Archive January 28, 2026

‘Incredibly painful’ to miss Barcelona testing – Williams chief

Williams say it is “incredibly painful” to have failed to get their car ready in time to take part in the first Formula 1 pre-season test this week.

Team principal James Vowles said on Wednesday that the team’s decision to withdraw from the test in Spain was “the result of our determination to push the limits of performance under the new regulations”.

“It clearly wasn’t our plan, and it’s incredibly painful,” he added.

“If you want to transform at speed, you need to find the pain points and put them right very quickly, which is exactly what we’re doing.”

Vowles took over at Williams in 2023 and has been leading owner Dorilton Capital’s attempt to turn the team back into frontrunners, after years of poor performance and what Vowles has described as underinvestment.

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The car has now passed all its impact tests, Vowles added, and drivers Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon “stand shoulder to shoulder with me”.

“They’re clearly, as I am, disappointed,” said Vowles.

“They want to be out there testing the car, and whilst they’re in our driver and loop simulator in tandem now, to increase that programme, it isn’t the same.”

Vowles said the main problem was that the factory was unable to cope with the demand put on it by the car build process.

“It’s more of an output than anything else, of pushing not just the boundaries of design but the boundaries of just simply how many components can be pushed through the factory in a very short space of time,” said Vowles.

“The car we’ve built is about three times more complicated than anything we have put through our business beforehand.

“So, to put that in perspective, it means the amount of load going through our system is about three times what it used to be.

“And we started falling a little bit behind and late on parts. There are compromises you can make as a result of it.

“In addition to that, we have absolutely pushed the boundaries of what we’re doing in certain areas. And one of those is in certain corresponding tests that go with it.”

However, he said the team were on target to make it to the second pre-season test, which takes place in Bahrain on 11-13 February.

Vowles added: “We could have made Barcelona testing. Simple as that. But in doing so, I would have to turn upside down the impact on spares, components, and updates across Bahrain, (the first race in) Melbourne, and beyond.

“And the evaluation of it was that for running in a cold, damp Barcelona, against doing a (rig) test, against the spare situation, and frankly, there was zero points for running in a shakedown test, we made the decision, and I stand by it, that the right thing to do is to make sure we’re turning up at Bahrain, correctly prepared, and prepared in Melbourne as well.”

Vowles did not directly answer a question as to whether the car was significantly over the minimum weight limit, saying it was impossible to respond to “murmurings in the media” because it was not possible to know the answer until the car was assembled.

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Sterling leaves Chelsea 18 months early – where could he go next?

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Raheem Sterling has left Chelsea by mutual consent after reaching an agreement to end his contract early.

The 31-year-old had 18 months remaining on his £325,000‑a‑week deal.

Sterling leaves after three-and-a-half seasons at Stamford Bridge following his move from Manchester City for £47.5m in 2022.

Sterling will receive a payout from Chelsea, while the club will save money as the settlement will be less than the figure of over £20m he would have been paid had he stayed for the remaining year and a half of his contract.

“We thank Raheem for the contribution he made while a Chelsea player and wish him well for the next stage in his career,” Chelsea said.

The England international made 81 appearances for the Blues but had not played a competitive match for Chelsea since May 2024.

He had been training separately with the so‑called “bomb squad” at the club’s Cobham base after failing to secure a move in the summer.

Several clubs, including Juventus and Bayer Leverkusen, explored a deal for the England winger, while a potential switch to Fulham did not materialise.

How Chelsea move turned sour

Sterling signed a five-year £325,000-per-week contract in 2022, relocating his young family in the process.

The £47.5m transfer was a statement of intent by Todd Boehly, who at the time was acting as sporting director, and Clearlake Capital.

However, the people behind the deal are no longer in charge at the club.

In addition to Boehly’s diminishing influence, Thomas Tuchel was the head coach who oversaw Sterling’s arrival.

Then came Graham Potter, then Frank Lampard, and then Mauricio Pochettino, all within Sterling’s first two seasons at the club, in which he played 81 times and scored 19 times as Chelsea finished 12th and then sixth.

But two years into his contract Chelsea effectively ended his role as a first-team player when new manager Enzo Maresca decided Sterling was not in his plans.

Sterling wants to add to impressive CV – analysis

Security. Stability. Football. Those are the three factors at the top of Sterling’s checklist as he weighs up his next move.

After 18 months in the Chelsea wilderness, what next for the attacker?

Well, there has been a perpetuated narrative that the failure to find Sterling a new club last summer was rooted in his desire to stay in London.

That, having uprooted his family from Manchester to the capital following his move to Chelsea in 2022, he didn’t want to disrupt his family again.

Indeed, his loan move to Arsenal last season allowed him to stay in London, and it is true to say the fact his son was enrolled in the north London club’s academy meant that he, like any father, was reluctant to disturb his family’s routine.

But it became clear at the start of January that Sterling was open to moving to a club outside of the capital in a bid to resurrect his career.

And with his Chelsea exit now concluded, Sterling will not limit his options to within London’s perimeter.

