Mercedes' George Russell wins F1 season-opener as polarizing rule change takes effect

George Russell of Mercedes won the season-opening Australian Grand Prix from pole position on Sunday, heralding a new era for Formula 1 after a sweeping regulation change that has sparked polarizing reaction among the drivers.

NBC Universal Race winner George Russell of Great Britain and Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team arrives on the podium during the F1 Grand Prix of Australia at Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit on Sunday. (Joe Portlock / Getty Images)

Finishing in second was fellow Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli, followed by Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton.

The result establishes Mercedes as the clear championship favorite at the outset of the 2026 season after their drivers qualified first and second.

It will boost Russell's hopes of a first driver's championship and his team's prospects of winning their first team championship since 2021. F1 history indicates that teams that nail a new regulations set early hold a lasting advantage.

"Feeling incredible. It was a hell of a fight at the beginning," Russell said in a post-race interview. "We knew it was going to be challenging. I got on the grid, I saw my battery level had nothing in the tank, made a bad start and then obviously some really tight battles with Charles. So I was really glad to cross the finish line."

Mercedes' George Russell drives during the Formula One Australian Grand Prix at the Albert Park Circuit on Sunday.  (Paul Crock / AFP / Getty Images)

Antonelli added, "It was the best start we could have wished for."

Finishing in fifth was reigning world champion Lando Norris of McLaren, ahead of four-time world champion Max Verstappen of Red Bull, who started 20th after crashing in qualifying but recovered well during the race.

The season began with immense intrigue and anticipation due to a sweeping regulation change that has caused each team to build brand new cars, resetting the order of the grid.

Leclerc said the new cars make things "quite challenging."

The new rules alter the balance toward battery power that drivers can deploy with a button on their steering wheel or replenish by "harvesting" and slowing down, creating more strategy games. It turns the emphasis away from raw one-lap pace and toward long game, forcing drivers to save power for opportune moments.

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VerstappentoldDutch media after qualifying that the new regulations are antithetical to the spirit of racing.

"I'm not enjoying it at all," he said. "Emotionally and feeling-wise, I'm completely drained. This has very little to do with racing."

Norris, too, was unhappy after qualifying, telling Sky Sports that the regulation shift "already sucks."

"We've gone from the best cars to the worst," he said.

It was a dramatic start on Sunday as Leclerc blasted from fourth to the lead in the first corner, overtaking Russell and trading places with him for multiple laps before regaining the lead. There was more chaos, with multiple "virtual safety cars" to slow down the race and create strategic opportunities for cars to pit for fresh tires.

"It was a very, very tricky race," Leclerc said. "It's even more tricky for the overtakes, to defend."

Ferrari missed an opportunity early during the first "virtual safety car" to pit their drivers, which Mercedes took and secured their one-two finishing position.

It was a heartbreaking day for Oscar Piastri as the Australian lost control of his car on a reconnaissance lap and crashed it, stunning his home crowd as he failed to start the race after qualifying in fifth. Piastri, who grew up in Melbourne near the track, narrowly lost the world championship last year.

Aston Martin's misery continued after a dreadful preseason marked by car problems, with both drivers — Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll — failing to complete race distance.

Cadillac, the new GM-backed American team making its debut, had a difficult start with one of its drivers, Valtteri Bottas, failing to finish with a technical issue. The team's other driver, Sergio Perez, finished 16th.

Mercedes' George Russell wins F1 season-opener as polarizing rule change takes effect

George Russell of Mercedes won the season-opening Australian Grand Prix from pole position on Sunday, heralding a new era...
When the Lionel Messi circus comes to town, MLS teams need a bigger tent

BALTIMORE — Messi League Soccer — or Major League Soccer, as it shall again be known when the Argentine maestro heads home someday — barnstormed into a new big top Saturday.

Yahoo Sports

Inter Miami is Cirque de Soleil with a supernatural ringmaster sent to charm audiences outside the regular tour stops with unrivaled performance art.

Lionel Messi is MLS' — and the sport's — greatest attraction, and so this offseason it was off to Peru, Colombia and Ecuador for friendlies and, two weeks ago, a one-night stint inPuerto Rico marred by an invading fan and a security officer knocking down the superstar.

The season opener at Los Angeles FC was relocated from tidy BMO Stadium across the park to the vast Coliseum.

