Sauber (1993–2005) Beginning and partnership with Mercedes-Benz (1993–1994) Sauber intended to pivot to Formula One in direct collaboration with Mercedes, but this joint project was shelved and Mercedes funded Sauber's first engine contract instead. The team re-branded
Ilmor V10 engines as Sauber power units, and the new
Sauber C12 spent most of 1992 testing across Europe at
Lurcy-Levis,
Barcelona-Catalunya, and even an airfield in
Zweisimmen. The team signed experienced Formula One driver
JJ Lehto to partner former Sauber endurance driver Karl Wendlinger for the 1993 season. .On debut at the
1993 South African Grand Prix, Lehto qualified in sixth position and finished in fifth ahead of
Gerhard Berger's Ferrari, achieving two points on debut in a race of attrition. The team struggled with engine reliability during the rest of the season but impressive points finishes at
San Marino,
Montreal, and
Monza prompted Mercedes to place "concept by Mercedes-Benz" stickers on the engine cover of Sauber's cars for the remainder of the season. A seventh place finish in the 1993 World Constructors' Championship, ahead of independents including
Minardi and
Jordan, established Sauber as a credible entrant in an era of small and questionable back-marker teams. Mercedes joined the team as an official component in 1994, but the newly-renamed Sauber-Mercedes regressed to eighth in the championship amid struggles with Mercedes-branded Ilmor 3.5L V10 engines. New entrant
Pacific Grand Prix received a customer supply of Sauber's older-specification engines from the previous season, but the team faced financial woes after title sponsor Broker was found to be fraudulent and did not pay its sponsorship obligations. To make matters worse, Wendlinger was seriously injured after a practice crash at the
Monaco Grand Prix, which left him in a coma and required
Andrea de Cesaris to step in as a relief driver. Sauber re-engineered its cars with high cockpit side walls after the crash, which later became mandatory in the wake of Wendlinger's crash and the deaths of
Ayrton Senna and
Roland Ratzenberger earlier that season. With the same points tally as the previous year, Mercedes left the team at the end of the year and joined
McLaren after it terminated its existing deal with
Peugeot. As a result, Sauber inherited
Benetton's works engine deal with
Ford for 1995 after it switched to
Renault power for the following season.
Red Bull and Ford engines (1995–1996) . In conjunction with the Ford deal, Sauber signed a ten-year sponsorship deal with energy drink company
Red Bull. Entrepreneur
Dietrich Mateschitz purchased a majority share in the team and
Fritz Kaiser joined as Sauber's new commercial director. Karl Wendlinger returned to the team alongside Heinz-Harald Frentzen, but Wendlinger was sacked in favor of
Jean-Cristophe Bouillon after just four races. Frentzen led the team to its largest F1 tally with eighteen points and scored the team's first podium at the
1995 Italian Grand Prix with a third place finish. 1995 also marked the start of the team's long association with
Petronas, who joined mid-season and later became a presenting sponsor until 2009. In 1996, the team regressed as it struggled with the uncompetitiveness of the new V10
Cosworth JD engine. Despite again holding seventh spot on a shrinking list of constructors, they scored only eleven points but finished third with
Johnny Herbert at the
1996 Monaco Grand Prix. For the next season they announced a customer deal to receive Ferrari engines while working with new sponsors Petronas to bring licensing and manufacturing in-house.