But as he ponders his next move, there will be a set of crucial factors he will consider.

First and foremost is the security of his family. Sterling has been the victim of two house burglaries since 2022.

If Sterling is to leave London, he will look for an opportunity that can provide himself, his family and his career with long-term stability and peace of mind.

He didn’t envisage his return to London would encounter such upheaval. Sterling wants to avoid a repeat when he signs his next contract.

Sterling yearns for a settled life on and off the pitch.

Then last, but not least, there’s the football. He has spent the last six months training away from Chelsea’s first-team squad, cut off from the virtues afforded to professional footballers.

His loan spell at Arsenal last season didn’t go according to plan, he made just 13 starts in all competitions for Mikel Arteta’s side – scoring once in a EFL Cup win over Bolton.

It is understood Arsenal paid around 20% of his reported £325,000-per-week wages, so while his lack of action became an obvious frustration it cost the club relatively little financially, while Arteta often praised Sterling’s influence – especially around the younger players.

Indeed, Sterling’s next club will be signing a proven winner – five Premier League titles, one FA Cup and five League Cup wins is an impressive trophy haul.

At 31 there are still miles left in the tank, aided by the fact Sterling has never suffered a serious injury.

Related topics

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  • Premier League
  • Football

More on this story

    • 17 October 2025
    A graphic of Premier League players from every team in the division in 2025-26 season, with the Premier League trophy in front of them.
    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Sterling leaves Chelsea by mutual consent

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Raheem Sterling has left Chelsea by mutual consent after reaching an agreement to end his contract early.

The 31-year-old had 18 months remaining on his £325,000‑a‑week deal.

Sterling leaves after three-and-a-half seasons at Stamford Bridge following his move from Manchester City for £47.5m in 2022.

“We thank Raheem for the contribution he made while a Chelsea player and wish him well for the next stage in his career,” Chelsea said.

The England international made 81 appearances for the Blues but had not played a competitive match for Chelsea since May 2024.

He had been training separately with the so‑called “bomb squad” at the club’s Cobham base after failing to secure a move in the summer.

Several clubs, including Juventus and Bayer Leverkusen, explored a deal for the England winger, while a potential switch to Fulham did not materialise.

How Chelsea move turned sour

Sterling signed a five-year £325,000-per-week contract in 2022, relocating his young family in the process.

The £47.5m transfer was a statement of intent by Todd Boehly, who at the time was acting as sporting director, and Clearlake Capital.

However, the people behind the deal are no longer in charge at the club.

In addition to Boehly’s diminishing influence, Thomas Tuchel was the head coach who oversaw Sterling’s arrival.

Then came Graham Potter, then Frank Lampard, and then Mauricio Pochettino, all within Sterling’s first two seasons at the club, in which he played 81 times and scored 19 times as Chelsea finished 12th and then sixth.

But two years into his contract Chelsea effectively ended his role as a first-team player when new manager Enzo Maresca decided Sterling was not in his plans.

Sterling wants to add to impressive CV – analysis

Security. Stability. Football. Those are the three factors at the top of Sterling’s checklist as he weighs up his next move.

After 18 months in the Chelsea wilderness, what next for the attacker?

Well, there has been a perpetuated narrative that the failure to find Sterling a new club last summer was rooted in his desire to stay in London.

That, having uprooted his family from Manchester to the capital following his move to Chelsea in 2022, he didn’t want to disrupt his family again.

Indeed, his loan move to Arsenal last season allowed him to stay in London, and it is true to say the fact his son was enrolled in the north London club’s academy meant that he, like any father, was reluctant to disturb his family’s routine.

But it became clear at the start of January that Sterling was open to moving to a club outside of the capital in a bid to resurrect his career.

And with his Chelsea exit now concluded, Sterling will not limit his options to within London’s perimeter.

But as he ponders his next move, there will be a set of crucial factors he will consider.

First and foremost is the security of his family. Sterling has been the victim of two house burglaries since 2022.

If Sterling is to leave London, he will look for an opportunity that can provide himself, his family and his career with long-term stability and peace of mind.

He didn’t envisage his return to London would encounter such upheaval. Sterling wants to avoid a repeat when he signs his next contract.

Sterling yearns for a settled life on and off the pitch.

Then last, but not least, there’s the football. He has spent the last six months training away from Chelsea’s first-team squad, cut off from the virtues afforded to professional footballers.

His loan spell at Arsenal last season didn’t go according to plan, he made just 13 starts in all competitions for Mikel Arteta’s side – scoring once in a EFL Cup win over Bolton.

It is understood Arsenal paid around 20% of his reported £325,000-per-week wages, so while his lack of action became an obvious frustration it cost the club relatively little financially, while Arteta often praised Sterling’s influence – especially around the younger players.

Indeed, Sterling’s next club will be signing a proven winner – five Premier League titles, one FA Cup and five League Cup wins is an impressive trophy haul.

At 31 there are still miles left in the tank, aided by the fact Sterling has never suffered a serious injury.

