FCA's Friendly Giant Given Keys to Alfa Romeo, Maserati

Mark Stevenson
by Mark Stevenson

Look up, waaaay up.

Human redwood and former Canadian junior hockey star Reid Bigland adds yet another set of responsibilities to his resume thanks to an executive shuffle at FCA.

Bigland replaces Harald Wester as CEO of both Alfa Romeo and Maserati brands effective immediately, though Wester retains his Chief Technology Officer position with the group. Both men will continue to sit on the Group Executive Council, which has increasingly insulated Sergio Marchionne from regional brand operations.

Bigland counts Head of U.S. Sales and Chief Executive of FCA Canada as his other continuing roles with the company. In the past, Bigland has been head of the Alfa Romeo brand in North America, and global head of Ram and Dodge brands.

“I am thankful for the work Harald has carried out in the last few years establishing a sound technical framework for our two premium brands and which has culminated in the recent launch of the Maserati Levante and the Alfa Romeo Giulia,” said group CEO Sergio Marchionne in a statement announcing the shuffle.

FCA poses the change as the next phase in Marchionne’s plan to rekindle a relationship between American buyers and FCA’s Italian luxury brands.

“It is time now for our efforts to be directed towards the global commercial expansion of these two brands, and I can think of no one better than Reid to fulfill that mission. Reid has an extraordinary record of growing sales and market share in the US and Canada over the last 7 years at FCA, including leading the growth and positioning of the Ram and Dodge brands for part of that time.”

Both brands have new models in the wings, but they’ve been plagued with setbacks. The Alfa Romeo Giulia, initially expected to hit dealer lots this year, won’t arrive until early 2017, reports Automotive News. FCA hopes the Levante, Maserati’s first SUV, will lift that brand’s profitability amid sales drops in the United States and Europe.

The shuffle comes seven months after similar executive moves left former Fiat North American chief Jason Stoicevich on the outside looking in. Stoicevich left the company shortly after the October shuffle.

Analysts expect Marchionne, 63, to retire in the next couple years. With this latest move, Bigland rises yet again as a possible successor, competing for Marchionne’s soon-to-be-vacated seat with Mike Manley, head of Ram and Jeep, and Tim Kuniskis, head of passenger car brands.

Mark Stevenson
Mark Stevenson

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  • Corey Lewis Corey Lewis on May 24, 2016

    We need more executives for all these Alfas we sell all over!

  • Olddavid Olddavid on May 24, 2016

    The children's show reference is lost on 300 million south of the border.

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    • FreedMike FreedMike on May 25, 2016

      @BklynPete The workers have all struck for fame, 'cause Lennon's on sale again.

  • Fahrvergnugen Almost 50% more weight than an E28? Just as ludicrous as inflating a sedan to 1,000psi and calling it a GT anything...
  • KOKing The next dominant driver/team combo will come just as it has before. I'd say Max has another season, but the rules changes for '26 and whatever driver/team combos that happen to come along with that could start a streak for Lando, Charles or George.
  • JMII I wish this survey listed the complaints in each category separately because as others have mentioned the "I can't save a radio preset" isn't a real problem in my book. Yes this kind of problem points to poor UI design and could lead to frustration down the road but could be easily solved by better education, like a simple YouTube video.
  • JMII Remember Braun? This +1. Rule changes can always shake things up. The bigger question is why can't Perez get similar performance out of the same car? While the gap between Red Bull and the rest has come down, Perez should still be in 3rd or 4th in every race just based on Max's results... instead he spends the whole race behind the other top 5 drivers/teams. At the F1 level I don't think its the driver, its more about the car normally. In Indycar things are different since its a spec series with only small differences between teams and engines, there the driver and strategy (or dumb luck) plays a bigger role
  • Mike-NB2 "Here, the turbocharger is apparently preconditioned to a higher turbine speed which should pay dividends with a right-now power delivery. " Does anyone know what this means? The article appears to have been written by someone who doesn't have a lot of R knowledge and this is the first I've heard of this. I understand that that some turbos can have variable vanes, but I wasn't aware that how the turbocharger responds can be changed in a different mode. I'm asking because I have a 2024 R (manual) and in R Mode (which I use 100% of the time for the tighter steering, tighter suspension and better sounding exhaust) and the engine will hit the rev limiter much faster than I'm used to. I had a '19 GLI with the same engine (but different tune, obviously) and it didn't rev that quickly. With the R in R Mode, the engine will go from 2000 rpm to redline blindingly fast. The R has much shorter gearing than the GLI, so that would be a factor too. 120 km/h in the GLI had 2200 rpm where the R at that speed is 3200. Any thoughts?
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