F1 Teams Test Their All-New 2026 Cars in Private Amid Concerns They Could Breakdown

Monaco's Charles Leclerc waves to fans as he steers his Ferrari Formula One SF-26 at the Ferrari private test track, in Fiorano Modenese, Italy, Friday, Jan. 23, 2026. (AP)
Monaco's Charles Leclerc waves to fans as he steers his Ferrari Formula One SF-26 at the Ferrari private test track, in Fiorano Modenese, Italy, Friday, Jan. 23, 2026. (AP)
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F1 Teams Test Their All-New 2026 Cars in Private Amid Concerns They Could Breakdown

Monaco's Charles Leclerc waves to fans as he steers his Ferrari Formula One SF-26 at the Ferrari private test track, in Fiorano Modenese, Italy, Friday, Jan. 23, 2026. (AP)
Monaco's Charles Leclerc waves to fans as he steers his Ferrari Formula One SF-26 at the Ferrari private test track, in Fiorano Modenese, Italy, Friday, Jan. 23, 2026. (AP)

Ten new cars, five days, no fans.

Formula 1 starts a new era with the public and the media excluded from its private testing session in Spain starting Monday. It's hard to imagine a bigger contrast to last year's lavish launch party with 16,000 fans and famous faces in London.

F1 has an 11th team this year as Cadillac makes its debut, but only 10 will be in Spain after Williams hit delays getting its car ready.

There won't be TV coverage, except brief clips from F1's own broadcaster, or official results from the five-day test this week, so it'll be hard to gauge who's got a head start on F1's new regulations. The second test in Bahrain next month is when the focus switches to performance.

So why is F1 blocking fans from seeing the new cars on track?

F1 originally referred to this week's event as a “private test" but now calls it the “Barcelona Shakedown,” a term usually used for short-distance runs to check basic reliability, not the sort of multi-day extended tests in Spain.

That change reflects concerns that some all-new designs might not be reliable enough to make a positive first impression.

Bahrain has a long-running agreement to hold preseason testing and its warm weather is more representative of real races. Downgrading Barcelona may keep more attention on Bahrain, which has the first live TV coverage of cars doing timed laps.

Some teams, like Ferrari, have revealed 2026 designs and given them brief track time using exemptions for distance-limited promotional events, but plan major changes before the first race in Australia in March.

Defending champion McLaren is unusual for signaling its Barcelona design will be close to race specification. McLaren will skip Monday's running “in order to give as much time as possible to the development of the car,” team principal Andrea Stella said last week.

Others, including Red Bull, had until now only showed new paint jobs on imitation cars, making the first runs in Barcelona an especially crucial stage in development.

What can go wrong

Teams can run on three out of five days in Spain, giving them time to fix problems without losing ground, so McLaren's delayed start isn't a setback.

With all-new engines, battery systems and smaller, lighter cars, reliability is a bigger concern than it has been for years.

The last time the rules changed this much, the first preseason test was a disaster.

Cars broke down frequently on the first day of testing at the remote Jerez circuit in 2014 as teams got to grips with the new turbocharged hybrid V6 engines, and Lewis Hamilton beached his Mercedes in a gravel trap. The problems eventually shook out over the season and Hamilton ended the year as champion.

F1 has become a very different sport in the 12 years since then, though. Netflix series “Drive To Survive” brought in a new influx of fans used to detailed broadcasts and all-access social media content.



Zverev Plays ‘Two Games at Once’ as Diabetes Clock Ticks Under Australian Open Run

Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates after defeating Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina in their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP)
Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates after defeating Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina in their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP)
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Zverev Plays ‘Two Games at Once’ as Diabetes Clock Ticks Under Australian Open Run

Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates after defeating Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina in their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP)
Alexander Zverev of Germany celebrates after defeating Francisco Cerundolo of Argentina in their fourth round match at the Australian Open tennis championship in Melbourne, Australia, Sunday, Jan. 25, 2026. (AP)

On tennis's biggest stages, Alexander Zverev plays by the arena's timing, the serve clock and the changeover, while a quieter countdown of his blood sugar runs beneath the ​noise.

"There are definitely two games happening at the same time: there's the match everyone sees and then there's the one only I feel," Zverev told Reuters recently, describing life with type 1 diabetes.

"If I don't manage my diabetes properly, I can't compete at the level I expect."

