Sainz signs for Williams for 2025 F1 season after Ferrari exit

By Sports Desk July 29, 2024

Carlos Sainz will join Williams for the 2025 season, signing a two-year contract with the option to extend, ending months of speculation on his future.

The 29-year-old will drive alongside Alex Albon next season following his departure from Ferrari, who announced earlier this year that Lewis Hamilton would be taking his seat.

Sainz was initially seen as a candidate to take Hamilton's place at Mercedes, with Alpine and Sauber, who will become Audi in 2026, also in the running to get his signature.

But, he will now replace American Logan Sargeant, who looks set to stop racing at the end of the season.

"I am very happy to announce that I will be joining Williams Racing from 2025 onwards," Sainz said in a press release.

"It is no secret that this year's driver market has been exceptionally complex for various reasons and that it has taken me some time to announce my decision.

"However, I am fully confident that Williams is the right place for me to continue my F1 journey and I am extremely proud of joining such a historic and successful team, where many of my childhood heroes drove in the past and made their mark on our sport.

"The ultimate goal of bringing Williams back to where it belongs, at the front of the grid, is a challenge that I embrace with excitement and positivity."

Sainz has achieved three F1 wins to date, including a victory at the Australian Grand Prix in March, and 23 podium finishes while amassing over 1,100 points over his career.

He currently sits fifth in the drivers’ championship and has five podiums in the first half of the season.

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    The Mercedes driver had finished top in both of Friday’s practice sessions before laying down the fastest time in Q2 as well.

    Hamilton locked up during his first run in Q3 before a track limits violation in his second run saw his lap time deleted.

    The British driver rued his drop-off in form that saw his team-mate and compatriot George Russell take pole position.

    "I should have been on pole but I'm not, so it is what it is. C'est la vie, you live to fight another day," he told Sky Sports.

    "It is what it is. It's been a good weekend so far, so I'll give it my best shot tomorrow. Congrats to George.

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    Elsewhere in the paddock, McLaren’s Lando Norris will start in sixth position on the grid, one place behind his title rival Max Verstappen.

    Norris needs to beat the Red Bull driver by at least three points to keep his title aspirations alive and take the championship race to the Qatar Grand Prix next week.

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    "I will do everything I can. That's what I'm here to do. I'm not going to give up 'til the end even if chances are extremely thin," Norris said.

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