Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Senior TT declared official after one lap, 2026 Isle of Man TT concludes early

Road racing
Senior TT declared official after one lap, 2026 Isle of Man TT concludes early

Medical update provided for three Isle of Man TT riders injured in Friday crashes

Road racing
Medical update provided for three Isle of Man TT riders injured in Friday crashes

"It works for me" – why Charles Leclerc isn't buying Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari simulator claims

Formula 1
Monaco GP
"It works for me" – why Charles Leclerc isn't buying Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari simulator claims

Why Max Verstappen won't follow Red Bull's famous Monaco GP swimming pool tradition

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Why Max Verstappen won't follow Red Bull's famous Monaco GP swimming pool tradition

Toto Wolff "very positively surprised" by Kimi Antonelli's Monaco GP practice pace

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Toto Wolff "very positively surprised" by Kimi Antonelli's Monaco GP practice pace

F1 Monaco GP: Kimi Antonelli pips Ferrari pair to top hectic FP3

Formula 1
Monaco GP
F1 Monaco GP: Kimi Antonelli pips Ferrari pair to top hectic FP3

Jenson Button names Ferrari's biggest Monaco GP qualifying threats

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Jenson Button names Ferrari's biggest Monaco GP qualifying threats

Ollie Bearman crashes out of Monaco FP3 as red flag halts session

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Ollie Bearman crashes out of Monaco FP3 as red flag halts session

Vowles: Williams F1 team has a "spark" again

Williams Formula 1 team principal James Vowles says there's a "spark" at the team after implementing the first changes which will take the Grove team in a fresh direction.

James Vowles, Williams team principal

Williams is a team in transition after years of chronic underinvestment, and as part of its overhaul, owner Dorilton Capital appointed Vowles to replace outgoing team boss Jost Capito in January.

Vowles, Mercedes' former Mercedes head of strategy, has the unenviable task of turning the team's fortunes around.

Williams placed last in the 2022 championship, its fourth time at the bottom in six seasons, and has been languishing in the bottom three every year since 2018. But after his first few weeks at the helm, Vowles feels the historic Grove team has been injected with fresh energy.

"The best word I could use is ‘spark’," Vowles said. "There's a spark and it's fascinating to see. There are shoulders lifted, there’s heads held high now, there is really direction that they can see where we're going and how we're moving forward.

"It’s a team clearly that have had a tremendously difficult winter and difficult few years even prior to that. But they can start to see the light at the end of the tunnel and direction we're going in."

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW45

Alex Albon, Williams Racing FW45

Photo by: Williams

With Capito, technical director FX Demaison and head of aerodynamics David Wheater also left Williams.

While those key technical roles remain vacant for now, Vowles already explained he would take his time to put in place a proper structure to take the team forward in the long term, even if that meant sacrificing progress this year.

Instead, Vowles' first major play was to appoint a chief operating officer, hiring Canadian Frederic Brousseau to oversee the organisation's planning and operations.

Brousseau brings vast experience from the aerospace industry after over 20 years at jet engine builder Pratt & Whitney Canada, where he rose through the ranks to become a vice president.

Expanding on his first high-profile hire, Vowles said: "A Formula 1 car is circa 15,000 components that have to be built, produced and fit together within the space of a few weeks.

"To get that properly done, you need an amount of planning across all of your organisation and that's really what he brings to the table.

"He's done that at Pratt & Whitney, he's been there for over 20 years, he has a good experience and good knowledge about how to bring thousands of people – in our case, hundreds – together in a key clinch moment.

"And especially under the cost cap; the more efficient you can be at doing that, the more money that's available to develop the car later. I think it's a key element of every aspect of the team."

Meanwhile Vowles continues his search to attract technical talent, with current members of the team's technical departments filling in until a new tech director and head of aero have been found.

"Going forward, there's a technical leadership where at the moment, I have lots of people standing in and doing a great job, but we need to supplement them with good experience from industry," he acknowledged.

Read Also:
Previous article The simple explanation for Red Bull's F1 DRS dominance
Next article What is really behind Domenicali's "cancel" F1 practice comments

Top Comments

Latest news