Sauber-Petronas Engineering (1997–2005) driving the C24 at the
2005 Canadian Grand Prix. From 1997 until 2005 Sauber used Ferrari designed customer engines and gearboxes built by
Sauber Petronas Engineering, a company founded for the sole purpose of building these engines. Sauber licensed nearly every legally licensable part from Ferrari and even had several Ferrari engineers on staff. The first podium for Sauber-Petronas came at the
1997 Hungarian Grand Prix with a third place finish, and a podium followed the next season with third at the
1998 Belgian Grand Prix. However, the team struggled in the lower midfield throughout 1999 and 2000 and achieved only six points at the turn of the millennium. In 2001, Sauber brought a virtually unknown and very inexperienced
Kimi Räikkönen into Formula One, despite the protests of a few drivers and influential members of the FIA, including
Max Mosley, that he would pose a danger to other drivers. His performances that year, however, more than vindicated their decision (he would later go on to win the 2007 Drivers' Championship with
Ferrari). It also caused
Red Bull to sell their majority share in the team to
Credit Suisse in protest (Red Bull wanted
Enrique Bernoldi to take the seat but he wound up at
Arrows). In 2004, Sauber spent a large sum of money on a new
wind tunnel at
Hinwil, and a high performance
supercomputer (called
Albert) to help refine the aerodynamics of their cars. The state-of-the-art infrastructure Sauber has built up is one aspect that attracted
BMW Motorsport to Sauber. In its later years, Sauber's links with Ferrari became weaker. They sided with the non-Ferrari teams over planned rule changes at the end of the 2004 season and also joined the
GPWC. Then they decided to switch to
Michelin tyres, while Ferrari continued to use
Bridgestone tyres. Sauber had secured a deal with BMW for a supply of their engines from 2006, initially expected to be on a customer relationship but following BMW's decision to split from Williams at the end of 2005, BMW agreed to take ownership of the team from 1 January 2006, having bought Credit Suisse's shares in the team and thus
Red Bull Racing took over Ferrari customer engine partnership. Sauber's final Grand Prix before BMW takeover was the
2005 Chinese Grand Prix, with Massa, in his final race for the team having been promoted to Ferrari for the 2006 season, scoring a welcome sixth place to round off the team's history. Sauber had finished its independent run in F1 with six third places and two front-row starts being their best results. Among notable Sauber drivers were
Jean Alesi, 2008 Drivers' Championship runner-up
Felipe Massa,
Johnny Herbert, and 1997 World Champion
Jacques Villeneuve. Two former Sauber drivers drove for the new
BMW Sauber team in 2006:
Nick Heidfeld who was a Sauber driver from 2001 to 2003, and Villeneuve who drove for the team in 2005.
BMW factory team (2006–2009) took BMW's first podium finish at the
2006 Hungarian Grand Prix. 's last Grand Prix in
Brazil. At the end of the season, the team's majority shareholding previously owned by
Credit Suisse was bought by
BMW, with Peter Sauber retaining a 20% stake, and was renamed
BMW Sauber. BMW sold its part back to Peter Sauber after the end of the season, but the team formally used the name
BMW Sauber until the end of the season. The team held a
German licence from to , then reverted to a Swiss licence in .
2006 For the season the team re-signed Nick Heidfeld from
Williams to be their lead driver (Heidfeld drove for Sauber in 2001–2003), while 1997 World Champion
Jacques Villeneuve had his existing Sauber contract confirmed. Pole
Robert Kubica was signed as the team's
third driver. The team continued to use Sauber's facilities, mostly for chassis construction and wind tunnel testing, while BMW's headquarters in Munich were responsible for building the new P86 V8 engine. Former Sauber title sponsor
Petronas renewed their contract with the new team after BMW Sauber snubbed
BP-
Castrol, despite them being BMW's official commercial gasoline and motor oil partner.
Credit Suisse also continued their sponsorship. For the new season BMW Sauber announced a technical partnership with
Intel and
O2, claiming that it will eventually lead to technological improvements available on BMW road cars. The new livery, unveiled in Valencia on 17 January 2006, was the traditional
BMW M blue and white with red flashes. Jacques Villeneuve scored the team's first points with a seventh-place finish at the
2006 Malaysian Grand Prix, after Heidfeld retired from fifth with an engine failure late in the race. Over the first two-thirds of the season the drivers picked up points with a succession of seventh- and eighth-place finishes. The team ran a radical "twin towers" aero enhancement on the front of the car for the race in Magny-Cours, France, which was meant to direct airflow to the rear and thus improve performance. This unconventional add-on was promptly banned by the FIA as it was adjudged to impede the drivers' vision and thus compromise safety. Heidfeld scored the team's first podium at the
2006 Hungarian Grand Prix from tenth on the grid. Kubica stood in for Villeneuve, BMW stating that Villeneuve could not drive due to medical complications following his accident at the
German Grand Prix. Kubica finished seventh, although he was later disqualified for an underweight car. After the Hungarian Grand Prix, BMW announced that Kubica would complete the season for the Swiss team, spelling the end of former world champion Villeneuve's F1 career. Kubica scored BMW Sauber's second podium of the season at the
Italian Grand Prix, after running in third place for most of the race and leading briefly during the first round of pit stops. Heidfeld struggled in the race and barely earned a point by finishing eighth. The team's fifth place in the Constructors' Championship was cemented by Heidfeld's two further points at the
