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The team
seems to have faired well in winter testing. What are your expectations for
the season ahead?
We want to continue our progress back, from a very low point of 2006, to
being a leading team, always in a position to challenge for race wins and
the Championship.
The media are speculating that Williams could be the leading team behind
Ferrari and McLaren this year, is this realistic?
It is too early to say where we will be in the pecking order. It looks as if
Ferrari and McLaren have made strong progress from 2007, BMW have a car that
seems quick and Renault have made progress, I am sure some of which is
coming from the cockpit with Alonso back at the helm. Red Bull are beginning
to look stronger and Toro Rosso are making the best of a car that they are
familiar with, they certainly cannot be dismissed. We have certainly made
progress, but we will not see where we stand until after the season starts.
What improvements have been brought to the FW30 over the FW29 and how is
it technically different to its predecessor?
The FW30 is a progression along the theme of the FW29, although the cooling
installations are quite different. Obviously it has benefited from nearly
nine months’ of aero development from the original FW29, although some of
the changes have been applied during the FW29’s development through 2007.
The team finished last year’s Championship in fourth place, a major step
up from 2006. Could a fight for the Championship be on the cards in two or
three seasons’ time?
We never design a new car to be fourth! Obviously we are always designing
for the highest possible position, so the result depends upon our relative
capability at the time. Although Nico will be starting his third season in
F1, Kazuki will be starting his first, so the driver line up will not be as
experienced as might be expected for a team competing for a Championship.
However, we intend to be regular podium visitors in 2008. The reliability of
current Formula One cars means that this can only be achieved with a car
that is close to front running performance.
Nico enters his third season as a race driver for the team and Kazuki is
making his debut. Are they working well together?
Yes, they are. Kazuki is steadily increasing his speed, particularly with
qualifying simulation of a single lap on new tyres. We expect Nico to be our
lead driver, but Kazuki will give a good account of himself.
2008 is a celebratory year for Williams in which 500 GPs and 50,000
racing laps will be reached. Did you foresee such longevity when you started
the team?
I don’t think either Frank or I thought about it. Formula One teams in those
days tended to come and go. In our first five years or so it was a financial
struggle to survive, but luckily we started winning races and then
Championships quite early, so this made the financial side stronger.
What has been the biggest change in Formula One you’ve witnessed during
your tenure?
The scale of the activity has changed enormously with the level of coverage.
Now some teams have well above 100 personnel that they take to each race,
many of whom have no operational connection to the running of the cars, but
are from marketing or the logistics-support side.
Your relationship with Frank has endured for over 30 years. What is the
key to its success?
Fundamentally, Frank and I have a similar view about the joys of motor
racing and we both look after different parts of the challenge; myself on
the technical side and Frank on marketing and finance, as well as
relationships with our senior partners, so we do not trip over each other
too much.
Did you envisage you would achieve 16 World Championships when you set up
Williams F1?
No, not at all, but we both wanted to achieve as much as possible.
If you could pinpoint one overriding element to the team’s success, what
would it be?
Consistent guidance from the top, an understanding that F1 is essentially a
technical and organisational problem as well as an appreciation of how much
we rely upon the skills and enthusiasm of our employees.
Out of 500 races, which has been your most satisfying?
Winning races is satisfying, but it is what we set out to do, so not winning
is failing in that task. Once the race is over, both Frank and I tend to be
thinking about the future.
And lastly, what are your predictions for the 2008 season as a whole?
That the races will be contested mostly between Ferrari and McLaren, as in
2007, that at least one race will be won by a third team and that Williams
will make progress from 2007. |