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When it came to the 2025 Formula 1 drivers’ market, James Vowles didn’t think twice.

Sainz officially became available on 1 February 2024 as Ferrari revealed it had signed seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton alongside Charles Leclerc, and the four-time grand prix winner’s services were coveted over the following months.

Alpine and Sauber in particular were hoping to secure the Spaniard but failed, despite potential links between the future Audi team and his father, who had represented the German brand in the previous three runnings of the Dakar Rally.

Instead of banking on a manufacturer drive, Sainz bought into the Williams vision that was presented to him by team principal Vowles, who has now been in office for two years and set to modernise the legendary British outfit, with over 300 hires during that period.

Attracting Sainz was crucial for Williams. Incumbent Alexander Albon has delivered since he joined the team in 2022 – scoring 43 of the team’s 53 points over the last three seasons – but youngsters Logan Sargeant and Franco Colapinto both struggled with too many crashes, despite flashes of speed from the latter.

Franco Colapinto, Williams FW46

Franco Colapinto, Williams FW46

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

For Williams, Sainz is a safe pair of hands that can be trusted to bring consistent results, and an equally valuable technical mind.

“A really good way of working with Alex, especially when we look at control systems – so differentials, brake maps, etc.,” Vowles said when asked what Sainz was bringing to the team, as Williams launched its new FW47 challenger.

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“It brings a whole new dimension, where Franco, for all of his skill in the car, obviously we were almost teaching him along the way what the control systems do.

“We now have an expert in it that has won races, and that’s really brought the team up. The same with starts – think of all the ancillary items.

“So not even driving the car, I can just see a dimensional change in how we’re performing, from where we were before to where we are today.”

Vowles was particularly impressed with the immediacy of Sainz’s input, when he drove the FW46 in last year’s post-season test at Yas Marina Circuit.

“When he tested in Abu Dhabi, he gave us very good, instantaneous and direct feedback on the aerodynamics,” the Briton added. “The good news is he is aligned with Alex, and the more good news is they were areas we were targeting for 2025.

“We were able to understand where our weaknesses lay relative to a car he’d driven just a few days before that had winning potential – and more importantly make sure that the direction of travel that we’re in, which I’m pleased to say is correct, was on the right pathway.

“He knows what excellent looks like: he was in a race-winning category last year, and a car that was a benchmark for a lot of the year, so he brings that with him.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

“Finally, this one’s just a little bit more qualitative, but I see an organisation around me that is smiley, happy, whose shoulders are lifted because they can see a pathway forward towards success, and that very much has Carlos’ and Alex’s names written all over it. So that’s what he brings to it.”

How long will Sainz remain smiley himself, though? The former Toro Rosso, Renault and McLaren driver got used to being a consistent podium achiever and victory contender during his time at Ferrari, but it will be a whole different ballgame with a team whose latest top-three result on merit dates back to the 2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix and whose best finish in 2024 was Albon’s seventh position… in Baku as well.

“My honest point on that is I don’t know how I’m going to react to fighting for P7 to P15,” Sainz pondered. “I don’t know how much I’m going to miss it. I don’t know how much fun I’m going to find it.

“How much will I miss a win, and how jealous will I be of people that are fighting for positions that I used to be fighting for? I cannot say how much I’ll feel that.”

What will help Sainz adjust to the situation is how comfortable he is within the team. When it comes to his new squad, the veteran is rapturously laudatory: “I’m very happy, I’m very motivated, I’m excited, I feel supported.

“I have a team principal and a team that fully trusts in my abilities and that wants to listen to what I say.

“What I like from this team is that they’re extremely excited to hear me, to listen, and they’re asking a lot of questions.

“I feel everything that I’ve said has been applied, and I think it could have an impact soon.”

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

Sainz too will be required to make an impact and be at the top of his game. “You can tell the midfield has caught up a lot with the top teams, and that’s why in Abu Dhabi Q1 we were all within half a second of one another,” the 30-year-old pointed out, with 0.431s then separating second-placed Valtteri Bottas from Colapinto in 19th position.

“So to fill that half a second over a full lap, we’re talking about half a tenth per corner. Am I good enough to fill half a tenth per corner? You need to be really good to fill it.”

Williams will certainly need it, as teams’ performances are expected to keep converging through this final season of regulatory stability in F1.

Additional reporting by Filip Cleeren and Alex Kalinauckas

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Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Williams driver Carlos Sainz says the FIA’s clampdown on swearing is “too much” and thinks it would be bad for Formula 1 if drivers were no longer allowed to show emotion inside the car.

Last month, F1’s governing body issued an update to its Sporting Code, featuring a series of stewards’ penalty guidelines to handle swearing or other sporting code violations. The new guidelines suggest much stricter penalties ranging from fines of up to 120,000 euro to points deductions and even race bans.

WRC driver Adrien Fourmaux was the first to fall foul of this clampdown at last weekend’s Rally Sweden, with the Hyundai driver fined €10,000 and hit with a further suspended €20,000 fine for using “inappropriate language” during a TV interview.