2006 Chinese Grand Prix, and
Toyota's early double retirement from the
2006 Brazilian Grand Prix.
2007 . On 19 October 2006, it was announced that Robert Kubica would partner Nick Heidfeld for the season with Sebastian Vettel taking the test and reserve driver role. On 21 December, it was announced that
Timo Glock had been signed as the team's second test driver. The team launched their 2007 car, the
F1.07, on 16 January 2007. The new car showed promising form throughout the winter testing, topping the times sheets on occasions. However, team principal
Mario Theissen declared some reliability concerns before the season's opening race in
Melbourne. Kubica duly retired from fourth place mid-race with
gearbox trouble, but Nick Heidfeld proved their pace in winter testing was no fluke as he raced to fourth place. Heidfeld continued this success with two more fourth places in Malaysia and Bahrain respectively. Kubica finished sixth in Bahrain after retiring in Australia and mechanical trouble in Malaysia. Their performance thus far had been such that many were saying a race win was likely after firmly establishing themselves as the best team behind championship leaders
Ferrari and
McLaren. Although the perceived performance gap between the two leaders and BMW Sauber was a fair amount, it was still less than that between BMW Sauber and the teams behind them. The
Canadian Grand Prix brought mixed fortunes for the team. While Nick Heidfeld scored a second-place finish, Robert Kubica suffered a huge crash that resulted in a long safety car period. The media was initially told Kubica had broken his leg, but it later emerged that he had escaped with only a sprained ankle and concussion.
Sebastian Vettel took his place in the
US Grand Prix, finishing in eighth place and therefore becoming the youngest driver to score a Formula One World Championship point. After the
European GP, however, it was announced by
Scuderia Toro Rosso that Vettel would take the second driver seat from
Scott Speed.
2008 of the season, courtesy of Nick Heidfeld. saw Robert Kubica win his and BMW Sauber's only race. On 21 August 2007, BMW confirmed its driver line-up of Heidfeld and Kubica for the season. Their 2008 car, the
F1.08 was officially launched in
Munich at BMW Welt on 14 January 2008. It made its track debut at Valencia the next day, with Robert Kubica driving. The BMW Sauber team also introduced a new scheme for the team as a whole, with every individual getting "fit for pole", from the boss to the cleaners, meaning that the team would be in optimum fitness for the 2008 season. Team principal Mario Theissen targeted the team's first Formula 1 victory for 2008. BMW Sauber started the season well with Kubica narrowly missing out on pole after a mistake in his main qualifying lap in
Melbourne. He later retired after being hit by
Kazuki Nakajima but Heidfeld finished second. Kubica took second in
Malaysia, with Heidfeld in sixth setting the fastest lap of the race. The team's points total of 11 was their largest score up to that time. In
Bahrain, Kubica scored his and the team's first ever pole position, beating
Felipe Massa by just under three hundredths of a second. The team went on to finish third and fourth in the race, equalling their highest round points total and promoting them to first place in the Constructors' Championship for the first time. The team also attained a second-place finish in the
Monaco Grand Prix with Robert Kubica, beating both Ferraris and only trailing the
McLaren of
Lewis Hamilton by three seconds. BMW Sauber's first race victory came in the
2008 Canadian Grand Prix, the team achieving a one-two finish with Robert Kubica's first race win and Nick Heidfeld taking second place. The victory came after Lewis Hamilton collided with Kimi Räikkönen in the pitlane, ending the race for both drivers. Kubica was on a different refuelling strategy from Heidfeld, who also briefly led the race before securing the one-two finish for BMW Sauber in comfortable fashion. This was the first Formula One victory for a BMW engine since the
2004 Brazilian Grand Prix. After the team's breakthrough win, development was switched to the 2009 season where new regulations come into play. This greatly annoyed Kubica, (who was leading the championship after the Canadian Grand Prix), as he felt they could have had a realistic chance of taking at least one title. The lack of development was reflected with a drop of form throughout the second half of the season, causing BMW to be outpaced by Renault, Toyota and even Toro Rosso (who started the season as one of the slowest teams) by the end of the season. Despite this, Kubica remained with an outside chance of taking the Drivers' Championship until the
Chinese Grand Prix, the 17th round out of 18.
2009 . In October 2008, the team confirmed that they would stick with Robert Kubica and Nick Heidfeld as their drivers for the season. Although BMW Sauber targeted the season as the year they would challenge for the title, their start to the season was a disappointment. Kubica was in third place in the
opening round, when he collided with Vettel while battling for second place and was forced to retire. Heidfeld then secured the team's first podium of the year in
Malaysia, but after six races BMW Sauber had collected a mere six points, and occupied eighth place in the Constructors' Championship out of ten teams. A raft of upgrades were set for
Turkey, including an improved
regenerative braking system (KERS) and a double deck diffuser. While the new diffuser was implemented, the KERS could not be made to fit the new car and both drivers raced without the device. After the qualifying session for the
British Grand Prix Mario Theissen announced that the team had decided to halt further development of KERS; of which BMW had been one of the strongest proponents, and focus instead on improving the car's aerodynamics. This left Ferrari and McLaren as the only remaining users of the KERS system. In the
European Grand Prix at Valencia, Kubica scored the team's first points since the race in Turkey. Following a meeting of the BMW board on 28 July, the company held a press conference the following morning in which it confirmed the team's withdrawal from Formula One at the end of 2009. Chairman Dr.
