Wheatley confident Audi will be winners in F1
Timing is everything in Formula One and Jonathan Wheatley reckons he got his right in leaving Red Bull, the team with the most race wins and drivers titles this century, to become principal of Sauber.
The Swiss-based team will become the Audi works outfit from next season but were at the bottom of the standings until Nico Hulkenbergs fifth place in Spain last Sunday raised them two places to eighth.
Sauber have won only once since 1993 -- in 2008 when owned by BMW -- and there are nagging questions about how competitive the 2026 engine will be, with early reports not encouraging. But Wheatley said they had all the building blocks for success.
Were looking at a campus expansion, weve got an ambitious program ahead of us and investment from Audi and QIA (Qatar Investment Authority). Im really, really super-excited about where were at, the Briton told Reuters.
I do not come to work to make up the numbers. I absolutely believe that well get on that path and well be winning races and world championships.
Wheatley has decades of experience, now in his 35th year in Formula One after starting as a junior mechanic with Benetton. He joined Red Bull from Renault in 2006 and was sporting director when he left at the end of last season.
With Red Bull he won six constructors titles, eight drivers titles and 120 grands prix.
He was also instrumental in securing Max Verstappens first title in 2021 after a radio conversation with race director Michael Masi triggered a fateful change to the safety car procedure.
The Briton said such experiences had shaped him and would help in his new role, which he started in April.
The radio transcripts in Abu Dhabi showed the extreme competitive passion from all the teams and
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