Fourmaux didn’t use swear words in relation to someone else, but in the interview the Frenchman said he and his navigator “f*cked up yesterday” on a previous stage.

In F1, where fines are quadrupled compared to other FIA-sanctioned series, there is yet to be an official response from driver association GPDA. But speaking at the launch of Williams FW47, Sainz urged the FIA to make a distinction between swearing inside and outside the car. And while he agreed drivers shouldn’t use inappropriate language in official press conferences, he urged the governing body not to clamp down too hard on drivers showing passion and emotion in team radio exchanges.

“F1 drivers should be controlled enough doing press conference and media appearances not to swear, and I am in favour of making an effort as a group – when all the kids are watching us in press conference or in front of the media – to at least have good behaviour and decent vocabulary,” the Spaniard said.

“I think that’s not very difficult. So, do we need fines, or do we need to be controlled for that? I don’t know, but I’m in favour of always being well-spoken and well-mannered in front of microphones and in front of media.

Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz,  Williams

Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz, Williams

Photo by: Williams

“At the same time, do I think this is too much for radio communication and the adrenaline and the pressure that we have inside the car? Yes, I think it’s too much what the FIA is trying to achieve with bans and everything, because for me that’s a fundamental part of the sport, where you guys get to see the real emotion and real pressure and the real excitement on the voice and even sometimes, unfortunately, a vocabulary of a racing driver.”

Sainz worries that F1 will lose some of its character if drivers are muzzled on the radio, with FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem recently hinting that he is not ruling out shutting down live team radio. Currently, radio messages are already broadcast with a delay on F1’s world feed to bleep out swearing.

“And as long as it’s not offensive words towards anyone and it’s just a swear word, where you just can see I’m being emotional, I don’t think that should be too controlled, because then you guys are going to miss out on a lot of stuff that we go through inside the car,” Sainz explained. “And trust me, you don’t want to put a microphone inside a football pitch and see what [players] are saying, which is an equivalent situation.

“It’s good to have those kinds of moments, because you see the real driver. We are already very constrained as to what we can tell you about our teams, about our situations. We already have a lot of media briefings. They already tell us what to say.

“Sometimes I’m not easy on the radio, but when you hear that passion, when you hear those words, even if sometimes we swear on the radio, for me that’s a keeper in F1, and that shouldn’t be something we should get rid of.”

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In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

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History is not lost on Carlos Sainz as he becomes the fourth driver in Formula 1 to race for the Big Three of Ferrari, McLaren and now Williams.

Sainz has become something of what pejoratively would be described as a journeyman, a very good driver below the absolute superstar level who has frequently moved teams in order to find a permanent home to deploy his talents, which in his case is not only his speed but also his technical nous and collaborative mentality which has made him an extremely valued member at any of his previous outfits.

Coming off the Red Bull conveyor belt in one of its most productive eras, Sainz opted to leave its satellite team Toro Rosso for two years at Renault, before landing a McLaren drive in 2019. Two years later the possibility of a dream Ferrari seat was impossible to turn down, and his four-year stint at the Scuderia was not only his longest for a single team but also his most successful, bagging four grand prix wins.

But Sainz’s Ferrari dream came to a premature end as the Italian powerhouse grabbed the opportunity to dislodge Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes, forming a mouthwatering partnership of F1’s most iconic team with its most famous and successful driver.

The news was a blow to Sainz, who was then presented with a range of much less desirable midfield outfits to pick from. But he has since turned the page, finished his Ferrari stint with dignity and accepted his new challenge at Williams, the once great team that is facing a huge rebuild under investor Dorilton Capital and led by team principal James Vowles.

“The only thing I can tell you is I’m very happy, I’m very motivated, I’m excited, I feel supported,” Sainz said after taking his new car for 2025, the Williams FW47, on a first date around Silverstone at the team’s ambitious Valentine’s Day launch.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

As anyone reading this can attest to, there’s nothing like feeling valued by your employer in any professional walk of life. And Vowles was absolutely desperate to bring in someone of Sainz’s calibre for his racing pedigree, intimate knowledge of Ferrari’s race-winning methods and his cooperative personality that is bound to gel well with Alex Albon.

“I have a team principal and a team that fully trusts in my abilities and that want to listen to what I say, and I have confidence in my abilities to help the team to move forward. I like Alex as a team-mate in how we can both push this team forward, so the whole project just motivates me a lot, and I’m just looking forward.

“How much I will miss winning or how jealous I will be of people that are fighting for positions that I used to be fighting for? I cannot say that yet, but I can tell you that I’m proud and happy to be part of a team like Williams and to join a project that the team has trusted me to help them in that recovery process.”

Make no mistake about it. If Lewis Hamilton hadn’t felt the urge to leave Mercedes for a final opportunity to race in red and make a fresh start at Ferrari, and the Scuderia had presented Sainz with a long-term contract extension, he would have signed it in a heartbeat.