Norbert Reithofer described the decision as a strategic one. The
Formula One Teams Association released a statement in response pledging its support to help the team remain in F1. On 15 September 2009, it was announced that BMW Sauber had secured a buyer,
Qadbak Investments Limited which turned out to be a
shell company. However,
Lotus Racing had been given the 13th and final slot in the season. The team were awarded what was termed a 14th entry, which hinged either on another team dropping out or all the other teams agreeing to allow 28 cars to enter the 2010 Championship.
Sauber (2010–2018) Independent return with Ferrari engines (2010–2017) racing during the
2010 German Grand Prix ;2010 On 27 November 2009, it was announced that
Peter Sauber would repurchase the team conditional upon the team receiving a FIA entry for the 2010 season. On 3 December 2009, the FIA confirmed that Sauber had been granted the entry vacated by
Toyota Racing following their withdrawal and would be using Ferrari engines. Peter Sauber had previously announced, on 29 November, that the team's chassis for the 2010 season would be designated Sauber C29, while the Swiss newspaper
Blick reported that the team will be called
Team Sauber F1. However, in January 2010, Peter Sauber had said that he had not yet applied for a change of name, so therefore they remained for the season as
BMW Sauber F1 Team despite zero BMW components.
Kamui Kobayashi was announced as their first signed driver for the 2010 season on 17 December 2009.
Pedro de la Rosa was signed as Sauber's second driver on 19 January 2010. Before the , it was announced that Nick Heidfeld would replace de la Rosa for the remaining five races of the season.
Esteban Gutiérrez later joined the team as a reserve driver, and drove during young drivers' testing after the end of the season. Despite promising pace in winter testing, the team struggled with technical problems in the early rounds of the season, with no points from the first six races. After running a blank livery for the first four races of the 2010 season, the team finally announced a sponsorship deal with the
Burger King fast food franchise at the
Spanish and
European Grands Prix. During frustrations, Peter Sauber admitted that his decision to rescue the team had been emotionally driven, but insisted that it was proper. Finally, in
Turkey, Kobayashi finished tenth, collecting the team's first championship point for the season. At the in Valencia, after qualifying in 18th place, Kobayashi spent a vast proportion of the race in third position defending from
Jenson Button who was following closely behind in fourth. After entering the pits during the closing stages of the race to switch tyres, Kobayashi exited the pit in ninth. In the last few laps of the race, Kobayashi overtook the
Ferrari of
Fernando Alonso and the
Toro Rosso of
Sébastien Buemi for a seventh-place finish. The impressive drive from Kobayashi received much acclaim and was Sauber's best result of the season to-date. Pedro de la Rosa meanwhile, despite originally crossing the line in tenth position to secure 1 point, was relegated to 12th place after a penalty, stripping away a double points finish. Both drivers went on to score points at the and . The second half of the season gave more productive and consistent results; The drives of Kobayashi, Heidfeld and de la Rosa combined earned 44 points, giving the team eighth place in the Constructors' Championship. Kobayashi performed the team's season-best finish of sixth at the . ;2011 at the
2011 Malaysian Grand Prix Kobayashi was retained for ; he was joined by teammate
Sergio Pérez and his compatriot
Esteban Gutiérrez as reserve driver. The team debuted their 2011 car – the
C30 – on 31 January, with testing beginning the following day. At the start of the season in
Australia, both Pérez and Kobayashi were later disqualified due to technical infringements. Pérez suffered a major collision at the , resulting in concussion and a sprained thigh. Despite being passed fit for the , Pérez withdrew from the weekend after the first free practice session due to illness, he was replaced by 2010 Sauber driver
Pedro de la Rosa for the remainder of the weekend. For the remainder of the season, the team obtained regular top-10 finishes, and overall finished seventh in the Constructors' Championship. On 28 July, it was announced that Kobayashi, Pérez and Gutiérrez would all remain in the Sauber setup for the 2012 season. ;2012 at the
2012 Canadian Grand Prix Sauber started the season with a double points-scoring finish – Kobayashi sixth and Pérez eighth – in
