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Aston Martin make approach for Audi boss Wheatley

Andrew Benson

F1 Correspondent
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Audi team principal Jonathan Wheatley has been targeted by Aston Martin to lead their troubled Formula 1 team.

Aston Martin team owner Lawrence Stroll has made Wheatley an offer to run the race team under managing technical partner Adrian Newey but no contract has yet been signed, insiders have told BBC Sport.

Wheatley joined Audi only a year ago and has been based at its chassis headquarters in Hinwil in Switzerland. Among the reasons for his desire to move on is said to be the appeal of a return to the UK.

However, Wheatley’s existing contract with Audi means it could be some time before he is able to join Aston Martin.

An Aston Martin spokesperson said: “The team will not be engaging in media speculation about its senior leadership team. Adrian Newey continues to lead the team as team principal and managing technical partner.”

An Audi spokesperson said: “We are aware of the recent media reports. There is no official update from our side at this point in time and we do not comment on speculation.”

BBC Sport approached Wheatley for comment but he was unavailable.

Signing Wheatley would allow Newey to focus his full attention on his main area of expertise, designing the car, and free him up from the other areas that fall under a team principal’s remit.

Newey stepped into the role as team principal, in addition to his wider role, in November last year after problems emerged in his relationship with then team principal and chief executive officer Andy Cowell. It was never intended to be a long-term position for Newey.

Cowell is now focusing on helping engine partner Honda resolve problems with its new power unit, which has started the season lacking performance and reliability.

Former Red Bull team principal Christian Horner, who was linked to Aston Martin last November, has met with Stroll this week.

However, Newey is said by sources to be opposed to Horner joining the team.

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen (left) speaks to Jonathan Wheatley (centre) and Adrian Newey (right)Getty Images

Stroll signed Newey on a contract which could be worth as much as £30m a year -including all possible bonuses and add-ons – hoping he would be the final part in the jigsaw that turned the team into winners.

But Aston Martin are last in the world championship after what amounts to a disastrous start to the season.

The car is not yet competitive. Newey’s arrival in March last year, combined with problems with their new wind tunnel, has led to its development being delayed but the 67-year-old is confident the chassis can be made competitive over the course of this season.

The bigger problem is the Honda engine, which has suffered major reliability problems and is short on power and energy recovery.

The engine has vibrations which were causing the batteries to fail in pre-season testing, leaving the team very short on parts for the first two races of the season.

A workaround was found to isolate the batteries from the vibration, which allowed the car to run for longer. But the vibrations are still being transferred to the chassis and into the drivers’ hands.

Fernando Alonso was withdrawn from the Chinese Grand Prix last Sunday because the vibrations were causing too much discomfort.

Alonso said: “I could not probably finish the race anyway. Vibrations level were very high today. At one point, from lap 20 to 35, I was struggling a little bit to feel my hands and my feet. We were one lap behind, we were last. It was probably no point to keep on going.”

Honda has admitted it does not yet know the source of the vibrations.

The hybrid engine is lacking power from the internal combustion engine and its electrical elements are not able to work at the full 350kw limit.

Alonso has leapt from 17th on the grid to 10th at the end of the first lap in both races so far this season, only to fall back through the field because he cannot defend against cars with more power and electrical recovery and deployment.

Wheatley and former Ferrari team principal Mattia Binotto had been operating in a dual leadership role, with Binotto primarily overseeing the engine and chassis factories in Germany and Switzerland and Wheatley in charge of the race team.

Wheatley’s expected departure amounts to the third management restructure at Audi F1 in less than two years.

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Haaland invests in new global chess tour

Manchester City striker Erling Haaland has been announced as an investor in a new global chess tour.

The 25-year-old is backing the Norway Chess organisation, which is set to launch the Total Chess World Championship Tour next year.

Four tournaments will be staged annually in different cities, with a world champion crowned across three disciplines – fast classic, rapid and blitz chess.

It is being supported by the International Chess Federation (FIDE) and a pilot tournament is planned for this autumn.

Each season will have a minimum prize pool of $2.7m (£2m) with Fide describing it as “one of the most significant developments in modern chess”.

Speaking to the federation’s website, Haaland said chess was “an incredible game” and he likened it to football as “it sharpens your mind”.

“You have to think quickly, trust your instincts and think several moves ahead. Strategy and planning are everything,” he added.