The German third seed will play Learner Tien on Tuesday for a place in the semi-finals, a ‌year after ‌losing the decider in Melbourne to Jannik ‌Sinner.

The ⁠28-year-old ​world ‌number three has won an Olympic gold medal, two ATP Finals titles and reached three Grand Slam finals but is still without the major trophy he craves.

Diagnosed with diabetes at four, he says the condition is not a hurdle so much as a second match running under the first, one that punishes haste and rewards routine.

"Most of ⁠the time it's preparation that keeps them aligned," he said. "When something unexpected happens, I've ‌learned to stay calm and trust the ‍systems I have in place."

That ‍second match is mostly hidden, he said, managed in the ‍quiet gaps between points and changeovers.

"Probably something as simple as when to take a sip from my bottle or choose to have an energy gel.

"From the outside it just looks like a routine changeover but I'm ​already planning my next change of ends."

Away from matches, he uses a Medtronic insulin pump, a wearable device that ⁠delivers measured insulin to help regulate glucose, but he cannot wear it during competition.

His career has also drawn scrutiny beyond results.

He settled a case last year over allegations he pushed and strangled a former girlfriend, which he denied, and the ATP later dropped another probe citing insufficient evidence.

On court, Zverev's attention turns to seemingly insignificant decisions that fans would never notice, choices tied to managing diabetes alongside the tennis score.

"These are tiny decisions, but they matter," he said.

"You don't need to stop the match or make a big moment ‌out of it. It's about staying one step ahead so the tennis can stay in the focus."


Lindsey Vonn Defies the Odds to Chase Olympic Dream

US' Lindsey Vonn smiles after the podium ceremony of the Women's Super G event of FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Tarvisio, Italy on January 18, 2026. (AFP)
US' Lindsey Vonn smiles after the podium ceremony of the Women's Super G event of FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Tarvisio, Italy on January 18, 2026. (AFP)
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Lindsey Vonn Defies the Odds to Chase Olympic Dream

US' Lindsey Vonn smiles after the podium ceremony of the Women's Super G event of FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Tarvisio, Italy on January 18, 2026. (AFP)
US' Lindsey Vonn smiles after the podium ceremony of the Women's Super G event of FIS Alpine Skiing World Cup in Tarvisio, Italy on January 18, 2026. (AFP)

US ski star Lindsey Vonn has defied age and injury to make one of the most remarkable comebacks in Olympic history, the latest chapter in a storied career of memorable highs and crushing setbacks.

Vonn, 41, is one of the most recognizable faces in women's sport, let alone alpine skiing.
She has been on the cover of Time magazine and Sports Illustrated and was a one-time girlfriend of golfer Tiger Woods, bringing attention that made her instantly visible to a wider audience than winter sports enthusiasts.

That visibility, allied with charity work and a savvy social media presence, has seamlessly combined with an enviable sporting prowess to bring her three Olympic medals -- including one gold -- eight world championship medals (two gold) and four overall World Cup overall titles.

Vonn will be in her fifth decade when she takes to the slope of Cortina d'Ampezzo next month for her fifth Olympics.

She retired after the 2019 world championships in Are but made what she dubbed a "crazy" comeback last winter.

That retirement was prompted by the chronic pain brought on by the wear and tear of decades of elite skiing -- she made her Olympic debut as a fresh-faced 17-year-old at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games and won downhill gold in 2010.

A partial titanium knee replacement in April 2024 dramatically changed her outlook.

It allowed her not only to return, pain-free, to competitive skiing after a six-year hiatus, but also to roll back the years, exceeding expectations by challenging -- and sometimes besting -- the top racers on the circuit.

- World Cup success -

Vonn has made the podium seven times this season, winning downhills in St. Moritz and Zauchensee to take her overall World Cup tally of victories to 84.

Only current teammate Mikaela Shiffrin, with 108, and ex-Swedish slalom specialist Ingemar Stenmark (86) have more wins.

The victory in St. Moritz was Vonn's first since March 2018 and it made her the oldest World Cup race winner in history, at 41.

"This might be the best and most meaningful win of my career!! Don't ever stop believing in yourself!!" Vonn, who won her first World Cup race in December 2004, said afterwards.

"I'm a pretty stubborn and driven person. I have an intense amount of competitiveness in me, it's just how I'm wired, so I'm thankful I have that ability."

In a sport where personalities do not always loom large, Vonn has well and truly transcended that divide, even endearing herself to a large fanbase in the central European skiing hotbeds of Austria and Switzerland with her fluency in German.

