Otmar Szafnauer

American-Romanian engineer, F1 team lead

Otmar Szafnauer
Szafnauer in 2018
Born (1964-08-13) 13 August 1964 (age 59)
Semlac, Arad County, SR Romania
NationalityRomanian and American[1]
Alma materWayne State University
University of Detroit
AwardsUSF2000 Hall of Fame 2013

Otmar Marin Szafnauer (born 13 August 1964) is a Romanian and American engineer. He served as Team Principal of the Alpine F1 Team until the 2023 Belgian Grand Prix.

Biography

Szafnauer was born in Semlac, a small village in Western Romania to an American father of German descent and a Romanian mother. [2] His family moved to Detroit in the United States when he was seven years old. He received a Bachelor of Science degree in electrical engineering from Wayne State University in Detroit[3] before completing a master's degree in business and finance from the University of Detroit Mercy.[3]

He joined the Ford Motor Company in 1986 and was appointed Programmes Manager for Ford in the United States. While working for Ford, he attended the Jim Russell Racing Driver School and started racing in Formula Ford in 1991. He left Ford in 1998 to become Operations Director at British American Racing in Formula One. After unsuccessful discussions with Jaguar Racing, he was hired by Honda on its return to Formula One in 2001, rising to Vice President of Honda Racing Developments and a member of the Management Board of the Honda F1 team.[4] After leaving Honda in 2008,[5] he founded Soft Pauer[6] which released the official Formula One Timing and Track Positioning Application[7] on the iPhone in June 2009.

Szafnauer joined Force India in October 2009 and played an integral role in the team's improved performance with the team going on an upward path, finishing seventh in 2010 and sixth in 2011, 2013 and 2014 before breaking into the top five in 2015 and achieving the team-best finish of fourth in 2016 and 2017. Szafnauer's efforts also played an instrumental role in the team securing a long-term agreement to use the Mercedes powertrain from the 2014 season onwards.

Szafnauer remained with Force India as they were sold in 2019 and became Aston Martin for the 2021 season, before leaving the team in January 2022.[8] In February 2022, he joined the BWT Alpine F1 Team as team principal.[9] He left Alpine after the 2023 Belgian Grand Prix.[10]

Awards and recognition

Szafnauer at the 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix

In 2013, Szafnauer was inducted into the USF2000 Hall of Fame in recognition of his racing achievements in motorsport over the last twenty years.[11]

USF2000 results

USAC FF2000 Eastern Division Championship

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Pos Points
1993 ATL IRP WGI MDO RAM
13
NHS SHA1 SHA2 LRP ??? ???

USAC FF2000 National Championship results

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pos Points
1994 IRP1
22
IRP2
19
500 WGI
26
BFR
18
TOP NHS
19
SHA1
19
SHA2
26
LRP ??? ???

USF2000 National Championship

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Pos Points
1995 PIR1 PIR2 500
DNQ
RIR WGI MDO1 NHS ATL1 ATL2 MDO1

[12]