But even if going to Williams wasn’t his first choice, and Sainz admitted he is curious to find out how he will cope going from fighting for podiums and wins to fighting for a point, there’s an appeal to the once successful team that stretches beyond its current capacities.

Alain Prost, Williams FW15C Renault, 1st position followed by Ayrton Senna, McLaren MP4/8 Ford

Alain Prost, Williams FW15C Renault, 1st position followed by Ayrton Senna, McLaren MP4/8 Ford

Photo by: Motorsport Images

For newer F1 followers – hello and welcome – it might be harder to imagine, but long before Red Bull and Mercedes showed up, Williams, Ferrari and McLaren were the sport’s undisputed Big Three, leaving mere breadcrumbs for the competition. Between 1974 and 2004 only two other outfits managed to win the world constructors’ title, Lotus in 1978 with Mario Andretti and the late Ronnie Peterson, and the 1995 Benetton team of Michael Schumacher and Johnny Herbert. Williams’ haul of nine titles was only recently matched by McLaren last year, joint second behind Ferrari’s towering tally of 16.

Entire generations of fans therefore grew up with Williams, Ferrari and McLaren ruling the roost. So did Sainz, who was glued to the TV screen as a child in Madrid when Williams driver Juan Pablo Montoya took the fight to Ferrari’s Michael Schumacher and McLaren’s Kimi Raikkonen, in what would prove to be Williams’ most recent stint as a regular front-running team, with a fondness for F1 history undoubtedly passed on by his father, rally legend Carlos Sainz Sr.

Little did Carlos Junior know that he would end up racing for all three, a feat only three drivers managed before him: Jacky Ickx, Nigel Mansell and Alain Prost.

Not the worst company to be in, even if Williams’ circumstances are vastly different today than they were when Mansell and Prost muscled Williams’ Renault-powered cars to back-to-back titles in 1992 and 1993, just before Sainz was born.

Nevertheless, while signing for Williams is a massive step backwards for now, there is a historic dimension to completing the set of F1’s legacy Big Three teams he will now have driven for that is not lost on the 30-year-old.

When asked by Motorsport.com about the prospect of becoming the fourth driver to do so, he grinned: “I think if you would have asked me when I was 10 years old and I started to fall in love with Formula 1, which teams I would have loved to drive for one day, I would have definitely picked those three.

“I’m in my 10th year in Formula 1, and I’m joining Williams at a very important moment for Williams, where it’s going through some key changes in its history. Nothing would make me happier and more proud, and it would definitely be the proudest moment of my career, if one day I can be on a podium with this team.

“I want to help in that process of a historic team. It’s the second most successful team in Formula 1 and being part of that process back to the top of Formula 1 is what motivates me. I think you guys can tell I’m happy. I feel supported by this team, and I think that’s hopefully going to bring out the best version of myself.”

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

Sainz is not alone in his affinity for the history of the sport and Williams itself. Team boss Vowles says he’s acutely aware of the responsibility of being a custodian of the Williams brand and the legacy left by Sir Frank Williams, the team’s iconic founder and force of nature who passed away in 2021.

“We absolutely have a responsibility towards the late Sir Frank,” Vowles said. “I joined this team because it was the benchmark in the sport that redefines certain elements for me and brought me into the sport. And that’s why I’m here heading up Williams today. It means something to me, something very deep and personal.

“My goal is simply to bring this back to a championship level and along the pathway, I want to make sure we do good to Sir Frank, his name and his legacy.”

There is plenty of evidence to suggest Williams is at least on the way up, but only time will tell if it goes all the way to the top again. But however far it may go, alongside early adopter Albon it now has another key figure in Sainz who will leave no stone unturned to get there. 

The tenacious and intelligent Spaniard is just the type of driver Sir Frank would have liked.

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Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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Carlos Sainz has hailed Williams’ “bold” approach revealing – and more crucially testing – its 2025 Formula 1 car with media in attendance.

The legendary British team unveiled its new FW47 car on Thursday at Silverstone, with a live event immediately followed by a filming day for its drivers Sainz and Alexander Albon.

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This is in comparison to difficulties encountered 12 months ago with the initially overweight FW46, whose shakedown was delayed because of tricky weather but also due to car parts having been produced late.

“This is a good show of Williams’ progress, to be bold enough to prepare a test where all of our partners are here, all the media is invited to see the first laps of the car,” Sainz rejoiced. “It shows the trust that Williams has in its new tools to produce a car that is going to be here on time, is going to be working well – like it did today, without any issues.

“It’s a good showing to the outside world.”

In from Ferrari, new hire Sainz had the privilege of giving the new machinery its first laps on the shorter, 2.89km international layout based out of the grand prix pitlane.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

Initially equipped with wet tyres on a not-so-wet track, the Spaniard completed two laps before pitting and giving a short interview to Williams ambassador Jenson Button in the garage.

