When Mark Blundell gave up on a career-defining Williams F1 role


From Le Mans to Indy cars via Formula 1, Mark Blundell had a successful career in motorsport – but how much more successful could it have been?

Born on 8 April 1966 in London, Blundell had a first taste of motorsport on motorbikes before switching to single-seaters in 1984, which yielded two championship titles in Formula Ford, followed by mixed results at the higher echelons of junior formulae.

Blundell’s path soon took him to endurance racing with Nissan, and he became one of the youngest drivers to take pole position in the Le Mans 24 Hours’ glittering history, aboard the R90CK he shared with Julian Bailey and Gianfranco Brancatelli in 1990. His margin over second place in qualifying was six seconds – still a Le Mans record. “It was one of those moments where time stood still and everything went perfectly,” Blundell reminisced in 2015. A gearbox issue took the trio out of the race.

Mark Blundell, Nissan Motorsport

Photo by: William Murenbeeld LAT Images via Getty Images

That same year, Blundell signed with the Williams F1 team as a test driver. A Jaguar endurance deal was on the cards for 1991, but the unfancied Brabham F1 team offered him a race seat, so he gave up on both Jaguar and Williams to fulfill his dream of actually competing at the pinnacle of racing.

“Initially I’d agreed a deal with Tom Walkinshaw to race for Jaguar in 1991,” Blundell told Motor Sport magazine in 2022. “When the paperwork came through to sign, however, there was a six-figure number missing, a potential bonus in the event of winning the world championship.

“I called Tom to discuss it, but Brabham approached while that conversation was going backwards and forwards. ‘Would you like to be a salaried Formula 1 driver?’ I wasn’t going to say no, was I?

“I asked Williams whether they would release me from my contract and they agreed, though their advice was to stay with them and not to accept the Brabham offer – and with hindsight they were absolutely right. But I was still young and more than anything else I wanted to be an F1 driver. I thought all my dreams had come true.”

In his maiden F1 season – which he described as “fairly horrendous from day one” – Blundell took a highest result of 11th in qualifying, 2.359s off the pace at Monza; he scored a solitary point at Spa-Francorchamps, courtesy of a few retirements ahead of him – as often happened at the time.

Mark Blundell, Brabham

Mark Blundell, Brabham

Photo by: LAT Images

“What I didn’t really appreciate at first was that I had absolutely zero opportunity of doing anything with the Brabham,” he added. “There was no money – my salary cheques bounced a couple of times! – and reality bit when Williams asked me to stand in for Damon Hill, their new development driver, in a test at Imola just after the San Marino Grand Prix.

“I was more than two seconds faster on race tyres in the Williams than I had been on qualifiers in the Brabham.

“I think Damon still owes me a drink, actually, because I phoned him as soon as I knew I was going to Brabham, to suggest that he should pitch for the Williams seat I was vacating…”

Blundell fell off the grid in 1992, with Hill taking up that Brabham drive alongside his Williams commitments, which lay the foundations for his title-winning career at the Didcot- then Grove-based outfit.

But Blundell took Le Mans honours that year, driving the Peugeot 905B to victory alongside Derek Warwick and Yannick Dalmas. He went on to enjoy a short but respectable F1 career at Ligier, Tyrrell and McLaren, taking three podium finishes over three seasons.

Mark Blundell, Peugeot Sport

Mark Blundell, Peugeot Sport

Photo by: William Murenbeeld LAT Images via Getty Images

The main subsequent highlights in the Englishman’s career were his 1997 CART campaign, with three victories and sixth in the standings, and second overall in the 2002 Le Mans 24 Hours, in a Bentley Speed 8 he shared with David Brabham and Johnny Herbert.

Blundell founded 2MB Sports Management with fellow F1 driver Martin Brundle in 2004, looking after a number of British drivers like Gary Paffett and Mike Conway.

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