References

  1. ^ Spurgeon, Brad (16 November 2012). "An Engineer's Passion for His Racing Work". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 June 2018.
  2. ^ Americans in F1: Otmar Szafnauer, crash.net, 20 September 2002; accessed 10 January 2014
  3. ^ a b "From Detroit to F1: Otmar Szafnauer is quietly making his mark as COO of Force India". Autoweek. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Executive Profile: Otmar Szafnauer". businessweek.com. Retrieved 6 June 2014.[dead link]
  5. ^ Noble, Jonathan. "Otmar Szafnauer leaves Honda – F1". Autosport. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  6. ^ "Soft Pauer: Home". www.softpauer.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  7. ^ "Latest News". Formula1.com. Retrieved 7 November 2018.
  8. ^ "Aston Martin announce departure of Team Principal Otmar Szafnauer". Formula1. 5 January 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
  9. ^ "Szafnauer named Alpine Team Principal as Rossi confirms new structure". www.formula1.com. Retrieved 17 February 2022.
  10. ^ Cooper, Adam (28 July 2023). "Szafnauer leaves Alpine F1 team principal role". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 28 July 2023.
  11. ^ "PRO MAZDA AND USF2000 COMPETITORS HONORED". IndyCar. 9 October 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2024.
  12. ^ "Otmar Szafnauer – Overall Start/Finish Positions (Class Positions not shown)". USF2000. Retrieved 11 August 2017.
  • v
  • t
  • e
France Alpine F1 Team
Executive management
Philippe Krief (Chief Executive Officer)
Bruno Famin (Team Principal)
Personnel
Dirk de Beer
Davide Brivio
Marcin Budkowski
Chris Dyer
Pat Fry
Matt Harman
Eric Meignan
Alan Permane
Ciaron Pilbeam
Laurent Rossi
Otmar Szafnauer
Rob White
Race drivers
10. France Pierre Gasly
31. France Esteban Ocon
Race winners
France Esteban Ocon
2023 Test and reserve drivers
Australia Jack Doohan
Alpine Academy drivers
Australia Jack Doohan
Brazil Matheus Ferreira
Germany Sophia Flörsch
France Victor Martins
Italy Nicola Lacorte
India Kush Maini
Italy Gabriele Minì
Japan Kean Nakamura-Berta
United Kingdom Abbi Pulling
Bulgaria Nikola Tsolov
Formula One cars
A350 (test only)
A500 (test only)
A521
A522
A523
A524
Related
Renault in Formula One
Automobiles Alpine
  • v
  • t
  • e
United Kingdom Aston Martin in Formula One
David Brown Corporation (19591960)
Aston Martin F1 Team (2021–)
Chairman
Lawrence Stroll
Martin Whitmarsh
Team Principal
Mike Krack
Personnel
Andrew Alessi
Matt Bishop
Eric Blandin
Dan Fallows
Luca Furbatto
Andrew Green
Akio Haga
Tom McCullough
Andy Stevenson
Former personnel
Bernadette Collins
Otmar Szafnauer
Race drivers
14. Spain Fernando Alonso
18. Canada Lance Stroll
2023 Reserve driver
Brazil Felipe Drugovich
Belgium Stoffel Vandoorne
2024 Reserve driver
Brazil Felipe Drugovich
Driver Ambassadors
Spain Pedro de la Rosa
United Kingdom Jessica Hawkins
Driver academy
Brazil Felipe Drugovich
Former drivers
Germany Nico Hülkenberg
Germany Sebastian Vettel
Formula One cars
AMR21
AMR22
AMR23
Related
Aston Martin
AMR GP
  • v
  • t
  • e
United Kingdom Racing Point F1 Team
  • v
  • t
  • e
United Kingdom Racing Point Force India F1 Team
Founder
Lawrence Stroll
Notable personnel
Bernadette Collins
Steve Curnow
Andrew Green
Akio Haga
Tom McCullough
Andy Stevenson
Otmar Szafnauer
Notable drivers
France Esteban Ocon
Mexico Sergio Pérez
Formula One cars
VJM11
Related
Racing Point UK
Force India
Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains
  • v
  • t
  • e
Japan Honda in Formula One
Notable personnel (2015-2021)
Yasuhisa Arai
Yasuaki Asaki [ja]
Yusuke Hasegawa
Toyoharu Tanabe [ja]
Masashi Yamamoto [ja]
(2000-2008)
Mariano Alperin [ja]
Loïc Bigois
Ross Brawn
Jock Clear
Gil de Ferran
Jacky Eeckelaert
Mark Ellis
Nick Fry
Takeo Fukui
Takeo Kiuchi
Simon Lacey
Ron Meadows
Shuhei Nakamoto
John Owen
Nicolò Petrucci
Andrew Shovlin
Otmar Szafnauer
James Vowles
Yasuhiro Wada
Graham Watson
Geoff Willis
Craig Wilson [ja]
Ian Wright
Jörg Zander
(1998-1999)
Ben Agathangelou
Tim Densham
Harvey Postlethwaite
Jos Verstappen
(1983-1992)
Osamu Goto [ja]
Nobuhiko Kawamoto
Yoshitoshi Sakurai [ja]
(1964-1968)
Soichiro Honda
Shoichiro Irimajiri
Nobuhiko Kawamoto
Yoshio Nakamura [ja]
Notable drivers
Brazil Rubens Barrichello
United States Ronnie Bucknum
United Kingdom Jenson Button
United States Richie Ginther
France Jo Schlesser
United Kingdom John Surtees
Cars
RA270
RA271
RA272
RA273
RA300
RA301
RA302
RC100
RA099
RA106
RA107
RA108
RA109K [ja]
  • v
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  • e
United Kingdom British American Racing
Founder
Craig Pollock
Former Staff
Mariano Alperin [ja]
Jock Clear
Gil de Ferran
Mark Ellis
Nick Fry
Luca Furbatto
Andrew Green
Ayao Komatsu
Simon Lacey
Ron Meadows
Malcolm Oastler
Adrian Reynard
David Richards
Andrew Shovlin
Otmar Szafnauer
Willem Toet
James Vowles
Graham Watson
Geoff Willis
Craig Wilson [ja]
Ian Wright
Jörg Zander
Drivers
Canada Jacques Villeneuve
United Kingdom Jenson Button
Japan Takuma Sato
France Olivier Panis
Brazil Ricardo Zonta
Finland Mika Salo
United Kingdom Anthony Davidson
Formula One cars
01
002
003
004
005
006
007