSmithKline. Retrieved 19 July
2006
- Anheuser-Busch, Inc.: Budweiser sponsors BMW
WilliamsF1 Team. Retrieved 19 July 2006
- SeaWorld Adventure Parks To Be Featured With
BMW WilliamsF1 Team. Retrieved 19 July 2006
- Williams turn to Cosworth engines .
Retrieved 13 July 2006/
- Williams sign Toyota engine deal .
Retrieved 27 July 2006.
- AT&T Title Sponsor for WilliamsF1
Retrieved 20 October 2006.
- Vodafone will be McLaren’s Title Sponsor 20
October 2006.
- 100 Greatest Cars Nominees - Car Picture Photo
Gallery from 4Car
References
Williams History (1967-2000) Taken from:
All Formula One race and championship results are taken
from:
External links