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Vote: Autosport Best of the Month for June 2026

General
Vote: Autosport Best of the Month for June 2026

Why similar Williams and Aston Martin failures are oddly reassuring

Feature
Formula 1
Austrian GP
Why similar Williams and Aston Martin failures are oddly reassuring

McLaren still to investigate why it's losing to Mercedes on the straights, despite same PU

Formula 1
Austrian GP
McLaren still to investigate why it's losing to Mercedes on the straights, despite same PU

Explained: The factors behind WRC’s big 2027 transition and the hurdles it still faces

Feature
WRC
Rally Greece
Explained: The factors behind WRC’s big 2027 transition and the hurdles it still faces

Marquez admits he "didn't want to walk into the paddock" because he "associated it with pain"

MotoGP
Dutch GP
Marquez admits he "didn't want to walk into the paddock" because he "associated it with pain"

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

Autosport Retro video: Remembering the 1987 British GP

Formula 1
British GP
Autosport Retro video: Remembering the 1987 British GP

Williams plans “almost entirely new car” by Azerbaijan GP

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Williams plans “almost entirely new car” by Azerbaijan GP

Newey downplays effect of Willis' exit

Red Bull chief technical officer Adrian Newey insists that the recent departure of team technical director Geoff Willis will not change the way that he approaches his day to day job

Willis has left the team that he first joined in 2007 after his "job was made redundant", and Newey revealed that the team will hand more authority to "four or five" individual department heads.

"My role and my daily way of operating will stay the same as it is," said Newey, who has always admitted that he prefers to concentrate more on design work than on management.

"What does change is that we have four or five very senior people on the next level down and we will be expecting them to take on more responsibility for their departments and run in a way which means that we don't need a single technical director."

This means that the likes of chief designer Rob Marshall and chief aerodynamicist Peter Prodromou will both have to take more responsibility for managing the team's technical effort at it pushes to close the gap on Brawn in both the drivers' and constructors' championships.

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