In October she appeared on Time's cover, under the title "The Comeback".

"I'm just a girl from Minnesota who wanted to ski fast, but this cover means I've done a lot more in my life than just ski fast," she told the magazine.

"I'm still chasing dreams, still pushing limits, still believing in what's possible. My hope is that anyone reading this remembers: never give up on yourself."

- 'Fantastic' comeback -

Vonn, now coached by ex-Norwegian racer Aksel Lund Svindal, will head to Cortina in the knowledge that she likes the course.

She has won 12 times there, her first victory coming in the downhill in January 2008. To give that some context, German rival Emma Aicher was four years old at the time.

"No one's expectations are higher than my own, so I try to keep everything in perspective," said the American, who was born in Minnesota but resettled in Vail with her family in her early teens.

"I know I'm going to have a lot of emotion in Cortina -- it's going to be a matter of controlling it."

Johan Eliasch, head of the International Ski Federation (FIS), said Vonn's presence in Cortina was "great for the Olympics".

"With her knee, I mean, any doctor would have said, 'You've got to be crazy doing a knee replacement and coming back'. But against all odds, she came back. And that's fantastic," he said.

Coach Svindal, himself a two-time Olympic gold medalist, added that his expectations of Vonn were high.

"She almost never makes mistakes now, she's so balanced and looking really good."


Pegula Knocks 2025 Champion Keys Out of Australian Open, Faces Anisimova in Quarterfinals

USA's Jessica Pegula celebrates victory against USA's Madison Keys in their women's singles match on day nine of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 26, 2026. (AFP)
USA's Jessica Pegula celebrates victory against USA's Madison Keys in their women's singles match on day nine of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 26, 2026. (AFP)
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Pegula Knocks 2025 Champion Keys Out of Australian Open, Faces Anisimova in Quarterfinals

USA's Jessica Pegula celebrates victory against USA's Madison Keys in their women's singles match on day nine of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 26, 2026. (AFP)
USA's Jessica Pegula celebrates victory against USA's Madison Keys in their women's singles match on day nine of the Australian Open tennis tournament in Melbourne on January 26, 2026. (AFP)

Jessica Pegula knocked podcast pal and defending champion Madison Keys out of the Australian Open on Monday and moved into a quarterfinal against Amanda Anisimova, another all-American match.

Their fourth-round wins on Day 9 meant four Americans reached the women's singles quarterfinals in Australia for the first time since 2001, when Serena and Venus Williams, Jennifer Capriati, Monica Seles and Lindsay Davenport made it to the last 8.

“Sucks that one American has to go out in the quarterfinals,” Anisimova said.

Pegula had a slightly different view: “At least one of us will get through, and I think that’s great for American tennis.”

“Yeah, it’s been pretty crazy how well the women have been doing and how many top-ranked girls there are," she added. "I’m just happy to be a part of that conversation.”

Pegula and Anisimova advanced a day after No. 3 Coco Gauff and 18-year-old Iva Jovic earned their places on the other side of the draw.

Pegula's 6-3, 6-4 win at Rod Laver Arena ended Keys' first Grand Slam title defense in a tough section of the draw.

Anisimova, runner-up at the last two majors in Wimbledon and the US Open, advanced 7-6 (4), 6-4 over Wang Xinyu as the temperature started rising at Melbourne Park, and organizers triggered the heat stress policy which allowed for extra cooling breaks.

Pegula is into the quarterfinals for the fourth time in Australia but has never previously gone beyond that round at the season-opening major.

“I have been seeing, hitting, moving, I feel like very well this whole tournament, and to be able to keep that up against such a great player as Maddie and defending champion was going to be a lot tougher of a task today,” Pegula said, “I was still able to do that really well.”

Pegula and Keys had played three times previously, and Keys had won the last two. But on Monday it was Pegula who dominated, racing to 4-1 leads in both sets.

“I felt like if I didn’t hit a really good ball immediately, she was in charge of the points," Keys said. “I was kind of struggling to kind of get that dominance back.”

Pegula's best performance in a major was making the US Open final in 2024, where she lost to Aryna Sabalenka. The top-ranked Sabalenka is aiming for a third title in four years.

No. 5 Elena Rybakina, the runner-up to Sabalenka here in 2023, advanced over Elise Mertens 6-1, 6-3.