Mark Smith (racing engineer)

Mark Smith
Born (1961-03-09) 9 March 1961 (age 63)
NationalityUnited Kingdom British

Mark Smith (born 9 March 1961)[1] is a British former technical director of the Sauber Formula One team.

Early life

Smith grew up in Pelsall, a village about 15 miles north of Birmingham. He left school to undertake a technical apprenticeship with GKN Automotive who sponsored him to undertake a mechanical engineering degree course at the Wolverhampton Polytechnic, from which he graduated with a first-class honours degree in 1984.

Motorsport career

Having participated in motocross as a youngster, Smith subsequently developed an interest in Formula One. His first job in the motorsport industry was in 1988 at Comtec, the composites wing of March Engineering. From there he joined Reynard Racing Cars in 1989 and started working with Gary Anderson, initially on the 1990 F3000 car.

In 1990, Smith moved to the newly formed Jordan Grand Prix, where he helped to design the Jordan 191 under Anderson, taking responsibility for the gearbox design and engine installation.[2] He stayed at Jordan for 11 years, progressing to the positions of head of mechanical design, and then joint chief designer with Mike Gascoyne. In 2000, Smith followed Gascoyne to Renault, taking the position of chief designer.

After a brief return to Jordan as it transitioned to new ownership, Smith moved to Red Bull Racing in 2005, firstly as deputy technical director and then technical director before moving to Force India as Design Director in 2007. Two years later he was promoted to technical director before moving to Caterham in 2011. He left in 2014 as the struggling team restructured its management in what would be its final season.

Smith was appointed technical director of Sauber F1 Team on 13 July 2015 but left the team a few days before the first race of the 2016 season, with Sauber announcing that he was returning to the UK for "family reasons".[3]

Career timeline

  • Chief designer – Jordan Grand Prix (1998–2001).
  • Chief designerBenetton (2001).
  • Chief designerRenault Formula One team (2002–2004).
  • Technical director – Jordan Grand Prix (2004–2005).
  • Deputy technical directorRed Bull Racing (2005).
  • Technical director – Red Bull Racing (2005–2008).
  • Design directorForce India Formula One team (2008–2010).
  • Technical director – Force India Formula One team (2010–2011).
  • Technical director – Team Lotus/Caterham Formula One team (2011–2014).
  • Technical directorSauber Formula One team (2015–2016).

