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News
History
1970 – 1979
1977 – Williams Grand Prix Engineering formed
1978 – Alan Jones Joins the Team
1979 – The first win – at Silverstone
1980 – 1989
1980 – Alan Jones takes the championship
1981 – Six-Wheeler Tested at Silverstone
1982 – Keke Rosberg Joins and Wins!
1983 – Team Moves to New Factory in Didcot
1984 – Full Season of Honda Engines
1985 – Nigel Mansell Joins Williams
1986 – Frank Williams in Road Accident
1987 – Nelson Piquet is Champion
1988 – Lean year and Poor Results
1989 – Renault to the Rescue
1990 – 1999
1990 – Adrian Newey Joins from Leyton House
1991 – The Return of Nigel Mansell
1992 – Finally it’s Mansell!
1993 – Mansell Out, Prost In
1994 – Senna’s Short Stay…
1995 – Williams Touring Car Engineering is Born
1996 – F1 Team Moves to Grove
1997 – Double Championship Success
1998 – A Winless Season
1999 – The Problem with Zanardi
2000 – 2009
2000 – Straight on the Button with BMW
2001 – Into year two with Montoya
2002 – Montoya breaks the speed record
2003 – So close in second
2004 – The Year of the Walrus
2005 – Last year of BMW Power
2006 – Back to Cosworth
2007 – First season with Toyota Power
2008 – Rosberg’s First Podium
2009 – The Wolff of Wantage
2010 – 2019
2010 – Youth and Experience
2011 – Williams floats
2012 – Surprise! A Win!
2013 – A year to forget
2014 – Back on track
2015 – Consolidation in third
2016 – Fastest pitstops but slower races
2017 – 40th Anniversary & film release
2018 – No highs, only Lowes
2019 – And to think we’d reached rock bottom
2020 – 2029
2020 – Williams family sells to Dorilton Capital
2021 – An improvement and off the bottom
2022 – Welcome Alex Albon!
Drivers
Formula 1
Jack Aitken
Alexander Albon
Mario Andretti
Rubens Barrichello
Valtteri Bottas
Thierry Boutsen
Martin Brundle
Jenson Button
Franco Colapinto
David Coulthard
Derek Daly
Paul di Resta
Heinz-Harald Frentzen
Marc Gené
Nick Heidfeld
Damon Hill
Nico Hülkenberg
Alan Jones
Robert Kubica
Jacques Laffite
Nicholas Latifi
Pastor Maldonado
Nigel Mansell
Felipe Massa
Juan-Pablo Montoya
Patrick Neve
Kazuki Nakajima
Jonathan Palmer
Riccardo Patrese
Nelson Piquet
Antônio Pizzonia
Alain Prost
Clay Regazzoni
Carlos Reutemann
Keke Rosberg
Nico Rosberg
George Russell
Logan Sargeant
Jean-Louis Schlesser
Ralf Schumacher
Ayrton Senna
Bruno Senna
Sergey Sirotkin
Lance Stroll
Nyck de Vries
Jacques Villeneuve
Mark Webber
Alexander Wurz
Alex Zanardi
Touring Car
Jean-Christophe Boullion
Will Hoy
Alain Menu
Jason Plato
Cars
Formula 1
1970 – 1979
FW06
FW07
1980 – 1989
FW07
FW07C/FW08D (Six Wheelers)
FW08
FW09
FW10
FW11
FW12
FW13
1990 – 1999
FW13
FW14
FW15
FW16
FW17
FW18
FW19
FW20
FW21
2000 – 2009
FW22
FW23
FW24
FW25
FW26
FW27
FW28
FW29
FW30
FW31
2010 – 2019
FW32
FW33
FW34
FW35
FW36
FW37
FW38
FW40
FW41
FW42
2020 – 2029
FW43
FW43B
FW44
Formula 2
Williams JPH1
Touring Car
Rally
Metro 6R4
Le Mans
Results
Articles
Formula 1
Touring Car
Le Mans
Rally
Special Projects
Other Information
Media
Pictures
Videos
Cartoons
Blog
About
Frequently Asked Questions
Contact
Shop
News
History
1970 – 1979
1977 – Williams Grand Prix Engineering formed
1978 – Alan Jones Joins the Team
1979 – The first win – at Silverstone
1980 – 1989
1980 – Alan Jones takes the championship
1981 – Six-Wheeler Tested at Silverstone
1982 – Keke Rosberg Joins and Wins!
