Royal Joaan Bin Hamad Al Thani spotted wearing a Richard Mille

Sheikh Joaan Bin Hamad Al Thani, the younger brother of Qatar's Emir Tamim and a figure long known in horological circles for his extraordinary personal collection, was recently photographed wearing the Richard Mille RM 67-02 Sebastian Ogier edition — a watch that sits at the absolute frontier of what a mechanical timepiece can weigh and still credibly claim to be a luxury object.
The RM 67-02 was developed in close collaboration with Sébastien Ogier, the French rally driver who claimed five consecutive FIA World Rally Championship titles between 2013 and 2017 and has continued competing at the highest level since. Richard Mille engineered the case from black Carbon TPT — a proprietary material created by layering filaments of carbon at alternating 45-degree angles under high pressure, producing a structure stronger than titanium at a fraction of the mass. The result is a total wrist weight, strap included, of just 32 grams. The movement, the in-house calibre CRMA7, is a skeletonized automatic beating at 28,800 vph and offering approximately 50 hours of power reserve. The bridges are rendered in the blue, white, and red of the French tricolore, making the nationality of the watch's dedicatee unmistakable at a glance.
From a collector standpoint, athlete-dedicated Richard Mille references occupy a distinct tier. They are produced in strictly limited numbers, distributed primarily through the brand's own network and direct athlete relationships, and almost never surface through conventional retail. The RM 67-02 Ogier is no exception — its scarcity is structural, not merely marketing. The combination of an identifiable sports legend, a technically meaningful case material, and the tricolor aesthetic gives it a narrative coherence that more generic limited editions lack.
Sheikh Joaan is no casual enthusiast. His collection is widely understood to include some of the rarest contemporary and vintage references in existence, and his appearances at major auctions and brand events have made him a recognized figure in serious collecting circles. His choice to wear the Ogier RM 67-02 in public signals genuine appreciation for the piece, not simply acquisition for its own sake.
At an official retail price of $156,000, the Richard Mille RM 67-02 Sebastian Ogier already occupies rarefied territory. On the secondary market, however, the piece commands approximately $420,000 — a premium of nearly 170 percent over retail — reflecting both its scarcity and the sustained demand for athlete-edition Richard Milles among the world's top collectors.