Rank 18 in F1 Heritage Collector documents Alan Jones as the no-nonsense World Champion who delivered Williams its first Drivers' title — a crown built on FW07 ground-effect mastery, team-owner clarity, and a personality that refused to soften for sponsors or journalists. Jones arrived at Williams when the FW07 was becoming the template everyone else copied: low, wide, Cosworth-powered, and devastating through high-speed corners where Jones's aggressive style extracted points others left on the table. The 1980 season was a duel with Nelson Piquet's Brabham and the shadow of Carlos Reutemann inside the same Williams garage — internal team politics as dramatic as any on-track battle. Five wins and a title for Jones while Reutemann's motivation wavered told the story of a team finally reaching the summit with an Australian lead driver who said what he thought and drove the same way. The poster treats 1980 as specimen year: white-green FW07, number 27, Saudia and TAG callouts, and the Australian flag ghosted through 1980 are catalog facts on warm cream paper. Jones retired after 1981, returned briefly, and later became a blunt voice in commentary — a career arc that makes this plate the peak frame on a driver who valued correctness over celebrity. For Williams collectors, Jones is the first name on the champion wall before Keke Rosberg, Nigel Mansell, and the modern empire.