Peter Sauber

Miscellaneous

Birthday October 13, 1943

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Zürich, Switzerland

Age 80 years old

Nationality Switzerland

#47427 Most Popular

1943

Peter Paul Sauber (born 13 October 1943) is a retired Swiss motorsport executive.

He was the team principal and owner of various motorsports teams, most visibly the eponymous Sauber Formula One team.

After being trained as an electrician, Sauber became a car salesman in Hinwil, Switzerland.

This was Sauber's first real association with automobiles and it proved to be the catalyst for his involvement in motorsports.

He competed in hillclimbing events in a Volkswagen Beetle he had purchased, and thus the foundations for his first project as a team owner were laid.

After opting not to run the family traffic light business, Peter built the Sauber C1 (the C stands for Christiane, the name of his wife) in his parents' basement.

It was a car of tubular frame, powered by a 1-litre Ford Cosworth engine.

1970

He subsequently drove it to the 1970 Swiss hillclimb championship.

1971

In 1971, Sauber handed over the driver's seat to Hans Kunis, who drove the new Sauber C2 model in the same series, as Sauber himself had done so the year before.

1973

Sauber had started to gain a portfolio of customers and in 1973, Sauber built three C3 spec chassis for different customers.

Designed by Guy Boisson, the car was used predominantly in the Swiss Sports Car Championship.

1974

It also remained in racing for ten years in the hands of other drivers, notably Friedrich Hürzeler, who took the 1974 crown in the car.

1975

The C4 of 1975 heralded the first aluminium chassis developed by the team, and Boisson was joined by Edy Wiss in designing it.

Only one C4 was ever produced.

1976

The most successful of the early Sauber cars, the C5 was used to great effect in conjunction with its 2-litre BMW engine—taking the 1976 Interserie Championship in the hands of Herbert Muller.

1977

Being a Group 6 sports car, the car was allowed to take part in the legendary 24 Hours of Le Mans, and Sauber entered the C5 in both 1977 and 1978.

In '77 the car led its class before retiring; the same thing happened in '78.

1979

1979 marked the end of Sauber's first foray into sports car building – and the start of preparing chassis for Lola F2 cars.

The drivers finished 1–2–4 in the championship that year – one of them was Max Welti, who subsequently joined the team as team manager.

1980

In 1980, and 1981, Sauber and Welti turned their attention to developing BMW M1 sportscars, in the latter year it won the 1000km Nürburgring.

1982

In 1982, with BASF sponsorship, Sauber returned to sports car racing.

The C6 was the first car to be tested in a wind tunnel by Sauber.

It was during these tests that Sauber built up a strong relationship with Leo Ress, who would later become instrumental in the F1 project.

1985

In 1985, the team's relationship with Mercedes-Benz began.

1991

This sports car partnership culminated in November 1991 – having ignited the career of Michael Schumacher and Sauber's own protégé, Karl Wendlinger.

Sauber now began to look seriously at launching an F1 team.

In the summer of 1991 Harvey Postlethwaite joined the team to design an F1 car and Mercedes funded a vast new factory at Hinwil.

In November 1991 Mercedes decided against direct involvement and so Sauber entered F1 by itself in 1993, with drivers JJ Lehto and Karl Wendlinger powered by engines built by Ilmor but rebadged as Saubers.

1994

Sauber did convince Mercedes to enter F1 in 1994 but a year later the German company did a deal with McLaren, leaving Sauber to become the Ford F1 works team.

1995

This was followed by a deal with the Malaysian oil company Petronas in 1995 and the establishment of an engineering company called Sauber Petronas Engineering to design and build V10 engines.

1998

The company began buying old Ferrari engines and rebadging them as Sauber Petronas V10s but the F1 engine program itself was scrapped in 1998.

2001

In the later years of this period Sauber saw increased success with the team finishing fourth in the World Championship in 2001 and fifth in 2002 despite having a much smaller budget than many of its rivals.

The team however never scored a race win.

2005

In June 2005, BMW acquired the major shareholding stake in the Sauber team from Credit Suisse, which owned more than 60% of the team from a deal Peter Sauber initiated in 1994 selling a majority stake of the team to its major sponsor.

It was done with Peter Sauber's blessing, the team was known as BMW Sauber, and Peter took a background advisory role within it, retaining a 20% stake in the team.

2009

In July 2009, BMW announced its withdrawal from Formula One at the end of the season.

Peter Sauber worked with BMW to develop a rescue package that would allow the team to continue in the sport without the manufacturer's backing.

Qadbak Investments Ltd were thought to have purchased the team, but on 27 November 2009 it was announced that the Qadbak deal had fallen through and BMW had instead reached an agreement to sell the entire F1 operation back to Peter Sauber.

On 3 December 2009, the FIA announced it had confirmed Sauber's entry for the 2010 season had been granted, and Sauber regained ownership of the team.

2010

This sale would only go ahead if the team was granted a place on the 2010 grid by the FIA.