1983 – Team Moves to New Factory in Didcot
1984 – Full Season of Honda Engines
1985 – Nigel Mansell Joins Williams
1986 – Frank Williams in Road Accident
1987 – Nelson Piquet is Champion
1988 – Lean year and Poor Results
1989 – Renault to the Rescue
1990 – 1999
1990 – Adrian Newey Joins from Leyton House
1991 – The Return of Nigel Mansell
1992 – Finally it’s Mansell!
1993 – Mansell Out, Prost In
1994 – Senna’s Short Stay…
1995 – Williams Touring Car Engineering is Born
1996 – F1 Team Moves to Grove
1997 – Double Championship Success
1998 – A Winless Season
1999 – The Problem with Zanardi
2000 – 2009
2000 – Straight on the Button with BMW
2001 – Into year two with Montoya
2002 – Montoya breaks the speed record
2003 – So close in second
2004 – The Year of the Walrus
2005 – Last year of BMW Power
2006 – Back to Cosworth
2007 – First season with Toyota Power
2008 – Rosberg’s First Podium
2009 – The Wolff of Wantage
2010 – 2019
2010 – Youth and Experience
2011 – Williams floats
2012 – Surprise! A Win!
2013 – A year to forget
2014 – Back on track
2015 – Consolidation in third
2016 – Fastest pitstops but slower races
2017 – 40th Anniversary & film release
2018 – No highs, only Lowes
2019 – And to think we’d reached rock bottom
2020 – 2029
2020 – Williams family sells to Dorilton Capital
2021 – An improvement and off the bottom
2022 – Welcome Alex Albon!
Drivers
Formula 1
Jack Aitken
Alexander Albon
Mario Andretti
Rubens Barrichello
Valtteri Bottas
Thierry Boutsen
Martin Brundle
Jenson Button
Franco Colapinto
David Coulthard
Derek Daly
Paul di Resta
Heinz-Harald Frentzen
Marc Gené
Nick Heidfeld
Damon Hill
Nico Hülkenberg
Alan Jones
Robert Kubica
Jacques Laffite
Nicholas Latifi
Pastor Maldonado
Nigel Mansell
Felipe Massa
Juan-Pablo Montoya
Patrick Neve
Kazuki Nakajima
Jonathan Palmer
Riccardo Patrese
Nelson Piquet
Antônio Pizzonia
Alain Prost
Clay Regazzoni
Carlos Reutemann
Keke Rosberg
Nico Rosberg
George Russell
Logan Sargeant
Jean-Louis Schlesser
Ralf Schumacher
Ayrton Senna
Bruno Senna
Sergey Sirotkin
Lance Stroll
Nyck de Vries
Jacques Villeneuve
Mark Webber
Alexander Wurz
Alex Zanardi
Touring Car
Jean-Christophe Boullion
Will Hoy
Alain Menu
Jason Plato
Cars
Formula 1
1970 – 1979
FW06
FW07
1980 – 1989
FW07
FW07C/FW08D (Six Wheelers)
FW08
FW09
FW10
FW11
FW12
FW13
1990 – 1999
FW13
FW14
FW15
FW16
FW17
FW18
FW19
FW20
FW21
2000 – 2009
FW22
FW23
FW24
FW25
FW26
FW27
FW28
FW29
FW30
FW31
2010 – 2019
FW32
FW33
FW34
FW35
FW36
FW37
FW38
FW40
FW41
FW42
2020 – 2029
FW43
FW43B
FW44
Formula 2
Williams JPH1
Touring Car
Rally
Metro 6R4
Le Mans
Results
Articles
Formula 1
Touring Car
Le Mans
Rally
Special Projects
Other Information
Media
Pictures
Videos
Cartoons
Blog
About
Frequently Asked Questions
Contact
Shop
1998
January
11
11 January 1998
Autosport International 1998
Neil Thompson
January 11, 1998
Autosport International 1998
Neil Thompson
January 11, 1998