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Smoke rises after Iranian missile attack on Israel oil refinery in Haifa

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Iran’s strike on Qatar gas facility will reduce supply for 3 to 5 years

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Iran’s strike on Qatar’s Ras Laffan gas facility will cut an estimated 17% of the country’s Liquefied Natural Gas export capacity for up to five years, officials say. The damage is a major blow to the global energy market, which could disrupt supplies to Europe, Asia and beyond.

Qatar PM on Iran attacks: ‘Wisdom seems to be lacking these days’

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Who leads Iran? Assassinations leave leadership and command in question

After the assassination of Ali Larijani, the powerful secretary of Iran’s Supreme National Security Council, questions have emerged over who will lead the country.

Larijani was one of the government’s most prominent faces, who had stepped into the spotlight after the assassination of Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and other top military and political figures by Israel and the US, which began attacking Iran on February 28.

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Mojtaba Khamenei has been announced as his father’s successor as supreme leader. But US officials claim that he is wounded, and analysts say he has never held an executive role. That has left observers wondering what the chain of command looks like in Tehran, and who the most powerful figures in the country are.

Influential figures

For now, analysts said it wasn’t completely clear who would succeed Larijani. Historian Reza H Akbari, who is also an analyst on Iran at the Institute for War and Peace Reporting, said that while there are mechanisms and constitutional processes in place, specific names might be harder to guess.

The number of assassinations also could lead to lesser-known entities assuming powerful positions, or even less transparency, analysts said.

“It might be in Iran’s interest not to name a successor to Larijani, since that would just be putting a target on his back,” Barbara Slavin, a distinguished fellow at the Stimson Center, told Al Jazeera.

However, she said there were a number of figures who “remain influential in both the political and military realms”.

Among the names Slavin said could play important roles are Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf, the speaker of the parliament; Saeed Jalili, a former national security adviser who was also involved in nuclear negotiations; Ali Akbar Salehi, a former foreign minister who is also a nuclear expert; Hassan Rouhani, the former president and national security adviser; and Mohsen Rezaie, the former head of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). who has been named a senior adviser to Mojtaba Khamenei.

“Other IRGC figures will be important, including Ahmad Vahidi, members of its intelligence branch, and leaders in the Basij,” Slavin said.

Killing off-ramps

Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was Iran’s leader for 36 years. He guided the country’s decision-making domestically and internationally and expanded the influence of the IRGC. But despite having a single leader for nearly four decades, the Iranian system is somewhat decentralised, according to analysts.

“The Iranian system is durable and built to take hits like this,” Akbari told Al Jazeera.

“One of the ways they do that is what has been nicknamed the mosaic defence, essentially the process through which regional and provincial commanders of the country’s military apparatus are empowered to act autonomously,” Akbari said.

Still, the killing of Khamenei and a number of other figures, including commander of the internal Basij militia Gholamreza Soleimani, has had an impact on Iran’s chain of command, analysts said.

And yet, it is unlikely to uproot the regime, even as both US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu have said, at times, that regime change is the goal for Iran.

“This morning we eliminated Ali Larijani, the boss of the Revolutionary Guards, which is the gang of gangsters that actually runs Iran,” Netanyahu said on Tuesday.

“If we persist in this – we will give [Iranians] a chance to take their fate into their own hands,” he said.

Analysts, however, said the decapitation efforts were unlikely to cripple the regime.

“There’s always another leader,” Mohamad Elmasry, professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, told Al Jazeera. “I don’t think this is going to suggest any kind of collapse of the Iranian regime.”

What it has done, according to Akbari, is remove “potential off-ramps” that would lead to de-escalation of the war. Larijani was one of the officials who had been involved in negotiations with the West over the nuclear file, and had the influence and authority to calm tensions.

New generation

Larijani was the highest-ranking political official assassinated since Khamenei was killed on the first day of the war.

Akbari said that even with Larijani assassinated, the Supreme National Security Council that he headed is still operational, and the country’s constitution has mechanisms aimed at keeping the system ticking.

Like many of the top officials of his generation, Larijani fought in the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988). That generation is giving way now to a younger generation, analysts said, who instead cut their teeth fighting in Iran’s proxy wars in Syria and Iraq. And analysts fear that the US decision to undermine negotiations, as well as the killing of many Iranian officials with the authority to de-escalate tensions, may lead to the emboldening of a new generation of younger hardliners.