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‘Yes we will’: Vowles makes championship vow for Williams

James Vowles does not deal in half-measures. Three years into his tenure as team principal of Williams, he is asking one of Formula 1’s most storied names to embrace short-term pain in pursuit of long-term glory – and insisting a world championship is no fantasy.

As the 2026 season dawns this week in Melbourne amid sweeping regulation changes, Vowles finds himself balancing realism with audacity.

Williams climbed from the back of the grid to fifth place in 2025, yet the 46-year-old is clear: the hardest steps still lie ahead. The gulf to the sport’s elite remains wide, but the Briton believes the foundations are finally strong enough to bridge it.

“There’s an exponential difficulty in going from fifth to fourth, fourth to second, second to first and then first to dominating. Each is a huge step forward,” he told The Guardian.

Radical Honesty

That reality was underscored before a wheel had even turned in anger this year. Williams were the only team to miss pre-season testing in Barcelona after their car was not ready in time – an embarrassment in a sport defined by precision.

“It’s a really sensible question,” Vowles says when asked what went wrong. “I’ll even add to that – why weren’t you ready given you put so much effort last year into [preparing for] 2026?

“But the time it takes from developing an idea and making it tangible still takes longer at Williams than for a benchmark team.”

Rather than deflect, he confronted the setback head-on.

“I prefer to be straight and say this is what happened and this is what we’re doing about it. Morale gets hurt if you have no plan of action or no awareness of how you got there,” he said.

The response in Bahrain – where Williams logged the third-highest mileage – offered reassurance.

“Even though we missed Barcelona, we had the agility to turn it around,” he says.

“Doing a week’s worth of simulated work in the UK is not the same as on-track testing, but it still meant we hit Bahrain in a way that we were doing the same mileage or more than pretty much any other team.”

Taking Pain for Progress

Despite that recovery, Vowles admits Williams begin this year’s campaign on the back foot.

“What I have seen post-Bahrain is that we have to find performance,” he explained.

“We’re not at the level we hoped to be, which was to be annoying the top four teams. It’s a surprise because that was the ambition, the drive, the direction. But we have plans for Melbourne and beyond.

“In some cases we have to take bold decisions that will cost us in the short term, but provide for the long term. We’re still finding out where we have big problems. The bits we have left are the real in-depth items that will take us time to find and fix.”

Crucially, he has backing from above.

“My board and I talk daily and there’s an incredible alignment,” he assured. “Even if we’re not where we want to be right now, we’ll keep taking the pain because it’s the right thing for the business.”

Forged in Adversity

Vowles’s appetite for difficulty was shaped long before he led Williams. He entered Formula 1 without contacts, financing a second degree while accumulating £42,000 of debt.

“I read until midnight and felt such contentment because I was doing everything that I loved. I wasn’t fearful for a second and never doubted myself,” he recalled.

His journey took him through Brawn’s fairytale 2009 title triumph and a dominant spell at Mercedes under Toto Wolff.

“It’s why Toto and I gel because we’re very similar,” Vowles says. “Those that have had some hardship realise there are bigger things than a racing car.”

He hints at deeper personal adversity but declines to share details.

“There are some things in my experience that make you weaker or stronger. You can choose the direction and for me each made me stronger. Painful, but stronger.”

A Bold Prediction

Vowles has studied the current competitive order with clear eyes, praising Mercedes and admiring McLaren’s resurgence. Yet his focus remains absolutely fixed on Williams’ trajectory.

When asked if the team can emulate McLaren and win a championship within five years, he does not flinch.

“It’s a reasonable timeframe,”

Then, leaning forward with conviction, he adds: “I’ll look you in the eyes and happily say yes we will.”

For a team rebuilding from the ground up, it is a statement of intent – and a measure of the belief driving one of Formula 1’s most compelling leaders.

Read also: Hill returns to Williams in ambassador role in title anniversary year

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Phillip van Osten

Motor racing was a backdrop from the outset in Phillip van Osten's life. Born in Southern California, Phillip grew up with the sights and sounds of fast cars thanks to his father, Dick van Osten, an editor and writer for Auto Speed and Sport and Motor Trend. Phillip's passion for racing grew even more when his family moved to Europe and he became acquainted with the extraordinary world of Grand Prix racing. He was an early contributor to the monthly French F1i Magazine, often providing a historic or business perspective on Formula 1's affairs. In 2012, he co-authored along with fellow journalist Pierre Van Vliet the English-language adaptation of a limited edition book devoted to the great Belgian driver Jacky Ickx. He also authored "The American Legacy in Formula 1", a book which recounts the trials and tribulations of American drivers in Grand Prix racing. Phillip is also a commentator for Belgian broadcaster Be.TV for the US Indycar series.

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