Newey has been a central figure in Red Bull’s rise from F1 newcomer when it took over the Jaguar team in 2005, to the super team status it achieved in the years following its first race victory in 2009.
With Red Bull having become the fifth F1 team to reach 100 race wins with Max Verstappen’s victory in the recent Canadian Grand Prix – after Ferrari, McLaren, Williams and Mercedes – the team has been reflecting on its achievements.
In an exclusive interview with Autosport, Horner praised Newey’s efforts to help turn Red Bull into a race-winning operation, which took three years after he joined from McLaren in early 2006 and was boosted by the downforce slashing aerodynamic rule changes from 2009.
Horner also explained how Newey’s role has changed over the years even as his job title – chief technical officer – has not, with Newey now overseeing the Red Bull technical department led by Pierre Wache as technical director since 2018.
Newey signed a new deal to continue in this position for several more years – the exact length of his contract beyond 2023 have not been made public – just after the 2023 campaign commenced and his job now encompasses working on design details for Red Bull’s F1 team, as well as developing its Advanced Technology business and its new Powertrains division.
“Adrian has been a phenomenal contributor to all of the success that we’ve had,” said Horner.
“Of course, in the early days, we were very dependent on Adrian and I collected a team around Adrian to be able to deliver from his drawing board to the car as quickly as possible.
Source: Autosport