Motorsport Week
  • Formula 1
    • 2026 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2026 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2026 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2026 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2026 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
  • Formula 1
    • 2026 Formula 1 Calendar
    • 2025 Formula 1 Standings
  • Formula E
    • 2026 Formula E Calendar
    • 2025 Formula E Standings
  • IndyCar
    • 2026 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WRC
    • 2025 WRC Standings
    • 2026 WRC Calendar
  • MotoGP
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
  • WEC
    • 2026 WEC Calendar
  • IMSA
    • 2025 IMSA Calendar
  • World SBK
  • More
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
    • Technical Insight
    • Galleries
    • About/Contact
    • Privacy Policy
No Result
View All Result
Motorsport Week
Home Feature

Retrospective: Sauber-Honda and the partnership that never was

byPhillip Horton
6 years ago
A A
Retrospective: Sauber-Honda and the partnership that never was
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Three years on, Motorsport Week takes a look back at the partnership between Sauber and Honda that never was, as two entities that confirmed their unity didn’t even get as far as marriage.

The start of the 2017 Formula 1 season was not promising for either Sauber or Honda.

After BMW’s exit at the end of 2009 Sauber struggled financially through the mid-2010s and, having scraped enough together for its very survival in 2016, entered 2017 with year-old Ferrari power units and a sub-standard chassis.

Honda, meanwhile, was beginning year three of its partnership with McLaren but a revised power unit concept set the project back amid performance and reliability issues.

RelatedPosts

Honda has made an admission over its terrible start to 2026

Honda blames F1 absence for woeful start to F1 2026

42 minutes ago
Max Verstappen has been at the centre of controversy after removing a journalist from his media session in Suzuka

Journalist in Max Verstappen F1 media furore reveals online abuse

2 hours ago

The McLaren-Honda relationship was on rocky ground but the marque, having previously been resistant to the idea of breaking that exclusivity, became increasingly receptive to supplying a second team in order to gather more data and understanding of its concept.

At the end of April Sauber, under the stewardship of Monisha Kaltenborn, publicly confirmed that Honda was to become its power unit supplier from 2018, breaking a relationship with Ferrari that stretched back to 2010.

The drivers – Marcus Ericsson and Pascal Wehrlein – were upbeat. “I think for the longer term it’s the right decision for the team,” said Ericsson, having acknowledged Honda’s shortcomings. “I think the potential is there.” Wehrlein added that “hopefully Honda is able to do its part to give Sauber the chance to be competitive next year.”

But a Sauber-Honda package never materialised.

Kaltenborn departed the team in June and shortly after her exit Frederic Vasseur – the long-time boss of junior powerhouse ART who had his first major F1 role as Renault’s Team Principal in 2016 – was given the keys to the top office at Hinwil.

Once of his first acts was to abort the Honda partnership, fearing that the uncertainty over McLaren’s commitment to Honda could negatively impact the Swiss minnows, particularly over the use of a gearbox. It was not a component that could be built internally at Hinwil. The design of the 2018 car was still at a point where it could be salvaged with a different power unit – and therefore gearbox.

The official line was that the decision was made “with the best intent for the future of the Sauber F1 Team in mind.” Honda commented that there were “differences in the future direction between Honda and Sauber, recognised during the preparation process for power unit supply systems.”

Shortly afterwards Sauber confirmed that it would renew its relationship with Ferrari.

The closest the two never-married parties came on-track was when Honda protégé Nobuharu Matsushita sampled Sauber’s Formula 1 car during the young driver test in Budapest, a few days after the split was confirmed.

It in theory left Honda without a team for 2018, but Red Bull had kept an eye on the situation and a deal was struck for Toro Rosso to become the Japanese supplier’s sole entity. The Toro Rosso-Honda deal was a complex one that involved several parties – including McLaren, Red Bull, Renault and Carlos Sainz Jr. – but crucially it kept the Japanese marque in the sport.

Honda’s gains in early 2018, allied to Renault’s plateaued performance, convinced Red Bull that it was ready to supply the senior team for 2019, and the partnership claimed three victories with Max Verstappen.

Sauber, meanwhile, strengthened its ties with Ferrari for 2018 by securing a current-year power unit deal while Fiat Chrysler Automobiles was keen to utilise the Alfa Romeo brand, meaning a title partnership was signed. 

Sauber’s renewed affiliation with Ferrari in effect gave the Italian squad sway over one seat, and for 2018 the reigning Formula 2 champion Charles Leclerc was handed his Formula 1 debut, with Mercedes-backed Wehrlein dropped. Leclerc’s performances at Sauber convinced Ferrari he was ready for 2019. Alfa Romeo then took over naming rights and 2007 World Champion Kimi Raikkonen returned.

How might the situation have unfolded if Vasseur left the Honda deal untouched?

Tags: F1HondaSauber
Share307Tweet145Share

Related Posts

Honda has made an admission over its terrible start to 2026
Formula 1

Honda blames F1 absence for woeful start to F1 2026

42 minutes ago
Max Verstappen has been at the centre of controversy after removing a journalist from his media session in Suzuka
Formula 1

Journalist in Max Verstappen F1 media furore reveals online abuse

2 hours ago
Mattia Binotto has spoken out on Jonathan Wheatley's exit from the Audi ranks
Formula 1

Mattia Binotto makes surprise Jonathan Wheatley Audi revelation – ‘relieved of his duties’

3 hours ago
Load More

Discussion about this post

Upcoming Races

#.EventDate
18Singapore GP09-11 October
19United States GP23-25 October
20Mexico City GP30 October-01 November
21São Paulo GP06-08 November
22Las Vegas GP19-21 November

Click here for the full 2025 F1 calendar

Drivers’  Standings

#.DriverPts
George Russell51
Andrea Kimi Antonelli47
Charles Leclerc34
Lewis Hamilton33
Oliver Bearman17
Lando Norris15
Pierre Gasly9
Max Verstappen8
Liam Lawson8
Arvid Lindblad4

Click here for full Drivers’ Standings

Latest Articles

Honda has made an admission over its terrible start to 2026
Formula 1

Honda blames F1 absence for woeful start to F1 2026

March 27, 2026
Max Verstappen has been at the centre of controversy after removing a journalist from his media session in Suzuka
Formula 1

Journalist in Max Verstappen F1 media furore reveals online abuse

March 27, 2026
Mattia Binotto has spoken out on Jonathan Wheatley's exit from the Audi ranks
Formula 1

Mattia Binotto makes surprise Jonathan Wheatley Audi revelation – ‘relieved of his duties’

March 27, 2026

Follow Motorsport Week

Join our daily motorsport newsletter

* indicates required

Motorsport Week

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd

Other Links

  • About & Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Motorsport Monday

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Sign Up
  • Home
  • Formula 1
    • Latest News
    • 2025 F1 Calendar
    • 2025 F1 Championship Standings
  • Formula E
    • Latest News
    • 2025 FE Calendar
    • 2025 FE Championship Standings
  • MotoGP
    • Latest News
    • 2025 MotoGP Calendar
    • 2025 MotoGP Standings
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • WRC
    • Latest News
    • 2026 WRC Calendar
    • 2025 WRC Standings
  • IndyCar
    • Latest News
    • 2026 IndyCar Calendar
    • 2025 IndyCar Standings
  • WEC
    • Latest News
    • 2026 WEC Calendar
  • Live Updates
  • Other
    • IMSA
    • Formula 2
    • Formula 3
    • F1 Academy
    • Moto2
    • Moto3
    • World Superbikes
  • Galleries
  • About/Contact
  • Privacy Policy

© 2024 Motorsport Media Services Ltd