During the Russian
GP weekend, it was announced that Sauber will be using Honda power units for
the 2018 season, meaning their 8-season association with Ferrari will come to
an end. It was also heavily speculated that the team would be using McLaren
gearboxes from the 2018 season, though team principle Monisha Kaltenborn said
the team was not ready to make any announcement. This new partnership is a good
deal for both the Sauber team and Honda itself, leading some people to
speculate whether Honda could take a controlling stake in the Swiss team, and
make it the works Honda team, something which has not been seen since the 2008
season.
This speculation
has solid ground when looking the recent history of the Sauber team, especially
in the last ten years. In the early 2000’s, Sauber were consistently “best of
the rest” behind Ferrari, McLaren and Williams, securing 4th in the constructors’
championship in 2001. This achievement would not be seen again for the team due
to the heavy investment that other teams were putting into their cars, which Sauber
could not match. However, their heavy investment into their wind tunnel
technology made BMW take notice and buy a controlling stake in the team, re-branding it BMW Sauber. Under this guise, the team enjoyed a lot of success
even a sole victory at the 2008 Canadian GP thanks to Robert Kubica. Peter Sauber
then bought the team back from BMW in late 2009 after the German car manufacturer
decided to pull out of the sport.
Since 2010, the
team has struggled financially and made no secret of this. There have been many
times since the team’s reincarnation where they were on the brink of folding
and disappearing from the sport. Investment from Longbow Finance S.A in 2016 has
secured the teams future. On the track this season though, fortunes have not
changed with the team being the slowest of the 10 on the grid, using old Ferrari
engines. This new deal will see the team use the latest Honda engine, not a year
old one and have a brand new gearbox supplied by McLaren. This deal can only
help the small Swiss team but also help Honda and McLaren.
Personally, I believe
it will take some pressure off Honda, who have simply let McLaren down since
their partnership renewed in 2015. Progress has been slow and many are running
out of patience, none more so than Fernando Alonso. With an extra team to
supply, it will give Honda the opportunity to test more new parts and upgrades to
make itself a force in Formula 1 again and at the same time, help put McLaren back
at the sharp end of the grid. In making itself a force again, the Sauber would
be the perfect team for Honda to buy out and make itself a fully operational Formula
1 team again. This would all boil down to Honda turning around its engine
performance though. The new involvement of Honda in Sauber shares similarities
with BMW’s involvement which could point to a similar scenario of Honda becoming
a works F1 team again.
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