Australia, before Pérez finished second the following week, at the ; the team's best result as an independent team. Kobayashi then started third at the behind the two Mercedes cars of
Nico Rosberg and
Michael Schumacher; although Kobayashi finished the race in tenth position, he recorded the fastest lap of the race, his first in Formula One. Prior to the , Sauber announced a sponsorship deal with English
Premier League team
Chelsea. After the race, in which Kobayashi equalled his career-best result of fifth, Peter Sauber announced that he had transferred ownership of a third of the team to CEO
Monisha Kaltenborn. Pérez achieved his second podium of the season at the with third place, while Kobayashi added a ninth place to help Sauber move up to sixth place in the Constructors' Championship. For the , Sauber achieved their best result of the season. After starting in twelfth position, Kobayashi finished fifth, equalling his best result at the time, before a time penalty for
Sebastian Vettel pushed him up into fourth, giving him the best result of his career. Meanwhile, after starting down in 17th due to a penalty, Pérez managed to work a great tyre strategy and finished just behind Kobayashi – prior to Vettel's penalty – in sixth position, giving the team a total points haul of 20, their best since splitting with BMW, and giving them a 53-point advantage over
Williams for sixth in the Constructors' Championship. At the , Kobayashi started second and Pérez fourth, the best grid positions in Sauber's history. At the start of the race,
Romain Grosjean caused a spectacular crash taking himself, Pérez, championship leader
Fernando Alonso and
Lewis Hamilton out of the race. Kobayashi's Sauber was also damaged and he finished the race in 13th place. At the , Sauber scored 20 points; Pérez used a one-stop strategy to move from twelfth on the grid to take his third podium of the season with second place, while Kobayashi finished in ninth place. Kobayashi took his first podium finish and the team's fourth of the season at the ; the following week, it was announced that Peter Sauber was stepping back from the daily management of his team, handing the role of team principal to Kaltenborn. racing during the
2013 Malaysian Grand Prix ;2013 On 23 November 2012, it was announced that
Nico Hülkenberg,
Esteban Gutiérrez and
Robin Frijns would make up the team's line-up for the season; Hülkenberg and Gutiérrez as part of the race team and Frijns as reserve driver. The team's car for the season, the
C32, was launched in
Hinwil on 2 February 2013. The livery was changed and the car is now grey, similar to the Sauber cars in the early 1990s. Despite a promising eighth place for Hülkenberg at the second round of the season, the , it was clear soon that the C32 was far from the competitiveness shown by its predecessor, with Hülkenberg unable to obtain better than a tenth-place finish in subsequent races and rookie Gutiérrez having been unable to score as of the . Despite this, Hülkenberg caused a shock by putting his car third on the grid for the , outqualifying both Ferraris in the process. On 15 July 2013,
Sergey Sirotkin joined Sauber as a development driver as part of a tie-in with Russian investors with a view to promoting him to a race seat as early as . At the
Singapore Grand Prix both Hülkenberg and Gutiérrez were in the points, running sixth and seventh respectively due to pitting under the safety car, but as their tyres went away Hülkenberg managed ninth place and Gutiérrez only 12th. Hülkenberg showed some impressive driving in
Korea, finishing in fourth place and allowing Sauber to pass Toro Rosso in the standings. The
Japanese Grand Prix saw the team's first double points finish of the 2013 season with Hülkenberg sixth after running most of the race in fourth, and Gutiérrez seventh after an impressive battle with Nico Rosberg's Mercedes. Hülkenberg scored again in the last two rounds and Sauber finished seventh in the WCC with 57 points. ;2014 at the
2014 Singapore Grand Prix In February 2014,
IndyCar Series driver
Simona de Silvestro was signed by Sauber as an "affiliated driver", with the intent of racing in F1 by . However, by the end of 2014, de Silvestro was no longer part of the team. For the season, Gutiérrez was retained and joined by
Adrian Sutil, following Hülkenberg's decision to return to
Force India. The team struggled throughout the season, often going out in the first round of qualifying and failing to score a single point for the first time in team history. driving the
Sauber C34 at the
2015 Malaysian Grand Prix ;2015 On 1 November 2014, it was announced that
Marcus Ericsson would drive for Sauber in . On 5 November 2014,
Felipe Nasr was announced as a Sauber driver to complete the 2015 line-up.
