The previous team boss of Midland,
Colin Kolles, remained as team principal into 2007.
Michiel Mol became the new Director of F1 Racing and member of the Spyker board, and
Mike Gascoyne became Chief Technology Officer from the end of the 2006 season. The team used customer 2006-spec
Ferrari engines in 2007, replacing the
Toyota units, which went to the
Williams team. Although the team remained based in the UK, it chose to register under the Dutch motor racing authority and therefore run under the Dutch flag during 2007, reflecting its new ownership. For the second race driver, Spyker signed one of their 2006 third drivers,
Adrian Sutil, to drive for the team in 2007. The official FIA entry list for 2007 was posted on various websites on 4 December 2006, and on the list the Spyker F1 Team was assigned car numbers 20 and 21, but only
Christijan Albers' name was made official on the entry list, with the second seat, and car number 21 left TBA, since Sutil had not been confirmed at the time. However, the car numbers were swapped inside the team as Albers wanted to drive a car with an odd number, hence Albers (and later Winkelhock and Yamamoto) raced with number 21 and Sutil 20. Spyker signed four test and reserve drivers for the 2007 season:
Adrián Vallés,
Fairuz Fauzy,
Giedo van der Garde and
Markus Winkelhock. In March, Spyker announced a sponsor deal with
Etihad Airways and
Aldar Properties, two companies from
Abu Dhabi,
United Arab Emirates. The official name of the entrant during the season was Etihad Aldar Spyker F1 Team. On 10 July, Albers was released from his Spyker contract due to a lack of sponsorship money, which would have funded the team's development programme. Mol described it as "one of the toughest decisions of my career". Despite former
Red Bull Racing driver
Christian Klien testing for the team on 12 July 2007, Albers' replacement for the
2007 European Grand Prix was Winkelhock. During the
2007 European Grand Prix, Winkelhock became the only driver to lead a Grand Prix in a Spyker, due to the team's tyre selection. However, Winkelhock did not keep his race drive as this went to
Sakon Yamamoto. In August, the new B-Spec Spyker model, which the team hoped to use at the
2007 Turkish Grand Prix, failed the rear crash test which is set by the FIA. All cars must pass these tests to be allowed to race. However, a few days later it was confirmed that the car had passed the crash test in time to compete in the
Italian Grand Prix. On 30 September at the
2007 Japanese Grand Prix, the team scored its first and only championship point. Sutil finished 9th on the track, but was promoted to 8th place and into the points scoring positions when stewards ruled post-race that
Toro Rosso's
Vitantonio Liuzzi had overtaken Sutil under a yellow flag on lap 55; Liuzzi was subsequently given a 25-second penalty that dropped his time below Sutil's. On 14 August, Spyker Cars announced that it might need to sell all or part of the team due to a potential split of the team from its parent company. The team was sold to a consortium named "Orange India" led by Indian businessman
Vijay Mallya and Dutch entrepreneur (and existing board member) Michiel Mol after approval by Spyker's shareholders. Mallya attended the Chinese Grand Prix as a team owner. The team was renamed
Force India for the
2008 season. ==Complete Formula One results==