“Everything went fine, which is good news,” Sainz said. “An install lap of a newly born car is always a bit tricky. But everything worked as it should, and now we’re ready to get into the run plan.

“First, I need to give the feedback – you’re not letting me give the feedback! – of the two or three things that I felt that could be improved, or feeling inside the cockpit, and everything that I want to obviously talk to them about. So now, once we finish this interview, I’ll give the feedback, and then we’ll get the car ready to run on slicks and probably start pushing it little by little.”

Eventually summing up the day as “positive”, Sainz had already been impressed with the squad when he drove the FW46 at the Abu Dhabi post-season test, just days after his last grand prix appearance for Ferrari.

“That was very positive, because at Williams, in Abu Dhabi, I found a car that was honestly a bit better than I thought, or better than I expected. Obviously, with some deficiencies, compared to the cars that I’ve been driving, but not massively far off.

“I can just tell you that the I found the team full of motivation, full of energy – not easy after a triple-header; [in the] Abu Dhabi test I normally see people just wanting to go home. The energy that I saw that day – and the run plan that we managed to follow to perfection [in order to] execute a good day – was important to me, and it was a very important test that I think is going to help going into Bahrain.”

In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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It was a moment that caused jaws to drop aplenty in the 2024 Formula 1 season: Williams team boss James Vowles revealing he’d discovered his then still-fairly-new squad was using a single, gigantic, Microsoft Excel spreadsheet to itemise its entire car build package.

The list ran to multiple thousands of cell entries – an approximate figure of 20,000 was at one stage mentioned – on a single document. It stunned Vowles when he first clapped eyes on it in 2023.

After all, it was a very far cry from the state of the art, purpose built, software systems he’d been used to working with at ex-employer Mercedes, as it churned out title-winner, after title-winner across the previous decade.

Such a discovery formed part of the Briton’s crusade in 2023 – his first as Williams team principal – to get CapEx infrastructure spending such systems fall under out of the F1 cost cap. This was a central pillar to his plan to turnaround Williams’s results.

Vowles opted to reveal the spreadsheet’s existence at the Bahrain season opener last year.

This was done to explain why the squad that’d been semi-regular points scorers in 2023 suddenly only had the pace to score once in the first 10 races of 2024 and why the team was dealing with a parts production problem.

Last year’s FW46 did not get a shakedown before pre-season testing and was later revealed to be overweight to the tune of 0.45s a lap in its initial specification. This eventually came down as the team’s upgrade plan kicked in.

Alex Albon, Williams FW46

Alex Albon, Williams FW46

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

The added weight was caused by many of the FW46’s parts having to initially be made using heavier metal than usually would have been the case with carbon fibre – because Vowles’ plan to go from relying on a spreadsheet that was time-consuming skimming through alone, to using the modern systems long in place at other squads meant everything took a lot longer to produce.

Those metal parts then came with added, and even more painful, costs for Williams in 2024.

Not only was the extra weight a factor in the crashes Alex Albon and his then team-mate Logan Sargeant encountered early on in Australia and Japan last year, the hefty metal parts were at times breaking chassis tubs during impacts and so enforcing added repairs and replacements – all of which had further cost cap effects.

But this time around, Williams’s new 2025 challenger – the FW47 – has been built in time for the squad to host a Silverstone shakedown attended by team partners, fans and the F1 press corps.

And, more importantly, the FW47 starts off life already at the 798kg minimum car weight limit.

When Autosport asked new Williams recruit Carlos Sainz on Friday what the team was telling him about the current car build compared to 2024, he said it’d been “night and day” different – and better.

Autosport had already quizzed Vowles about the upgrade production systems, which he revelled in first replying: “We don’t use an Excel spreadsheet!”

James Vowles, Team Principal Williams with Alex Albon, William

James Vowles, Team Principal Williams with Alex Albon, William

Photo by: Williams

“The big change is we are using modern day tools that are the benchmark for what we need to be doing,” Vowles added.

“Basically, what we call ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning), MRP (Material Requirements Planning), PLM (Product Lifecycle Management) – the systems used to know what parts you have, where they are, and what the materials you have [for them], etc.

“We’re using benchmark systems 1739558607. There’s still work to do, because once you introduce that, there’s an amount of pain that comes with it.

“So, we’re not firing on all cylinders yet, but that will happen across the course of 2025.

“To answer your question, you simply can’t [have it as it was before] – almost using humans having to understand where every bit is in order to make the car.

“We’re relying now on process and structure. You always get a little bit of pain when you’re doing that [going through the process of modernising these systems] and the car next door is a testament to where we’re going.”

What Williams now has to replace the infamous spreadsheet is in effect a digital map of the FW47’s entire architecture.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

Within this – which one senior team insider described to Autosport as an arrangement in a hierarchical system for every part – the map can be quickly accessed and traversed.

Each part on the FW47 can now be visualised individually, as well as fully represented on screen, and then the parts and materials needed to be built can be itemised and categorised in depth.