Ferrari Driver Academy member
Raffaele Marciello acted as reserve driver. The team also underwent a livery change in accordance to their new sponsor
Banco do Brasil. ;Driver's contractual dispute The start of the season saw Sauber become involved in legal action commenced by their 2014 reserve driver,
Giedo van der Garde. On 5 March 2015, van der Garde received a partial award under
international arbitration by the Swiss Chambers' Arbitration Institution, upholding the driver's contract for a race seat in . Sauber breached the contract when the team instead signed
Felipe Nasr and
Marcus Ericsson as announced in November 2014. Despite the Swiss arbitrator ordering Sauber to "refrain from taking any action the effect of which would be to deprive Mr. van der Garde of his entitlement to participate in the 2015 Formula One season as one of Sauber's two nominated race drivers", further legal action was required to see the award enforced. Just prior to the held on 13 to 15 March 2015, van der Garde applied to an Australian court who ordered, at first instance on 11 March and on 12 March following Sauber's failed appeal, that he be permitted to race in
Melbourne. Due to the risk of having its assets seized for not obeying Court orders, pending an outcome in
contempt of court proceedings against Sauber's team principal,
Monisha Kaltenborn. Based on media speculation, however, thanks to an intervention by
Bernie Ecclestone to avoid further negative publicity on the sport, Ericsson and Nasr were able to take part in Friday afternoon's second practice session. The matter was temporarily resolved on Saturday, 14 March 2015, following an announcement by van der Garde that he would forego racing in Melbourne, with a view to finding a more permanent solution in the future. The Sauber team and its new drivers for 2015, Ericsson and Nasr, were thus able to complete the Saturday qualifying session and point-scoring race on the Sunday. Three days later, on 18 March 2015, van der Garde confirmed that he and Sauber had reached, by mutual consent, a settlement that would see him relinquish, once and for all, his rights to race in Formula One with the team in return for compensation in the amount of US$16 million. The controversy, however, continued due to a statement released by van der Garde revealing further background and indicating that his intention had also been that of promoting the rights of racing drivers, whose contracts are often dishonoured. In response, the Sauber team expressed surprise at van der Garde's post-settlement statement opting to not comment further on the matter. After the resolution of the dispute, Sauber underwent an improvement from the previous year, finishing fifth in the race, their best result all year. They finished the season eighth, ahead of McLaren and Marussia. and
Marcus Ericsson racing for position at the
2016 Bahrain Grand Prix ;2016 On 23 July 2015, Sauber confirmed that Ericsson and Nasr would be retained for . ;Mid 2016 sale to Longbow Finance S.A. On 20 July 2016 it was announced that Swiss based investment firm Longbow Finance had bought both Peter Sauber and Monisha Kaltenborn's shares in the company, which made Longbow Finance the sole owner of Sauber. Pascal Picci was announced to take Peter Sauber's role as chairman of the board and president. Monisha Kaltenborn remained as Team principal and CEO of Sauber. The acquisition by Longbow Finance followed a series of speculation about the future of Sauber. The team had been in financial trouble for years before the change of ownership, often being unable to pay salaries to team members on time. Longbow's owners are said to include Swedish billionaires
Finn Rausing,
Stefan Persson and
Karl-Johan Persson. ;2017 competing for Sauber at the
2017 Malaysian Grand Prix On 11 November 2016, Sauber announced Ericsson would remain with the team in . On 16 January 2017, the team announced the signing of
Pascal Wehrlein, replacing Nasr. After Wehrlein was injured in a crash at the
2017 Race of Champions, Ferrari third driver
Antonio Giovinazzi took his place for the first winter test. Despite Wehrlein being fit to take part in the , he later withdrew after participating in the first two practice sessions, with Giovinazzi replacing him for the rest of the race weekend. Giovinazzi again replaced Wehrlein for the following race in
China. Days before the
2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix, it was confirmed that the first ever female F1 team principal
Monisha Kaltenborn would be stepping down from the team. Her role was replaced by former
Renault team principal
Frédéric Vasseur.
Partnership with Alfa Romeo (2018) driving an
Alfa Romeo Sauber C37 during pre-season testing at the
Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya ;2018 In April 2017, it was confirmed Sauber would end their engine deal with Ferrari and begin a new contract with
Honda. However, on 27 July 2017, it was announced that Sauber had cancelled their planned partnership with Honda for 2018 onwards for "strategic reasons". The following day Sauber confirmed their new multi-year agreement with Ferrari for up-to-date engines starting in 2018. On 29 November 2017, Sauber announced that they had signed a multi-year technical and commercial partnership contract with
Alfa Romeo, therefore the team was renamed to
Alfa Romeo Sauber F1 Team for the 2018 season onwards. driving the
Sauber C37 during the first free practice session of the
2018 Chinese Grand Prix at the
Shanghai International CircuitOn 2 December 2017, it was announced that
Charles Leclerc and
Marcus Ericsson would be racing for the team in 2018.