References

  1. ^ "Mark Smith". oldracingcars.com. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
  2. ^ ""Being at Silverstone opened doors…" Jordan F1 adventure all started here 25 years ago". Silverstone Park. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  3. ^ Adam, Mitchell. "Technical director Mark Smith leaves Sauber F1 team". Autosport.com. Retrieved 15 March 2016.
  • Profile at Sauber F1 Team website
  • v
  • t
  • e
Benetton Formula
Founder
Luciano Benetton
Personnel
James Allison
Ben Agathangelou
Giorgio Ascanelli
John Barnard
Bob Bell
Rocco Benetton
Ross Brawn
Flavio Briatore
Rory Byrne
Nick Chester
Peter Collins
Frank Coppuck
Tim Densham
Pat Fry
Mike Gascoyne
Rob Marshall
Steve Matchett
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
David Richards
Sergio Rinland
Mark Smith
Nigel Stepney
Pat Symonds
Rob Taylor
Willem Toet
Nikolas Tombazis
Dino Toso
Naoki Tokunaga
Joan Villadelprat
John Walton
Jonathan Wheatley
Nick Wirth
World Champions
Michael Schumacher
Drivers
Teo Fabi
Gerhard Berger
Thierry Boutsen
Alessandro Nannini
Johnny Herbert
Emanuele Pirro
Nelson Piquet
Roberto Moreno
Michael Schumacher
Martin Brundle
Riccardo Patrese
JJ Lehto
Jos Verstappen
Jean Alesi
Alexander Wurz
Giancarlo Fisichella
Jenson Button
Drivers' titles
1994
1995
Constructors' titles
1995
Formula One cars
B186
B187
B188
B189
B189B
B190
B190B
B191
B191B
B192
B193
B193B
B194
B195
B196
B197
B198
B199
B200
B201
Benetton Group
Toleman
Renault
  • v
  • t
  • e
Renault in Formula One
Équipe Renault Elf (19771985)
Renault F1 Team (20022010)
Notable personnel
James Allison
Bob Bell
Éric Boullier
Flavio Briatore
Dirk de Beer
Jean-François Caubet
Nick Chester
Denis Chevrier
Alain Dassas
Tim Densham
Mike Elliott
Patrick Faure
John Iley
Ayao Komatsu
Gérard López
Patrick Louis
Eric Lux
Rob Marshall
Paul Monaghan
Jarrod Murphy
Rod Nelson
Steve Nielsen
Alan Permane
Simon Rennie
Bernard Rey
Mark Slade
Mark Smith
Pat Symonds
Rémi Taffin
Dino Toso
Jon Tomlinson
Naoki Tokunaga
Jonathan Wheatley
Rob White
Notable drivers
Jarno Trulli
Jenson Button
Giancarlo Fisichella
Heikki Kovalainen
Nelson Piquet Jr.
Robert Kubica
World Champion(s)
Spain Fernando Alonso
Drivers' titles
2005
2006
Constructors' titles
2005
2006
Formula One cars
R202
R23
R24
R25
R26
R27
R28
R29
R30
Related
Renault
Renault Sport
RF1 Driver Programme
Renault Formula One crash controversy
Lotus Renault GP (2011)
Renault F1 Team (20162020)
Titles achieved with Renault engines
  • v
  • t
  • e
Austria Red Bull Racing
Founder
Dietrich Mateschitz
Advisor to Red Bull GmbH
Helmut Marko
Team principal
Christian Horner
Chief Technical Officer
Adrian Newey
Personnel
Hugh Bird
Ben Hodgkinson [ja]
Gianpiero Lambiase
Paul Monaghan
Simon Rennie
Guillaume Rocquelin
Hannah Schmitz
Pierre Waché
Ben Waterhouse
Enrico Balbo [pt]
Craig Skinner [pt]
Jonathan Wheatley
Former personnel
Rob Marshall
Ben Agathangelou
Mark Ellis
Dan Fallows
Mark Gallagher
Mark Gillan [ja]
Andrew Green
Neil Martin
Ciaron Pilbeam
Peter Prodromou
Mark Smith
Guenther Steiner
Dave Stubbs
Rob Taylor [pt]
Gavin Ward
Geoff Willis
Current race drivers
1. Netherlands Max Verstappen
11. Mexico Sergio Pérez
2024 Reserve drivers
New Zealand Liam Lawson
Switzerland Sébastien Buemi
United Kingdom Jake Dennis
World champion(s)
Germany Sebastian Vettel
Netherlands Max Verstappen
Drivers' titles
2010
2011
2012
2013
2021
2022
2023
Constructors' titles
2010
2011
2012
2013
2022
2023
Sister team
RB Formula One Team
Red Bull Junior Team
France Enzo Deligny
United States James Egozi
Germany Oliver Goethe
France Isack Hadjar
Japan Ayumu Iwasa
United Kingdom Arvid Lindblad
Spain Pepe Martí
Thailand Enzo Tarnvanichkul
Germany Tim Tramnitz
Formula One cars
RB1
RB2
RB3
RB4
RB5
RB6
RB7
RB8
RB9
RB10
RB11
RB12
RB13
RB14
RB15
RB16
RB16B
RB18
RB19
RB20
Concept cars
X2010/X2011/X2014/X2019
Related
Red Bull Powertrains
Red Bull GmbH
  • v
  • t
  • e
Switzerland Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber
Founder
Current
2024 drivers
Notable personnel
Notable drivers
Former drivers
See category
Sportscars
Formula One cars