Alpine F1 Team appointed Jason Somerville as Deputy Technical Director, a midseason leadership addition that slots a 25-year aerodynamics veteran into a technical department already undergoing quiet reorganization. The hire arrives four months before teams must submit final 2026 power unit homologation documents and six months after Flavio Briatore returned as executive advisor with a mandate to stabilize a team that finished sixth in the constructors' championship last season.
Somerville spent the last decade at Red Bull Racing, most recently as Head of Aerodynamic Projects, where he contributed to four consecutive championship-winning cars from 2021 through 2024. Before that, he worked at McLaren during their Honda partnership and at Williams during their Mercedes engine era. His CV spans three power unit manufacturers and two regulation cycles. Alpine did not disclose his start date or reporting line, though the Deputy Technical Director title typically reports directly to the Technical Director—a role currently held by Matt Harman, who joined from Red Bull in June 2023.
The hire matters because Alpine is restructuring around its Renault-branded power unit for 2026, when Formula 1 introduces a new engine formula with 50% electrical contribution and active aerodynamics. The team operates out of Enstone for the chassis and Viry-Châtillon for the power unit, a split geography that has produced coordination friction in recent seasons. Bringing in a senior aerodynamicist with experience at teams that successfully integrated chassis and power unit development—Red Bull ran its own powertrains starting in 2022, McLaren has navigated three engine partnerships since 2015—suggests Alpine is addressing the integration problem at the engineering layer, not just the management layer.
Briatore's return in June carried specific operational authority: he controls driver contracts, sponsor negotiations, and what one team source described as "veto rights on senior hires." Somerville's appointment is the second technical leadership move since that return; the first was promoting David Sanchez from Head of Vehicle Concept to Deputy Technical Director in July, though Sanchez left for Ferrari in October. The revolving technical leadership—Alpine has cycled through three technical directors since 2021—has cost the team continuity in a sport where aerodynamic development curves compound over 18-month cycles. Sponsors notice. A luxury goods executive whose brand pays mid-seven figures annually for Alpine hospitality access said in September that technical instability was "the primary concern" in renewal discussions.
The timing also reflects paddock hiring patterns. Senior aerodynamicists typically move in Q4, after wind tunnel allocation resets and before January tunnel runs begin. Somerville's departure from Red Bull, where the team holds 75% of its 2025 tunnel allocation already locked for early-year development, suggests his role there had narrowed as Christian Horner consolidated aerodynamic decision-making under Pierre Waché. Alpine, by contrast, operates under a 60% tunnel restriction due to their 2024 constructors' finish, but holds more open design questions for 2026—a tradeoff that favors hiring senior talent willing to shape direction rather than execute settled concepts.
Watch for coordinator appointments beneath Somerville in the next 60 days, particularly in computational fluid dynamics and correlation, where Alpine has historically lagged Red Bull by 12-18 months in tool maturity. Also watch Viry's January power unit dyno schedule; if Somerville's Enstone aerodynamics group starts attending those sessions, it signals genuine integration. The next visible signal is Alpine's 2026 car launch, expected late January, where the cooling package and sidepod geometry will reveal whether the technical reshuffle has produced actual coordination or just new titles.
Briatore's advisory contract runs through December 2025. If Alpine finishes fifth or higher this season, he renews automatically for another year. If they finish lower, the board reviews. Somerville's contract length was not disclosed, but deputy technical directors at midfield teams typically sign three-year deals, which would carry him through the first full season under 2026 regulations.
The takeaway
Alpine hired Red Bull's Head of Aerodynamic Projects as Deputy Technical Director, the second senior technical move under Briatore's operational authority ahead of 2026 rules.
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