The Daily Courier

Overcoming

- By MALCOLM GUNN

Life is all about change and adapting to change, even if we don’t ask for it or plan it ourselves.

Frank Williams certainly never planned or asked for the kind of change he experience­d on March 6, 1986, but he has adapted and even thrived on it.

On that day, the man who had become a formidable player in Formula One, the world’s premier auto racing series, was at the Paul Ricard circuit in the south of France. He was there to check on the progress of his team drivers Nigel Mansell and Nelson Piquet as they tested his latest FW11 race car.

Returning to his private jet parked at the nearby Nice airport, the usually fast-driving Williams lost control of his rental car on a twisty secondary highway. The vehicle somersault­ed off the road, landing on its roof.

Although an associate riding with him was uninjured, the resulting near-fatal injuries to Williams left the one-time marathon runner a quadripleg­ic.

You might think that this sort of catastroph­ic, life-altering event would have been exactly that. But Williams seemed to treat it as only a minor annoyance. Within four months, the wheelchair-bound head of one of the most successful race teams in the world was back at work.

That year, his Honda-powered thoroughbr­eds won nine of 16 events, with Williams capturing both the Constructo­r’s Cup as well as the 1986 World Championsh­ip for driver Nelson Piquet.

Those who know Williams express little surprise that the tenacious Englishman would re-establish himself so rapidly, or even regain his ultra-active pre-accident pace.

From his earliest beginnings (he was born in 1942), Williams has focused on little else but the world of motorsport­s. Growing up largely alone from age eight in a Scottish boarding school gave Francis Owen Garbett Williams plenty of time and solace to think about his one overriding passion.

After graduating from college, he tried his hand at racing, working his way up to the open-wheel Formula Three ranks. But, by the age of 24, having secured only a single victory among several mostly non-finishes, he retired from active competitio­n.

Instead of racing, Williams became a broker of racing cars and racing parts. The job not only kept him involved in the sport, but his multi-lingual skills (fluency in French and Italian, plus a passing knowledge of German) came in handy in his dealings with European prospects.

Dabbling on the fringes of the racing world and mingling with numerous racing personnel eventually led Williams to manage Piers Courage, an up-and-coming Grand Prix driver. However, Courage was killed at the Dutch Grand Prix in 1970.

Williams continued to knock around racing, usually in a state of perpetual impoverish­ment, for a number of years, eventually starting his own badly underfinan­ced team in 1976.

With the assistance of race-car designer Patrick Head, and with funding derived from wealthy members of the Saudi Arabian royal family, Frank Williams launched a concerted and carefully planned assault on the Formula One crown.

In 1979, in the team’s second full year of competitio­n, driver Clay Regazzoni scored Williams’ first victory with teammate Alan

 ?? ADAM YOUNG/Special to The Daily Courier ??
ADAM YOUNG/Special to The Daily Courier

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