The PLM element means the system can also quickly log how long all parts have been used on the car and therefore when each part is approaching the end of its lifespan.

But perhaps the most important element for Williams as 2025 pre-season testing approaches is that, having gone through its 2024 car build pain, this time around it has produced a challenger with which it already seems quietly confident.

“A good car,” as Albon put it, when Autosport asked what his first impressions had been of the design on-screen. “It’s an evolution, as you can see.

“Really impressed with the packaging of the car. I think that’s been really well done.

“I think the quality in general, if you look at the quality of the parts, has been a really great job from everyone at the factory. There’s been a step-up in that sense.”

Night and day indeed.

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Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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The Williams Formula 1 team has taken the covers off its 2025 challenger, the FW47, at a launch event in Silverstone.

Following McLaren’s Silverstone launch of the MCL39 on Thursday, Williams also headed to the British Grand Prix venue to showcase its new car to the world while holding a filming day for drivers Alexander Albon and Carlos Sainz.

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Like its papaya counterpart, the Williams livery shown in the Grove team’s livestream on an older car has received a temporary black and blue design ahead of F1’s joint season launch at London’s O2 Arena on Tuesday, where all teams are expected to first unveil their definitive 2025 colour schemes.

The FW47, which was unveiled during the livestream before it hit the circuit, is the second car produced under team principal James Vowles’ helm as he aims to get the once-successful team back to the front in Formula 1.

Williams FW47

Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

“It’s obviously an evolution of last year’s car,” Vowles said ahead of the last F1 season before the 2026 overhaul of technical regulations.

“We’ve had a reasonable winter. It’s always difficult to know, though, because the field, as we finished the last race, I think we qualified within half a second of one another at Abu Dhabi. So the field’s closing in together, and what you don’t know is how good a winter others have had.

“What I can say is I’m proud of the work we have achieved across the winter. When you look at the car, you can see just 1,000 details that are just another evolution of where we were before. So there’s been literally no bolt left to where it was. We’re making sure we’re continuously moving the team forward. Let’s see where that falls out.”

Having shored up its commercial portfolio with the signing of software firm Atlassian as its first title sponsor in five years, the 2025 season is expected to be another transitional year as Williams aims to hit the ground running with the all-new technical regulations.

While the team continues to undergo structural changes at thew factory, Albon and Ferrari signing Sainz are aiming to improve upon the team’s lowly ninth position in the 2024 constructors’ championship.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW47

Photo by: Williams

Williams hasn’t achieved a podium finish on merit since the 2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix with Lance Stroll, as its only top-three result since then was George Russell’s in the one-lap 2021 Belgian Grand Prix.

However, when it comes to reaching the podium this year, Vowles said: “Nothing’s impossible. We’re going to remember that a few surprises happened last year as well.

“At the same time, what I can say is this: we have a lot more of the ingredients available to us. I think on a normal race weekend, it’s going to be unlikely, but there are circumstances that will fall our way, and we have two of the strongest drivers that will give absolutely everything – as will I, as will the team.

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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In one very small way, pairing Alex Albon with Carlos Sainz is a gift from Williams team principal James Vowles to the designers of his squad’s 2025 Formula 1 car.

Both appendix-less these days, that’s a rough 9g saving per car no other team can make. Handy, given car weight problem was what really held Williams back last year.

The team now has something else more subjective, but potentially even more rewarding: arguably F1’s politest driver line-up. Two unassuming and friendly characters, with emotional intelligence to back up their considerable sporting talents.

An example. For years now, F1 drivers have moaned about the length of the modern calendar – completely disregarding their first class or private travel, other-worldly life experience and salary millions. The only sage point uttered about the debate this whole time concerning their particular perspective – that travelling to such an extent is too disruptive to raise a family with proper stability – came from Sainz at Austin last year.

And now he joins Albon at Williams to form ‘Carbono’ – per the social media ‘content’ churned out of the team’s recent Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) run with 2023’s FW45 at Barcelona last week.

Some will inevitably scoff at that cutesy amalgamation. There’s certainly a surging narrative about how the friendliness of the current pack overall jars with the needle beloved in drivers of past generations – and still seen in less regular episodes these days, as with George Russell and Max Verstappen.

But however well these two really gel at Williams, this is how it starts.

Sainz arrives after an emotional fourth and potentially final season racing for Ferrari. He channelled the devastation of losing his seat with the Scuderia to Lewis Hamilton into that string of brilliant performances at 2024’s commencement. This included that sensational Melbourne win almost two weeks to the day he’d been under the knife in Jeddah.

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Photo by: Ferrari

Now former team-mate Charles Leclerc responded with his best season-long F1 performance overall. But Sainz was so close, again, that the pair were regularly trying to occupy the same piece of racetrack.

Sainz gave absolutely no quarter to Leclerc all year long. The pair even came to (minor) blows on his home patch in Spain. And there was much team radio chatter around their Las Vegas contretemps – both amusing and wince-inducing from Leclerc – plus those eye-catching sprint battles in China and at Austin.