Tatiana Calderón was promoted to the role of test driver, having been a development driver for the team in 2017. On 8 April at the
Bahrain Grand Prix, Ericsson placed ninth and picked up 2 points for the team using a one-stop strategy. Two races later, Leclerc finished sixth in the
Azerbaijan Grand Prix which was the team's highest position since the
2015 Australian Grand Prix. The race that followed in
Spain saw Leclerc finish in tenth and score back to back points finishing results. It was the first time Sauber finished in the points in back to back races since . Over the course of the season, Sauber would finish in the points on 12 occasions and would get both cars in the points twice. driving the
Alfa Romeo C38 during the
2019 Hungarian Grand Prix at the
HungaroringSauber finished the season with a respectable 48 points, finishing in eighth position on the Constructors' Championship. Following the season's conclusion, Ericsson was not retained for the following season and Leclerc departed for
Scuderia Ferrari.
Alfa Romeo Racing/F1 Team (2019–2023) 2019 In September 2018, Sauber confirmed that
Kimi Räikkönen would be swapping places with
Charles Leclerc for the
2019 season. Also announced in September 2018 was that Ericsson would stay with the team, but as
third driver and
brand ambassador.
Antonio Giovinazzi would replace Ericsson and drive alongside Räikkönen for the 2019 season. On 1 February 2019, Sauber announced that it would compete in the 2019 season as
Alfa Romeo Racing although the ownership,
Swiss racing licence, and management structure would remain unchanged. In addition to Alfa Romeo, sponsors for the season included
Shell,
Singha, Axitea,
Carrera,
Iveco,
Richard Mille,
Pirelli,
Claro, Adler-Pelzer,
Little Mole, and Huski Chocolate. The 2019 season was a good season for Alfa Romeo – they managed to score 57 points and finished eighth in the Constructors' Championship. Räikkönen managed nine point finishes over the 2019 season, with four consecutive top-10 finishes in the first four races. Giovinazzi only managed four point finishes over the season. Highlight of the season for the team came in
Brazil. After an action packed race, a collision between
Alexander Albon and
Lewis Hamilton saw both Alfa Romeo's promoted into the top 5. Räikkönen finished P4 and Giovinazzi finished P5, securing 22 points for the team and solidifying eighth in the Constructors' Championship.
2020 driving the
Alfa Romeo C39 at the
2020 Pre-Season testing session at
Circuit de Cataluyna Räikkönen and Giovinazzi stayed on for the team after the 2019 season. Ericsson decided to focus fully on
IndyCar rather than being Alfa Romeo's
reserve driver. Ericsson ensured that he will maintain links with Alfa Romeo and Sauber. Alfa Romeo signed
Robert Kubica to replace Ericsson after he was released by
Williams. This also meant that
PKN Orlen would become the co-title sponsors of Alfa Romeo. After an investigation was launched against Ferrari's
power unit, the
FIA reached an unknown agreement with Ferrari,
Haas and Alfa Romeo. The details of this agreement are unknown, but it was done to hinder the performance of the Ferrari power unit. The
2020 season was not a good season for Alfa Romeo. While they did manage to retain eighth in the Constructors' Championship, they only managed to get eight points, 49 points below what they got in 2019. Throughout the season, Räikkönen managed only two point finishes, with Giovinazzi got three. Both drivers ended up with four points and ended in 16th and 17th in the drivers' standings respectively.
2021 Alfa Romeo retained both Räikkönen and Giovinazzi with Kubica as the reserve driver for the
2021 season. Ahead of the
Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Alfa Romeo confirmed that
Callum Ilott would become their test driver. The Ferrari power unit agreement with the
FIA had finished, meaning the power unit should be back to normal use. Alfa Romeo finished ninth in the Constructors' Championship with 13 points. Räikkönen scored 10 points by finishing in top 10 on four occasions, while Giovinazzi scored twice to collect the remaining three points. Räikkönen tested positive for
COVID-19 ahead of the
Dutch Grand Prix, forcing him to sit out of the event as well as the
Italian Grand Prix a week later. Kubica stood in, finishing 15th and 14th respectively.
2022 After Räikkönen announced his retirement and the team elected not to retain Giovinazzi, former Mercedes driver
Valtteri Bottas and rookie
Zhou Guanyu were signed for the
2022 season. The team entered the season as
Alfa Romeo F1 Team. Bottas had a best result of fifth at Imola and finished 10th in the overall standings, whereas Zhou scored points in three races and ranked 18th in the drivers' standings. It was the team's best finish in the Constructors' Championship since they had rebranded to Alfa Romeo in 2019, and Sauber's best finish since
2012.
