Veteran motorsports engineer Matt Borland has been named vice
president of technology for Haas F1 Team and Stewart-Haas Racing. In this role,
Borland will serve as a liaison between the two organizations – Haas F1 Team in
the FIA Formula 1 World Championship and
Stewart-Haas Racing in the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series.
Haas F1 Team will make its Formula One debut in 2016, becoming the first American-led
Formula One team in 30 years. Stewart-Haas Racing is a four-car NASCAR Sprint
Cup Series team with drivers Kevin Harvick, Danica Patrick, Tony Stewart and
Kurt Busch. Stewart-Haas Racing debuted in 2009 and won the 2011 Sprint Cup
championship with Stewart and the 2014 Sprint Cup championship with Harvick.
Borland will oversee the transfer of Formula One
technology to Stewart-Haas
Racing while providing Haas F1 Team with deep engineering resources.
Concurrently, the highly-respected Borland will serve as a gatekeeper, ensuring
the privacy of proprietary information respective to each team.
“With his knowledge and work ethic, Matt has helped build
Stewart-Haas Racing into the team it is today, and as we build Haas F1 Team and
prepare it for 2016, his expertise has already proven to be incredibly useful,”
said Joe Custer, chief operating officer, Haas F1 Team and executive vice
president, Stewart-Haas Racing. “Matt’s talent as an engineer and manager are
augmented by a sterling reputation that is beyond reproach. He is well suited
for this dual role that will ultimately lead to the betterment of Haas F1 Team
and Stewart-Haas Racing.”
Borland joined Haas CNC Racing, the precursor to Stewart-Haas
Racing, in May 2007. He has served in numerous capacities, including crew
chief, competition director, technical director and, most recently, vice
president of engineering, where he oversaw all of the team’s technical
initiatives and research and development projects.
Borland came to Haas CNC Racing with significant NASCAR
experience, first with Team Penske from the end of the 1999 season through 2006
and then with Michael Waltrip Racing in 2007. Prior to coming to NASCAR,
Borland was the race engineer for driver Mark Blundell at PacWest Racing in
Champ Car and before that, Borland was at Pi Research, a well-known engineering
organization specializing in motorsports.
“I’m an engineer at heart, so I’m always interested in building
things,” said Borland, who in 1994 earned a degree in mechanical engineering
from Kettering University (formerly the General Motors Institute). “It’s been
very satisfying to help build Stewart-Haas Racing from a two-car team to a
four-car team that’s always capable of winning championships. Now I have the
best of both worlds, as I can continue to help improve Stewart-Haas Racing
while building Haas F1 Team. We work smart and efficiently at Stewart-Haas
Racing, and there are best practices we can apply to Haas F1 Team. Eventually,
both organizations will make each other better, and I’m proud to be a part of
it.”
No comments:
Post a Comment