But Vowles told me last year that for him, “that’s normal – one driver will always be frustrated by what it is”.

“If we’re fighting for a win or a podium, so be it,” he added of how Sainz may scrap with Albon one day – in admittedly wishful thinking for Williams in 2025.

But given Sainz’s tremendous performances for Ferrari elevated Leclerc, the time has now arrived to wonder what they will mean for Albon’s F1 reputation from here on in.

This reputation is much restored after Albon endured the savage rapidity of Red Bull promotion/demotion in 2019 and 2020 – going the full length of the energy drinks company’s brutal F1 driver conveyor belt in just two seasons.

Alex Albon, Red Bull Racing RB16

Alex Albon, Red Bull Racing RB16

Photo by: Charles Coates / Motorsport Images

In Williams, he found the best possible place for rehabilitation and subsequent growth. The team needed a talismanic replacement for Russell from 2022 and got it in Albon, who paired regular starring drives in qualifying with even better race performances. And did so arguably more often than his friend did in the same spot.

From then until Sainz’s arrival, Albon has been clearly the best driver in Williams’s line-up.

Nicholas Latifi and Logan Sargeant never got close, with Franco Colapinto getting a surprise and extended cameo to measure himself at F1 level last year.

Colapinto, of course, did well enough to almost earn himself a perilous ride on the Red Bull driver journey. Before his Interlagos and Vegas crashes finally put off Christian Horner and co – for the start of 2025 at least – Colapinto had done well enough to eclipse Sargeant immediately. And, to some, Albon had therefore been “found out” by his new team-mate.

Colapinto did make waves outqualifying Albon at Austin and in Baku, but that’s where Albon lost the ground he’d been holding to that bizarre fan issue. Overall, however, only once did Colapinto offer better race pace than Albon – around the many incidents that complicated such comparisons. For a full break down of this data, see the February issue of Autosport magazine.

Of these, while Albon made some unexpectedly poor errors in 2024 – that Melbourne FP1 crash that led to Sargeant’s crushing standing down, for instance – the tricky FW46 did little to help its pilots.

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW46

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW46

Photo by: Williams

Indeed, early on when the drivers crashed pushing hard to overcome its extra weight, the metal parts that’d been added because they were quicker to produce even damaged chassis tubs and further contributed to the team’s spare parts problem.

Sainz, though, is a clear step above Colapinto. He is now Albon’s best team-mate since the London-born Thai driver was last paired with Verstappen in 2020. The risk that he in turn might surpass Albon is clear, but there’s a relevancy narrative in this assessment that can’t be ignored right now.

At this point in time, it’s just as likely that Albon will emerge as the stronger driver of the two in F1 2025. He’s spent three years learning Williams, even around how he feels “every year it’s constantly evolving”, whereas Sainz is learning his way around a fifth new F1 squad in his decade in the championship.

But there are other early indications that this season subplot could well be beneficial for both parties. And this is exactly what Williams is hoping for.

In terms of their driving styles, both are very smooth on turn-in, evoking memories of Jenson Button in a Williams a generation ago.

They like a stable rear end, with Albon even taking a regular step to unwind steering lock past the apex to ensure good traction on corner exit. Sainz tends to load up the front axle by turning in slightly earlier than most of his peers.

And while Sainz’s best Ferrari results came when he could hone his slight preference for an understeering front end with a handling sweetspot, they will be pulling in the same car development direction, which is already of considerable benefit to Williams.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

The other indication that this pairing is likely to remain jovial is how the 2025 campaign is about “looking forward to what we have in 2026 together”, per Vowles. That’s in terms of what Williams can gain with the upcoming rules reset, if it gets things right on car development.

Vowles also feels “what I love about Alex is he’s a leader”. He adds: “When things get difficult, he pulls forward. Irrespective of what the circumstances are. And that lifts the team back up to emotional strength.

“He was the one encouraging us to get Carlos into the building because he’s not worried about a challenge, he wants us to be successful. So, Alex is everything that I know he can be and wants to be.”

And indeed Albon recognises Sainz’s “experience and his knowledge from Ferrari is gonna help a lot” in the coming campaign.

“He will be a good team leader as well,” Albon continues. “He’s well-spoken and he’s very articulate. He comes from a strong engineering background too. I think he’s good in that sense. So, how we take his information and how we can apply it to our car will be really important, too.”

Ultimately, hard-to-shift narratives are acquired quickly in F1 – just ask Sargeant.

Logan Sargeant, Williams FW46, jumps out of his car after a crash

Logan Sargeant, Williams FW46, jumps out of his car after a crash

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

And, for Albon, Sainz flattening him in 2025 would require another round of reputation restoration – even if this campaign apparently matters little beyond prize money stakes for Williams (not a caveat to be dismissed lightly with so many millions attached).

