Alex Albon says Williams had the car to be ahead of Mercedes at the start of this season but for the weight issues it has been facing in 2024.
Williams has been working to bring its car down to the weight limit ever since the start of the year, having been late delivering the FW46 and then having to divert resources to repairs after a number crashes early on. Further upgrades at this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix are also focused on weight saving, and Albon says it’s a problem that has cost the team a chance of significant points.
“It’s the weight, basically!” Albon says about the lack of point-scoring chances this season. “If you look at it from race one, I think pace-wise we could have been likely in front of the Mercedes. We started off the year with a good base, possibly a car that we knew wasn’t going to have many upgrades for a while, but obviously as we were hit by the weight…
“Think of it more like what Haas do — start the year strong but then have fewer upgrades throughout the year. But with the weight, everything was offset so we’re starting from further back than what we expected to be.
“Racing is such a joint effort between team and driver. Last year we had a great car in a lot of races — it was peaky but we were able to score points when it mattered. This year we just haven’t been able to do that, there’s not been enough peaks for us — Monaco being one and Canada being the other. But when you’re handicapped by at some points four or five tenths a lap, especially at the start of the season, there’s not really much chance of scoring points.”
As the weight saving brings a performance gain that is not dependent on aerodynamic characteristics or getting car setup right, Albon says Williams would certainly have been at the front of the midfield with a car that hit the team’s original weight target.
“If you take the races so far this year, it’s almost a guarantee that we would have been,” he said. “I think now everyone’s starting to bring upgrades as we are getting closer to the target as well, it’s becoming less that case. Of course there’s still lap time in being on target to where we are now, but then again teams like RB have made huge progress — they’re developing very quickly as well. So start of the year, yes , and now we’re at the early side of halfway, less so.”