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Xevi Pujolar

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spanish engineer
Xevi Pujolar
Born (1973年01月03日) 3 January 1973 (age 52)
NationalitySpain Spanish
CitizenshipSpanish
OccupationEngineer
EmployerSauber Motorsport
Known forFormula One engineer
TitleRacing Director

Xevi Pujolar (born 3 January 1973)[1] is a Spanish Formula One engineer. He is currently the racing director at the Kick Sauber Formula One team.

Career

[edit ]

Pujolar studied mechanical engineering at the University of Girona for three years and while he was there he got a job in Genikart, who had a young Fernando Alonso as one of its drivers. After graduating in 1996, he worked kart in France with Cristian Boudon for a year. He then went to work at Formula Nissan for the G-Tech team as a race engineer. Pujolar remained there until 2000, when he moved to F3000 to the Red Bull junior team where he met Niki Lauda who invited him to work for Jaguar Racing in Formula 1 to be one of the performance engineers responsible for Eddie Irvine's car.[1]

In 2003, transferred to Williams to be Juan Pablo Montoya's performance engineer and in 2004, he was promoted to be the race engineer of Ralf Schumacher, a position in which he worked with several Williams drivers including Mark Webber, Alex Wurz and Kazuki Nakajima. In 2010, Pujolar seeking a new challenge moved to fledging contractor Hispania to become a senior race engineer for Bruno Senna, but left the struggling team after a year. He then returned to Williams to be Pastor Maldonado's racing engineer, a partnership that continued into 2012 where Maldonado took victory in the Spanish Grand Prix.[2] Pujolar was promoted to chief race engineer in 2013 overseeing the entire trackside engineering team for Williams.[3] In 2014, he joined Toro Rosso, retaining the role of senior race engineer, and worked with Jean-Eric Vergne and later with Max Verstappen.[4]

In May 2016, Pujolar left Toro Rosso and in August of the same year, he went to work for Sauber as head of track engineering, where he remains today as the team transitioned into Alfa Romeo Racing.[5]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ a b "Xevi Pujolar". F1PULSE.com. Archived from the original on 18 April 2015.
  2. ^ "Pujolar says Maldonado 'a great fighter'". motor1.com. Archived from the original on 20 November 2021. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  3. ^ "Xevi Pujolar becomes Chief Race Engineer at Williams as part of a revamp". Sky Sports.
  4. ^ "Pujolar to be Vergne's race engineer". ESPN.
  5. ^ "Sauber sign Xevi Pujolar". The Parc Ferme. 23 August 2016.
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