Skip to main content

Recommended for you

LIVE: Indianapolis 500 qualifying minute-by-minute commentary and live updates

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
LIVE: Indianapolis 500 qualifying minute-by-minute commentary and live updates

Formula E Monaco E-Prix: Oliver Rowland reignites title challenge with first win of season

Formula E
Monaco ePrix II
Formula E Monaco E-Prix: Oliver Rowland reignites title challenge with first win of season

“Three restarts is quite dangerous”: MotoGP riders react after “terrible day” in Barcelona

MotoGP
Catalan GP
“Three restarts is quite dangerous”: MotoGP riders react after “terrible day” in Barcelona

How F1's ADUO system works

Feature
Formula 1
Feature
How F1's ADUO system works

F1 2027 engine shift could hurt Mercedes and disrupt team development, says Naomi Schiff

Formula 1
Canadian GP
F1 2027 engine shift could hurt Mercedes and disrupt team development, says Naomi Schiff

MotoGP Catalan GP: Fabio di Giannantonio wins twice red-flagged Barcelona race

MotoGP
Catalan GP
MotoGP Catalan GP: Fabio di Giannantonio wins twice red-flagged Barcelona race

Nurburgring 24 Hours: Mercedes win as late mechanical failure hits Verstappen Racing

Endurance
Nurburgring 24 Hours: Mercedes win as late mechanical failure hits Verstappen Racing

Lucas Auer reflects on “frustrating” end to Max Verstappen Mercedes’ Nurburgring bid

Endurance
Lucas Auer reflects on “frustrating” end to Max Verstappen Mercedes’ Nurburgring bid

Adrian Newey to step down as Aston Martin F1 team principal

Newey will focus exclusively on technical matters amid Aston Martin’s tough start to the 2026 F1 season; he’ll be replaced by a rival team’s boss

Adrian Newey, Aston Martin Racing

Adrian Newey, Aston Martin Racing

Photo by: Lars Baron / Getty Images

Adrian Newey is set to step down from his team principal position at the Aston Martin Formula 1 team, where he’ll be replaced by current Audi team boss Jonathan Wheatley.

Motorsport understands Newey will step down in order to focus exclusively on technical matters, as Aston Martin has experienced a more than underwhelming start to the 2026 F1 season. Power unit trouble with new partner Honda means the Newey-designed AMR26 currently can’t complete a whole race.

Read Also:

Wheatley has been working at Audi since last May alongside CEO Mattia Binotto but will therefore return to England after just 10 months. The timing of the move depends on his Audi contract.

Aston Martin’s Silverstone campus is located just 20 miles away from Red Bull’s F1 headquarters, where Wheatley spent 20 years of his career.

Jonathan Wheatley, Audi F1 Team Principal

Jonathan Wheatley, Audi F1 Team Principal

Photo by: Dom Gibbons / Formula 1 via Getty Images

This opportunity is attractive as Wheatley is set to join at an extremely tricky time for Aston Martin – it can’t really get any worse. At Audi, enjoyed a certain degree of autonomy, reporting directly to the board, but coexisting with Binotto meant he did not have the same leeway as normally afforded by the team principal role.

Wheatley may have been endorsed – if not suggested to owner Lawrence Stroll – by Newey himself, as they spent those two decades together at Red Bull.

Read Also:

Newey’s promotion to the team principal role was announced just four months ago and was effective in 2026 only, so it was short-lived; the current crisis only made it harder.

Now, what will Audi’s strategy be: searching for a new team principal, or restructuring the squad internally and/or promoting from within?

Previous article Jacques Villeneuve explains how he surprised Michael Schumacher with iconic overtake
Next article Esteban Ocon’s Haas form sparks strong final-year warning from Guenther Steiner

Top Comments

Latest news