But, precisely because of how good Sainz is and what he has already shown in a Class A squad, this year Albon actually has the chance to lay down an impressive marker of his own. If he can beat a four-time GP winner, he could yet earn himself a more concrete way back to the big time beyond the since-superseded option offer to possibly rejoin Red Bull from 2026, which his fine early Williams form had already earned.

And if he helps Williams finally complete its rebuild to winning ways come 2026, all the better too.

Whatever happens, however, expect it to come with utter class.

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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In one very small way, pairing Alex Albon with Carlos Sainz is a gift from Williams team principal James Vowles to the designers of his squad’s 2025 Formula 1 car.

Both appendix-less these days, that’s a rough 9g saving per car no other team can make. Handy, given car weight problem was what really held Williams back last year.

The team now has something else more subjective, but potentially even more rewarding: arguably F1’s politest driver line-up. Two unassuming and friendly characters, with emotional intelligence to back up their considerable sporting talents.

An example. For years now, F1 drivers have moaned about the length of the modern calendar – completely disregarding their first class or private travel, other-worldly life experience and salary millions. The only sage point uttered about the debate this whole time concerning their particular perspective – that travelling to such an extent is too disruptive to raise a family with proper stability – came from Sainz at Austin last year.

And now he joins Albon at Williams to form ‘Carbono’ – per the social media content churned out of the team’s recent Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) run with 2023’s FW45 at Barcelona last week.

Some will inevitably scoff at that cutesy amalgamation. There’s certainly a surging narrative about how the friendliness of the current pack overall jars with the needle beloved in drivers of past generations – and still seen in less regular episodes these days, as with George Russell and Max Verstappen.

But however well these two really gel at Williams, this is how it starts.

Sainz arrives after an emotional fourth and potentially final season racing for Ferrari. He channelled the devastation of losing his seat with the Scuderia to Lewis Hamilton into that string of brilliant performances at 2024’s commencement. This included that sensational Melbourne win almost two weeks to the day he’d been under the knife in Jeddah.

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-24

Photo by: Ferrari

Now former team-mate Charles Leclerc responded with his best season-long F1 performance overall. But Sainz was so close, again, that the pair were regularly trying to occupy the same piece of racetrack.

Sainz gave absolutely no quarter to Leclerc all year long. The pair even came to (minor) blows on his home patch in Spain. And there was much team radio chatter around their Las Vegas contretemps – both amusing and wince-inducing from Leclerc – plus those eye-catching sprint battles in China and at Austin.

But Vowles told me last year that for him, “that’s normal – one driver will always be frustrated by what it is”.

“If we’re fighting for a win or a podium, so be it,” he added of how Sainz may scrap with Albon one day – in admittedly wishful thinking for Williams in 2025.

But given Sainz’s tremendous performances for Ferrari elevated Leclerc, the time has now arrived to wonder what they will mean for Albon’s F1 reputation from here on in.

This reputation is much restored after Albon endured the savage rapidity of Red Bull promotion/demotion in 2019 and 2020 – going the full length of the energy drinks company’s brutal F1 driver conveyor belt in just two seasons.

Alex Albon, Red Bull Racing RB16

Alex Albon, Red Bull Racing RB16

Photo by: Charles Coates / Motorsport Images

In Williams, he found the best possible place for rehabilitation and subsequent growth. The team needed a talismanic replacement for Russell from 2022 and got it in Albon, who paired regular starring drives in qualifying with even better race performances. And did so arguably more often than his friend did in the same spot.

From then until Sainz’s arrival, Albon has been clearly the best driver in Williams’s line-up.

Nicholas Latifi and Logan Sargeant never got close, with Franco Colapinto getting a surprise and extended cameo to measure himself at F1 level last year.

Colapinto, of course, did well enough to almost earn himself a perilous ride on the Red Bull driver journey. Before his Interlagos and Vegas crashes finally put off Christian Horner and co – for the start of 2025 at least – Colapinto had done well enough to eclipse Sargeant immediately. And, to some, Albon had therefore been “found out” by his new team-mate.

Colapinto did make waves outqualifying Albon at Austin and in Baku, but that’s where Albon lost the ground he’d been holding to that bizarre fan issue. Overall, however, only once did Colapinto offer better race pace than Albon – around the many incidents that complicated such comparisons. For a full break down of this data, see the February issue of Autosport magazine.

Of these, while Albon made some unexpectedly poor errors in 2024 – that Melbourne FP1 crash that led to Sargeant’s crushing standing down, for instance – the tricky FW46 did little to help its pilots.

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW46

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW46

Photo by: Williams

Indeed, early on when the drivers crashed pushing hard to overcome its extra weight, the metal parts that’d been added because they were quicker to produce even damaged chassis tubs and further contributed to the team’s spare parts problem.

Sainz, though, is a clear step above Colapinto. He is now Albon’s best team-mate since the London-born Thai driver was last paired with Verstappen in 2020. The risk that he in turn might surpass Albon is clear, but there’s a relevancy narrative in this assessment that can’t be ignored right now.

