Infiniti Engineering Academy: Matthew Crossan wins the 2017 edition in Canada

The fourth annual edition of the Infiniti Engineering Academy kicked off its recruitment activities in Montreal last night, and the Canadian winner is a young engineer from London, Ontario.

A group of journalists was invited to the Luciani Infiniti dealership in Montreal in order to meet the ten finalists gathered from across Canada. They had to present themselves in front of the journalists and talk about both their experience and motivations leading them to participate in the Engineering Academy. To make us journalists feel useful—for once—Infiniti’s representatives handed us an evaluation sheet and asked us to rate each finalist based their level of knowledge, confidence and eloquence.

At our arrival, these finalists were split in two groups, and one of several challenges faces in the last few days was to build, with a time limit, a little electric car from scratch, picking through a bin filled with various parts. The two cars had to go head-to-head in an improvised race down the dealership floor, not only in speed, but staying within the track limits.

Matthew Crossan’s coronation was unveiled by no other than Renault F1 driver Nico Hülkenberg. “When my name was announced, I couldn't believe it!” said Matthew. “I met nine other very capable and strong candidates in the Final, who were all deserving of the opportunity, so I feel very fortunate to be selected as the winner. I can't wait to get started and I will give it all to prove I am a winner worthy of this amazing opportunity.”

The other Canadian finalists were Antonio Badea, Jackson Diebel Andrei Dragos, Samantha Flavel, Anthony-Jonathan Hokayem, Mathew Marzanek, Jason Soares, Garrett Thompson and Shaymus Veinotte.

The next legs of the Infiniti Engineering Academy will take place every two weeks, during which winners of six other regions will be crowned, including United States, Mexico, United Arab Emirates, China, Asia-Pacific and Europe (including Russia). These seven winners will work at Infiniti for a year; half of their time will be dedicated to the Renault-Nissan group’s efforts in F1, and the other half to the Japanese luxury brand’s road cars.

Félix Lamy, last year’s Canadian winner of the Infiniti Engineering Academy, will end his one-year tenure at Infiniti in September, and will complete his university studies that he already started before joining the Academy. After that, he plans to pursue his career in the world of F1.

Share on Facebook

More on the subject

Special EventsA Great Story from the Infiniti Engineering Academy!
We talked about the Infiniti Engineering Academy earlier in June. For those of you who missed the piece, the Academy is a project that Infiniti created last year to find some of the world’s most talented young engineers and to bring them into the fold. Infiniti looks for young talent …
RacingInfiniti All About Performance in F1
MONZA (Italy) – Although once upon a time it was a simple sponsor of the Red Bull team in F1, Infiniti is now a “technical partner” of Renault’s F1 team since the brand with the diamond-shaped logo acquired the Lotus team and joined the Formula One ranks, not only as …
NewsAre You the Next Infiniti Engineering Academy Winner?
The Infiniti Engineering Academy is returning in 2019 for the sixth consecutive year as the luxury car company wants to find the best up-and-coming engineers on the planet to work with them and the Renault F1 Team on a unique 12-month paid placement. Since 2014, almost 30,000 people have registered …