Max Welti
Max Welti
Career
1975-1990: From active Racing Driver to Team Manager, Le Mans Winner and World Champion
Welti studied mechanical engineering at EPFL, and ETH Zurich while he began racing.
He raced for three years in the Swiss Sports Prototype Championship, which he won in 1980 on a Wittwer March BMW.[3]
After his active racing days, Welti moves into operational racing and becomes Sauber's first Team Manager. He helps the team become one of the most successful in Sports car racing.[4]
In 1986,
1991-1994: Race Director
In 1991, Sportscar Racing went into decline and Welti was offered the job of being F1 Project Manager for
1995: Vice President of Sauber Formula 1
In May 1995 Welti decided to return to
2000-2003: V8STAR - Setting up Europeans 1st Silhouette touring car championship
From 2000, Welti was responsible as chief executive officer for setting up the V8STAR touring car series in Germany, a championship for tubular frame vehicles with silhouettes of well-known manufacturers such as Jaguar, Volkswagen, Opel, Ford, Lexus, Audi and BMW with uniform V8 engines under the hood and renowned pilots at the steering wheel.
2005-2009: Team Principal Swiss National Team - A1 GP Worldcup of Motorsport
In 2004, Welti became Franchisee and Team Principal in the A1 GP Worldcup of Motorsport and built up the Swiss national motorsport team.[11] With Neel Jani, the A1 Team Switzerland won the World Cup of Motorsport in 2008 and was runner-up in 2006 and 2009. The team also supported other Swiss drivers such as Marcel Fässler, Sébastian Buemi, Alexandre Imperatori, Tom Dillmann, Rahel Frey and Natacha Gachnang.[12] No other team nor driver were more successful than Switzerland and Jani in this global championship.
2013-2017: Volkswagen Group
Welti entered the international limelight again in 2013. As member of the Volkswagen Group Motorsprt Steering Committee, he was sent to Italy as Motorsport Director of Lamborghini Squadra Corse to build up a new motorsport department there.[13] After that task was completed, Welti traveled to all important races in Europe and on the American continent for six years, leading negotiations with organizers, promoters, federations and technicians of different racing series.
2018-2023: BMW Group
Between 2018 and 2020 Welti is a strategic motorsport advisor to BMW.[14] He travels to important races of the WEC, IMSA, Formula E, DTM as well as WRX and is on site at endurance classics such as Nürburgring, Spa, Le Mans, Sebring and Daytona.
2009 until today: Consultant for racing series, promoters, sponsors and OEMs
Nowadays, Welti works internationally as an independent expert for promoters, sponsors and OEMs. Since 2019, he is also the Sporting Director of the all-electric SuperCharge racing series.[15][16]
Awards
In 1990, Max Welti is awarded the "BP Racing Trophy", an award for special services to motorsport, which he receives for his successes with Sauber-Mercedes.[17] The coveted "BP Racing Trophy" was first awarded in 1965.
After winning the world championship title in the A1GP season 2007/2008, A1 Team Switzerland receives in December 2008 the Auto Sport Award for special services to Swiss motorsport.[18][19] Previous award winners were motorsport greats like Jo Siffert, Clay Regazzoni und Peter Sauber.
In 2010, Max Welti is inducted into the "Wall of Fame" in the Autobau museum in Romanshorn as "Swiss legend of motor racing".[20]
References
- ^ "Max F. Welti". www.maxpertise.eu. Retrieved 14 February 2017.
- ^ "Max Welti joins Sauber as operations director". Motorsport.com. 8 May 1995. Archived from the original on 2017-12-08. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
- ^ "Schweizer Legenden des Automobilrennsports mit Wall of Fame in der Autobau geehrt (Veranstaltungen)". Zwischengas (in German). Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "People Max Welti". grandprix.com.
- ^ "24 hours of Le Mans 1989: One-two win 30 years ago". marsMediaSite. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ISBN 3-7977-0252-3.
- ^ "1989 und 90". Michael Schumacher (in German). Archived from the original on 2022-10-07. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "Porsche History Le Mans". newsroom.porsche.com.
- ISBN 3-928540-11-4.
- ^ "grandprix.com Interview with Max Welti". grandprix.com.
- ^ "Team Switzerland preview Brands Hatch". motorsport.com. Archived from the original on 2019-04-12. Retrieved 2019-01-02.
- ^ "Pictures of drivers and team A1 Team Switzerland". motorsport.com.
- ^ "Max Welti to Head Lamborghini's Squadra Corse Racing Division". motorauthority.com.
- ^ "From VW to BMW". autosprint.ch.
- ^ "Electrifying Urban Racing". SuperCharge. Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "SuperCharge: Die Macher der E-Rennserie im Exklusiv-Interview". Motorsport-Magazin.com (in German). Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ "BP Racing Trophy Award 1990". Retrieved 2021-03-15.
- ^ Auto Sport Schweiz. "Auto Sport Award 2008 for A1 Team Switzerland" (PDF).
- ^ motorsport-total.com. "Award for the A1 Team Switzerland".
- ^ Zwischengas. "Swiss legend of motor racing".
External links
- Max Welti driver statistics at Racing-Reference
- Profile at grandprix.com
- https://www.motorauthority.com/news/1083947_max-welti-to-head-lamborghinis-squadra-corse-racing-division