At this point in time, it’s just as likely that Albon will emerge as the stronger driver of the two in F1 2025. He’s spent three years learning Williams, even around how he feels “every year it’s constantly evolving”, whereas Sainz is learning his way around a fifth new F1 squad in his decade in the championship.

But there are other early indications that this season subplot could well be beneficial for both parties. And this is exactly what Williams is hoping for.

In terms of their driving styles, both are very smooth on turn-in, evoking memories of Jenson Button in a Williams a generation ago.

They like a stable rear end, with Albon even taking a regular step to unwind steering lock past the apex to ensure good traction on corner exit. Sainz tends to load up the front axle by turning in slightly earlier than most of his peers.

And while Sainz’s best Ferrari results came when he could hone his slight preference for an understeering front end with a handling sweetspot, they will be pulling in the same car development direction, which is already of considerable benefit to Williams.

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

The other indication that this pairing is likely to remain jovial is how the 2025 campaign is about “looking forward to what we have in 2026 together”, per Vowles. That’s in terms of what Williams can gain with the upcoming rules reset, if it gets things right on car development.

Vowles also feels “what I love about Alex is he’s a leader”. He adds: “When things get difficult, he pulls forward. Irrespective of what the circumstances are. And that lifts the team back up to emotional strength.

“He was the one encouraging us to get Carlos into the building because he’s not worried about a challenge, he wants us to be successful. So, Alex is everything that I know he can be and wants to be.”

And indeed Albon recognises Sainz’s “experience and his knowledge from Ferrari is gonna help a lot” in the coming campaign.

“He will be a good team leader as well,” Albon continues. “He’s well-spoken and he’s very articulate. He comes from a strong engineering background too. I think he’s good in that sense. So, how we take his information and how we can apply it to our car will be really important, too.”

Ultimately, hard-to-shift narratives are acquired quickly in F1 – just ask Sargeant.

Logan Sargeant, Williams FW46, jumps out of his car after a crash

Logan Sargeant, Williams FW46, jumps out of his car after a crash

Photo by: Simon Galloway / Motorsport Images

And, for Albon, Sainz flattening him in 2025 would require another round of reputation restoration – even if this campaign apparently matters little beyond prize money stakes for Williams (not a caveat to be dismissed lightly with so many millions attached).

But, precisely because of how good Sainz is and what he has already shown in a Class A squad, this year Albon actually has the chance to lay down an impressive marker of his own. If he can beat a four-time GP winner, he could yet earn himself a more concrete way back to the big time beyond the since-superseded option offer to possibly rejoin Red Bull from 2026, which his fine early Williams form had already earned.

And if he helps Williams finally complete its rebuild to winning ways come 2026, all the better too.

Whatever happens, however, expect it to come with utter class.

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Alex Albon

Williams

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Carlos Sainz’s impact is already being felt within the Williams Formula 1 squad, team principal James Vowles has stated.

Sainz has moved to Williams alongside Alex Albon this year after racing for Toro Rosso, Renault, McLaren and Ferrari during his first 10 seasons in F1, having been replaced by Lewis Hamilton at the Maranello-based outfit for the 2025 season.

The veteran actually made his Williams debut at the end-of-season test in Abu Dhabi, and revealed he was already thinking about how to improve his future car when racing his very last laps with Ferrari. 

“He’s relishing it,” Vowles told Motorsport.com at the Autosport Awards earlier this week.

“You could see from the moment he jumped in the car in Abu Dhabi, his mind switched. This is where he wants to be, this is what he wants to do, he’s part of our success story. He’s fitting in perfectly.

“He’s a brilliant personality who, with him, brings not only race-winning pedigree but this want and desire for Williams to be successful.

“I was there with him this morning, with Alex and myself, for three, four hours – just talking through plans for the year, what we’ve changed, where we’re going.”

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Carlos Sainz, Williams FW46

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

Sainz has been at work with the team at the Grove factory since last month, and Vowles has already been impressed with his new driver’s input.

“His contributions – as are Alex’s as well – are absolutely key for driving this team forward, because it’s now into a level of detail where you’re starting to chase milliseconds as opposed to the big-ticket items we work for,” Vowles added.

“Already in the space of just a few weeks, real positive momentum from ideas, concepts, how we can change, how we can move forward, is coming.”

Sainz is only the fourth driver ever to race Ferrari, McLaren and Williams cars in his career.

While he wasn’t always dominant in terms of pure pace compared to Lando Norris at McLaren and Charles Leclerc at Ferrari, the Spaniard played a key role in making those teams better, Vowles claimed – with the Scuderia contending for the title last year, which was a first since 2018.

“He also doesn’t leave a stone unturned,” the Briton said. “I mean, there’s a statistic up on the F1 channel today where you look at all the teams he’s been to and where they’ve ended up. It’s not a coincidence. He’s a hard worker, a diligent worker that brings with him success – and he wants us to be successful.”

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In this article

Ben Vinel

Formula 1

Carlos Sainz

Williams

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