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De la Rosa: Wheatley not joining Aston Martin ‘for the time being’

In the wake of Jonathan Wheatley’s sudden departure from Audi, whispers have grown louder that the experienced team boss could be headed for Silverstone – potentially reshaping the leadership structure at Aston Martin.

The rumors reached a fever pitch this week, suggesting that Wheatley was being lined up to take over the team’s day-to-day running as its team principal, allowing current team boss Adrian Newey to retreat into the pure design genius of his Managing Technical Partner position.

However, Aston team ambassador Pedro de la Rosa, speaking candidly in Japan, offered a mix of intrigue, caution, and firm resistance to the rumor mill.

‘That will remain unchanged’

Pressed in an interview with Sky F1 on whether Wheatley could arrive to ease Newey’s workload, de la Rosa initially searched for the right words – before drawing a clear line.

“Well, at the moment, we remain... Our structure is...” de la Rosa stammered. “We're happy with what we have, you know? And how we have organised the team, and Adrian being the team principal.

“But he's more than a team principal, he's actually a managing technical partner. So, that's going to remain the same.

“I mean, Jonathan has left. I mean, we really shouldn't comment on things that are happening. We don't know why he has left. We don't know, you know, the situation, really.

“And the only thing we know, really, is that we have a team principal, and it's Adrian Newey, you know? And that will remain unchanged.

“We have to believe in our structure and not change it anymore.”

It was a clear message from within Aston Martin’s ranks – one that emphasized stability over speculation, even as the team’s leadership history has been anything but settled in recent years.

Door closed… for now

Still, the question lingered: is Wheatley a possibility down the line? De la Rosa didn’t entirely slam the door – but he certainly didn’t open it either.

“Well, not for the time being, you know? I mean, it's just... We shouldn't comment on rumours and speculation. Because we have to be respectful as well for what Jonathan wants to do in the future,” he said.

The phrasing – “not for the time being” – is likely to keep the rumor mill spinning while perhaps also covering the inevitable period of gardening leave likely imposed on Wheatley.

But in the fast-moving world of Formula 1, today’s denial can easily become tomorrow’s announcement.

Pressure builds amid performance struggles

The speculation regarding Wheatley comes against the backdrop of a deeply challenging start to 2026 for Aston Martin. The team’s new Honda power unit has been plagued by vibrations severe enough to damage batteries and even raise concerns about driver wellbeing.

The result? The AMR26 has yet to see the chequered flag in a race this season.

In such circumstances, talk of leadership reinforcements feels inevitable – but de la Rosa insists the focus must remain internal, not speculative.

“You have to face the public, the people,” the Spaniard insisted. “When things go right and when things go wrong, you also have to be here and explain.

“And it is very important to actually be very transparent, to explain the things in a proper way, because the people want to understand why we are so slow. We are not happy, but they need to know as well that we are fighting and that we are not happy at all.

“There's no time for being frustrated or disappointed, you know. We just have to work hard, harder than anyone else, but also with a very good strategy.”

For now, Aston Martin’s stance is clear: Newey stays, the structure holds, and Wheatley remains an outsider.

But in a sport where fortunes – and personnel – shift at breathtaking speed, the story may be far from over. The only certainty is that eyes will remain fixed on Silverstone, watching for the next twist in Formula 1’s ever-evolving power game.

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Michael Delaney

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