Haas team principal Ayao Komatsu: ‘We shouldn’t be fourth. We’re the smallest F1 team’

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There is no one quite like Ayao Komatsu in Formula One,Haas’s Japanese team principal, a rugby-playing Coventry City fan who left his home country to escape the constraints of conformity, is F1’s rebel without a pause,As Haas enter their first home race of the season in Miami this weekend, they are on a roll,Fourth place in the championship is the highest position held by a US team after three races in the sport’s history and Komatsu has engineered it in a sport he once viewed as his great escape,“Fortunately or unfortunately, I was very rebellious,” explains the 50-year-old, who grew up in Tokyo.

“I was just very unhappy about education, authorities, adults.I didn’t like that part of the culture.You ask questions, and curiosity wasn’t something that was actually encouraged.I really hated that, so I really wanted to get out of that world.”Komatsu speaks with an enthusiasm and openness that is refreshing in the corporate F1 world.

His lack of any hesitation to consider whether he is fulfilling a party line is endearing and it is all but impossible not to warm to him.Originally a fan of motorbikes, he was only 14 when he came to the conclusion that F1 held the promise of a new life.“Part of the frustration I had in Japan was this culture of not being different from other people,” he says.“If you wanted to do something which may not be in the mainstream of what your government wants to do, then you are classified as the outcast and then they don’t give a shit.I really wasn’t into that kind of normalisation.

“F1 looked like a really exciting world and ticked everything I was looking for.It was international, multicultural and had competitiveness.I really wanted to go into the world where if you are good at something, you get rewarded, sport is obviously one of those things.”No little journey was to follow and it has led to Haas enjoying their best stint yet.In fourth behind Mercedes, Ferrari and McLaren, they are, extraordinarily, in front of Red Bull.

This is a considerable feat, especially given the relative size of their operation to the big players’.Red Bull can be expected to come back but his team’s place at the leading edge of the midfield pack is very much down to Komatsu.He has been with them for a decade and replaced Guenther Steiner as team principal in 2024, after previously working alongside him as trackside engineering director.He could not be further from the larger‑than‑life persona of Steiner but is every bit as interesting, for all that he slips quietly under the radar among the sound of egos and ideologies clashing in F1.Aware that it was the hub for almost every F1 team, Komatsu left Japan to take a foundation course at Warwick University near Coventry, before going on to study automotive engineering at Loughborough.

He threw himself into it, determined that the best way to understand the people of his new home was to mix with them and joined a rugby club in Coventry where he played scrum-half.It was the only slot, he acknowledges with a broad grin.“I used to play all sorts of positions in Japan but after I came to this country everybody’s so big,” he says.“I’m by far the smallest person on the pitch so I could only play scrum-half.”Secured, then, as the No 9, with his new-found friends he also became an avid Coventry football fan and, indicative of how he much he has embraced the club, their recent promotion has meant an awful lot amid the furore of these opening rounds of the season.

“I can’t wait to see the City back in the premiership after so long,” he says, as if born in the shadow of the old Highfield Road.“When we went down, I knew it was going to be many years before we got back up.It’s been an amazing journey to follow, seeing them rise from League One.It’ll be a special day when we have our first home match next season.I cannot wait to see us play against our former striker, [Arsenal’s] Viktor Gyökeres, at home.

”After graduating, Komatsu went on to cut his teeth at British American Racing (BAR) then Renault and Lotus as it would become, from which he learned valuable lessons he has taken into what has been a fine turnaround in his two years in charge at Haas,Where Steiner was very much centre stage, Komatsu has quietly gone about the business of making Haas the little team that can,A crucial differential last year was his insistence that they could develop their car in‑season and keep pace with other better-resourced teams,It gave them confidence and a sense they were in the fight,It is an impetus that has continued into 2026, when Britain’s Oliver Bearman has returned seventh- and fifth-place finishes from the first three races.

Drivers matter, of course, but making a difference for Komatsu at the sharp end of F1 has been a case of making the most of the broader human resource.“My job is to provide the environment,” he says.“Once you provide the environment, you put the right people in the right place, you make sure that they understand that you should take risks, that I trust them and if you make a mistake, then you’re not going to get banned.People need to be empowered to do that.If nobody took a risk, we’re going nowhere.

”That risk did include Bearman.The young British driver is undoubtedly a talent and was nurtured by Ferrari but his place with Haas is also another indication of Komatsu’s mindset in trusting his gut over the naysayers.“So many people questioned me, the results speaks for themselves,” he says.“I was confident that we have everything to make this rookie driver work.I thought: ‘If we do it right, I’m sure we can nurture his potential.

’ Because potential is clear to me.We’ve done that.”Haas are lucky to have Komatsu and he has found his freedom in the sport, but can they hang on to fourth place? He smiles and, while he knows it is a long shot, clearly relishes the challenge.“By definition we shouldn’t be able to hang on to it, we have no rights to be P4, right? You know, we are the smallest team on the Formula One grid,” he says.True enough, but Komatsu has made a point of refusing to be constrained by expectations, which was, after all, why he wanted to join F1 in the first place.

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