2023 driving the Alfa Romeo C43 at the
2023 Austrian Grand Prix Sauber ended their relationship with Alfa Romeo at the end of
2023 season after deciding not to renew the agreement. The driver pairing of Bottas and Zhou were retained for the season. On 13 December 2022,
Andreas Seidl was announced as Sauber's new chief executive officer from January 2023, replacing Frédéric Vasseur. In January 2023, Alfa Romeo announced a multi-year title sponsorship agreement with
online casino Stake, renaming the team as
Alfa Romeo F1 Team Stake. The team also signed a partnership agreement with live
streaming platform Kick, which shares Stake co-founder and owner Eddie Craven as investors. Kick's name and logo replaced Stake's in countries where gambling and sports betting advertisements were not allowed as
Alfa Romeo F1 Team Kick.
Kick Sauber (2024–2025) 2024 on the grid for the Sprint Race at the
2024 Chinese Grand Prix Sauber officially lost its
Alfa Romeo sponsorship due to transitioning to the
Audi factory team from 2026 onwards. Due to this, Sauber's links with Ferrari became weaker, with the
Haas team effectively assuming Sauber's role as
Ferrari's new satellite team. Sauber entered as Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber (but operated as Stake F1 Team on a day-to-day basis), continuing the sponsorship deals signed by Alfa Romeo with
Stake and
Kick in the previous season. In countries where gambling advertisement is disallowed, the team competed as Kick Sauber F1 Team and replaced all Stake logos on their car with Kick logos, just as they had done in 2023. Kick also acquired the naming rights of the chassis for two seasons, with the 2024 car named as
Kick Sauber C44. On 5 February the car launch event was held at London's
Guildhall which was hosted by
Naomi Schiff. Zhou and Bottas stayed on for the
2024 season and The C44 was consistently finishing outside the points, and the team finished the 2024 season in tenth place, scoring only four points.
2025 Nico Hülkenberg returned to the team starting from , arriving from
Haas. Hülkenberg was joined by reigning Formula 2 Champion
Gabriel Bortoleto, completing their lineup for 2025.
Jonathan Wheatley was initially expected to join Sauber as the new Team Principal in the summer of 2025, replacing Team Representative
Alessandro Alunni Bravi. On 15 January, Sauber announced that Team Representative
Alessandro Alunni Bravi would be leaving the team at the end of January. Thus, this meant that Chief Operating and Technical Officer
Mattia Binotto would serve as Team Principal temporarily until Wheatley's arrival. Subsequently, reports emerged on the same day that Wheatley's gardening leave would be ending earlier and he would begin his new role on 1 April, which would be in time for the Japanese Grand Prix. On 12 March, Sauber officially confirmed that Wheatley would join the team from 1 April, which meant that he would be making his debut as Team Principal at the Japanese Grand Prix. In February 2025, it was announced that Sauber would be opening a new 'technical centre' in the United Kingdom by the summer, with Bicester, Silverstone, and Milton Keynes as potential locations. This was part of the move to allow Sauber to “extend the team’s presence and influence within the global Formula 1 landscape” as it will give them access “to the world’s largest motorsport expertise and talent pool. Subsequently, Bicester was announced as the location which the 'technical centre' would be opened in, specifically Bicester Motion. At the
British Grand Prix, Hülkenberg finished in third place to take his first ever podium in Formula One after 239 race starts, which was also Sauber's first since the
2012 Japanese Grand Prix.
Audi factory team (2026–) On 26 October 2022, it was announced that Sauber will compete as the
Audi factory team from 2026 and will use Audi's power unit, thus ended a sixteen-year customer engine relationship with Ferrari since the 2010 season. In January 2023, Audi announced the acquisition of a minority stake in the Sauber Group. On 8 March 2024, the Audi Group confirmed a full takeover of Sauber. Former McLaren team principal
Andreas Seidl was planned to continue as CEO, additionally taking over the role of team principal from
Alessandro Alunni Bravi. However, he was replaced by former Ferrari team principal
Mattia Binotto starting from 1 August 2024. Red Bull sporting director
Jonathan Wheatley was expected to join in the summer of 2025, having left Red Bull at the end of 2024 and having planned to go on
gardening leave in the start of 2025. However, he joined earlier on 1 April 2025 following a deal struck for his earlier release to Sauber. ==Sauber Academy==