US-owned Haas F1 names 'lead driver'

Driver Romain Grosjean, center, team owner Gene Haas, right, and team principle Guenther Steiner, left, pose for a photoduring a news conference for Haas Racing's Formula One auto race team in Kannapolis, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2015. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

Driver Romain Grosjean, center, team owner Gene Haas, right, and team principle Guenther Steiner, left, pose for a photoduring a news conference for Haas Racing's Formula One auto race team in Kannapolis, N.C., Tuesday, Sept. 29, 2015. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

Published Sep 30, 2015

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Kannapolis, North Carolina - France's Romain Grosjean will be leaving Lotus at the end of the season to become 'lead driver' at the new US-owned Haas Formula One team in 2016.

Team founder and chairman Gene Haas, who is also co-owner of the successful Stewart-Haas Nascar outfit, presented a smiling Grosjean at a news conference at their Kannapolis headquarters in North Carolina.

Ferrari-powered Haas, which has a close technical partnership with Maranello, is the first US-owned entrant in Formula One since 1986.

“He's going to have a lot of work to do,” Haas told reporters. “He's going to be our lead driver and we are going to depend heavily on him to help us with our strategies with the car, with the racetracks and learning the whole operations of an F1 team.”

Grosjean said he had been interested in the Haas project from the outset and liked the fact that they were taking a different approach to other new teams in the past.

“I think it's an approach that can be pretty quickly successful,” added the Frenchman.

“I like the idea, this partnership with Ferrari, I like the way everything has been going, I like the fact that it's going slowly but nicely and I'm very happy that I made that decision.”

PLENTY OF SCOPE

Grosjean, 29, has 10 podium finishes from 78 Grands Prix after starting his career with Renault - Lotus's predecessors who are in the process of buying back that financially struggling team - in 2009.

Most recently, he was third in Belgium in August.

The Ferrari connection will have been the clincher for the Frenchman, however, with the Italian team likely to be looking for a replacement for Kimi Raikkonen at the end of 2016.

Being at Haas, which is expected to announce Ferrari reserve Esteban Gutierrez as its second race driver, will give Grosjean plenty of scope to show what he can do.

“We should be able to run straight away without having the problems of a new team,” he said. “I think it will be really good to score a few points early in the season for a newcomer American team.

“I have spent 10 years at Lotus, I know the guys very well and it would have been easy and comfortable to stay,” he added.

“On the other hand, I want to try to win races and championships and I thought that coming here to Haas was a good step and a good direction to achieve that.”

Haas said there had been pressure to sign an American driver but, with Alex Rossi only this month becoming the first US racer in Formula One since 2007, the team needed someone more experienced.

“The reality was that a rookie driver with a rookie team just isn't a good fit,” he said. “The primary purpose here is to show that as an American manufacturer we can compete in the most difficult competitive series in car racing in the world.”

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