Related topics

  • Chelsea
  • Premier League
  • Football

More on this story

    • 17 October 2025
    A graphic of Premier League players from every team in the division in 2025-26 season, with the Premier League trophy in front of them.
    • 16 August 2025
    BBC Sport microphone and phone

Rubio says Maduro abduction ‘strategic’ necessity, downplays future attacks

Secretary of State Marco Rubio has defended the United States abduction of Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro before a Senate committee, arguing the operation did not constitute an act of war while framing the attack as a strategic necessity.

The hearing before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on Wednesday offered the latest window into the administration’s thinking behind the extraordinary January 3 abduction of Maduro, who remains in a New York prison awaiting drug trafficking and narco-terrorism conspiracy charges.

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Rubio began the hearing by underscoring the operation as a “strategic” necessity for the Trump administration, while downplaying what United Nations Experts have decried as a flagrant violation of international law.

Rubio described Venezuela under Maduro as a “base of operation for virtually every competitor, adversary and enemy in the world”. He listed Venezuela’s alleged ties to Iran, Russia and Cuba.

“[Having Maduro in power] was an enormous strategic risk for the United States, not halfway around the world, not in another continent, but in the hemisphere in which we all live, and it was having dramatic impacts on us, but also on Colombia and on the Caribbean Basin and all sorts of other places,” he told lawmakers.

“It was an untenable situation, and it had to be addressed, and now the question becomes what happens moving forward,” he said.

Rubio said the US had three objectives in the South American country, the culmination being “a phase of transition where we are left with a friendly, stable, prosperous Venezuela – and democratic”.

In that, Rubio defended the decision of US President Donald Trump to continue working with the government surrounding Maduro, including interim President Delcy Rodriguez, while not initially supporting an opposition takeover.

Rubio said the first objective was avoiding civil war in Venezuela and aiming to “establish direct, honest, respectful, but very direct and honest conversations with the people who today control the elements of that nation”.

He said the second objection aims for “period of recovery … and that is the phase in which you want to see a normalised oil industry”.

Speaking before Rubio, Senator Jeanne Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate, focused little on the wider international law implications of the Trump administration’s approach to Venezuela.

Instead, she emphasised the cost, noting that the military operation and ongoing naval blockade have been estimated by some outside analysts to cost $1bn.

“So it’s no wonder that so many of my constituents are asking, why is the president spending so much time focused on Venezuela instead of the cost of living and their kitchen table economic concerns?”

Senator Rand Paul, a Republican, was more direct, asking Rubio is the operation against Maduro constituted an act of war.

“We just don’t believe that this operation comes anywhere close to the constitutional definition of war,” Rubio responded, arguing that Maduro’s election in 2024 had been contested and that he had been indicted on US drug trafficking charges.

Paul, who has been a vocal advocate of passing legislation asserting congressional oversight over future actions in Venezuela, described the arguments as “empty”.

Emphasis on oil

During his testimony, Rubio appeared to downplay the prospect of future attacks on Venezuela, even as a blockade on sanctioned oil tankers remains in effect and US military assets remain surged to the region.

“We are not postured and do not expect to take military action,” Rubio said. Still, he declined to rule out future strikes to protect US interests.

The secretary of state also laid out plans for Venezuela’s oil industry, which has been a key emphasis of the Trump administration.

He said Washington and Caracas reached an agreement that “on the oil that is sanctioned and quarantined, we will allow you to move it to market … In return, the funds from that will be deposited into an account that we will have oversight over, and you will spend that money for the benefit of the Venezuelan people.”

He called the plan a “short-term mechanism”.

“And so we have created that, we hope to do is transition to a mechanism that allows that to be sold in a normal way, a normal oil industry, not one dominated by cronies, not one dominated by graft and corruption,” Rubio added.

He further hailed a law passed by Venezuela’s legislature that allows for more international access to the country’s oil industry.

Fulham agree to sign Man City winger Bobb for £27m

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Fulham have agreed a £27m deal with Manchester City to sign Oscar Bobb.

BBC Sport reported this week that a deal between the two clubs was close and well-placed sources have confirmed an agreement has now been struck for the attacker to join Fulham.

Sources say City will retain a 20% sell-on clause, as well as matching rights for any future bids received by the Cottagers.

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Bobb has fallen down the pecking order at City after the January arrival of Antoine Semenyo from Bournemouth.

“I know there are rumours, I know there are talks,” manager Pep Guardiola said on Saturday after City’s win over Wolves.

Asked if Bobb wants to leave the club, Guardiola replied: “I think so.”

Bobb, who has also had interest from Bundesliga side Borussia Dortmund, has featured 15 times for City this season without scoring.

He last played on 17 December against Brentford in the Carabao Cup, when he hobbled off injured inside the opening 20 minutes.

Fulham have lost only one of their last seven Premier League games under Silva and sit seventh in the table following their 2-1 win over Brighton on Saturday.

Bobb has featured six times for Norway this year, helping them qualify for this summer’s World Cup, and would unite with compatriot Sander Berge at Craven Cottage.

He missed almost the whole of last season after fracturing a bone in his leg during training in August 2024.

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