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Williams family to leave F1 after Italian GP

September 03, 2020 23:17 IST

The family's departure marks the end of an era after 43 years and 739 Grands Prix.

IMAGE: Williams' Racing Deputy Team Principal Claire Williams. Photograph: Andrew Boyers/Reuters

Claire Williams, Formula One's only female team boss, will step down after Sunday's Italian Grand Prix and following the sale to US-based Dorilton Capital, the former champions announced on Thursday.

Williams, officially the deputy to her 78-year-old father Frank who no longer attends races and is also leaving, effectively ran the British-based team whose sale was announced last month.

The once-dominant but now-struggling team, who have not won a grand prix since 2012 and are currently last and without a point, will continue to race under the Williams name.

The family's departure marks the end of an era after 43 years and 739 Grands Prix.

"It is with a heavy heart that I am stepping away from my role with the team," Claire Williams, who took over day-to-day running of the team in 2013, said in a statement.

"I had hoped to continue my tenure long into the future and to preserve the Williams family’s legacy into the next generation."

 

Williams, 44, said she had taken the decision to go "in order to allow Dorilton a fresh start" and to spend more time with her family.

"It has not been an easy decision but it’s one I believe to be right for all involved," she added.

"I have loved every minute and will be forever grateful for the opportunities it has given me. But it’s also an incredibly challenging sport and I now want to see what else the world holds for me."

Williams, who has a two-year-old son, has spoken in the past of the responsibility she felt. Two years ago she said she wondered every day whether she was the right person to be in charge.

A champion for gender diversity in F1, Williams appointed female drivers Susie Wolff -- now running the Venturi Formula E team -- and W Series champion Jamie Chadwick to development roles.

Williams are the third most successful constructor in the sport's history, with 114 wins and 16 titles, but their last championship was with Canadian Jacques Villeneuve in 1997.

Founded in 1977 as Williams Grand Prix Engineering, the team were at their peak in the 1980s and 90s with champions Alan Jones, Keke Rosberg, Nelson Piquet, Nigel Mansell, Alain Prost, Damon Hill and Villeneuve.

"We have been in this sport for more than four decades. We are incredibly proud of our track record and the legacy we leave behind," said Claire Williams.

"We have always been in it for the love of it, for the pure pleasure of going motor racing, so this is not a decision that we have taken lightly but after much reflection and as a family."

Factbox: The Williams Formula One team

IMAGE: Williams have not won a grand prix since 2012 and are currently last and without a point. Photograph: F1 Racing/Twitter

Factbox on the Williams Formula One team after the announcement on Thursday that the founding family will be leaving after this weekend's Italian Grand Prix at Monza following the sale to Dorilton Capital.

1977 - Williams Grand Prix Engineering founded by Frank Williams, who had previously entered cars in F1 from 1969, and Patrick Head. The team are based in a former carpet warehouse in Didcot, England.

1979 - First race win, at the British Grand Prix with Swiss driver Clay Regazzoni.

1980 - First world championship, a drivers' and constructors' double with Australian Alan Jones.

1981 - Second constructors' title.

1982 - Finland's Keke Rosberg, father of 2016 champion Nico, wins the drivers' title despite having only one race victory.

1986 - Third constructors' title. Frank Williams is injured in a car accident after testing in the south of France, damaging his spinal cord and becoming tetraplegic.

1987 - Williams returns to the helm after his accident. Title double with Brazilian Nelson Piquet.

1992 - Title double with Britain's Nigel Mansell after a dominant year with the team taking 10 wins and 15 poles.

1993 - Title double with Frenchman Alain Prost

1994 - Brazilian triple champion Ayrton Senna dies in a crash at Imola. Williams end the season as constructors' champions.

1995 - The team moves to their current factory at Grove.

1996 - Title double with Britain's Damon Hill. The team win all but four races and score more than twice as many points as runners-up Ferrari. Hill then leaves.

1997 - Title double with Canadian Jacques Villeneuve, the team's last crowns.

2012 - Venezuelan Pastor Maldonado wins the Spanish Grand Prix, the team's most recent victory, from pole position.

2013 - Claire Williams appointed deputy principal, taking over day-to-day running of the team.

2018 - Williams are 10th with seven points

2019 - Williams are again 10th, this time with one point

August 21, 2020 - The team announces they have been sold to US-based Dorilton Capital.

Source: REUTERS
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