For a nervy 2-1 victory Saturday, Inter Miami hit Inner Harbor to play D.C. United, which sacrificed home-pitch advantage for an NFL stadium 37 miles north to sell 3 1/2 times more tickets than it would have at Audi Field.

Thousands of Messi gawkers among the announced sellout of 72,026 at M&T Bank Stadium — there were a few thousand empty seats — helped offset United's 2025 attendance plunge and underwhelming turnout for the 2026 home opener two weeks ago.

Moving to a larger location was good business — no argument there — but it also gave off carnival vibes. Three decades since its launch, MLS remains a thirsty operation reliant on Messi and other big names late in their careers for attention outside the league bubble. From a competitive standpoint, United wasn't doing its team any favors; it was all about revenue and marketing.

Miami welcomed the pink-clad support.

"It's definitely nice to be able to go to away stadiums and know you probably have more supporters than the actual home team sometimes," goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair said. "Obviously that won't be the case in every single stadium, but I think it was definitely the case tonight."

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - MARCH 07: Lionel Messi #10 of Inter Miami CF celebrates after scoring the team's second goal during the MLS match between D.C. United and Inter Miami CF at M&T Bank Stadium on March 07, 2026 in Baltimore, Maryland. (Photo by Patrick Smith/Getty Images)

At the center of it was Messi, who goes where he is told, probably without the slightest idea where Baltimore is or why he's there.

He did know where he was Thursday:at the White House, at a time of war, shaking hands with the FIFA Peace Prize recipient, President Donald Trump, at a ceremony honoring the reigning MLS Cup champions.

By all accounts, Messi is not a political person, but he has stepped into sticky situations before as a well-paid Saudi tourism ambassador. The White House invitation was extended to Inter Miami, not Messi himself, but given Messi's outsized influence at the club and in the league, he and his handlers could've quietly discouraged it.

Messi is so popular and his brand so secure, though, the potential damage of appearing with a polarizing political figure probably won't amount to much before his expected World Cup farewell this summer across North America.

The White House visit wasn't without awkwardness. As Trump spoke about the bombing of Iran, Messi, standing to the president's right, shifted his weight back and forth, looked down and coughed nervously into his left hand.

Trump's comments about soccer brought a smile to Messi's face; he doesn't speak English but clearly understands some. Later, he presented Trump with a commemorative pink ball.

President Donald Trump receives a soccer ball trophy from Lionel Messi during an event to honor the 2025 Major League Soccer champions Inter Miami in the East Room of the White House, Thursday, March 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

Asked in his video call with reporters Friday about the White House visit, coach Javier Mascherano said in Spanish, "I thought we were going to talk about soccer." He then explained the visit had been in place for a few months and followed protocol for a championship team.

St. Clair said Trump's political rhetoric in front of the team was "definitely a little bit awkward … and kind of threw a lot of guys off, because it was supposed to be about the team and winning last year. … It's something that's out of our control, and we didn't know that was going to be a part of it as well."

Last year, citing a scheduling conflict, Messi declined then-president Joe Biden's invitation to the White House to receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

D.C. United is not the first team to try maximizing the Messi spectacle, though other efforts have come with controversy. Last year, the Columbus Crew angered many loyal supporters by moving its home match against Miami 150 miles north to Cleveland's NFL stadium, where 60,614 tripled normal attendance. (The Haslem family owns both the Crew and Browns.)

"It was nice to have a game in front of so many spectators and in this beautiful stadium," D.C. coach René Weiler said Saturday. "We prefer to have a good result at the end, but it was a nice atmosphere."

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Two years ago, Miami's away match against Kansas City took place at Arrowhead Stadium (72,610), quadrupling Sporting Park's 18,457 capacity.

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Messi promotions have also backfired. Last year, MLS and the Whitecaps faced a class-action lawsuit after pumping up an appearance that never came to fruition. Fans received steep discounts for food and drinks, and last week the British Columbia Supreme Court approved a $329,000 settlement.

Two years ago, when Messi injured an ankle six weeks before a scheduled appearance at Soldier Field, the Chicago Fire scrambled by offering free tickets to a future game that season and discounted seats the following year, if he didn't play. (He didn't play.)

D.C. fans have never seen Messi at Audi Field. His 2023 MLS debut fell just after Miami's lone visit to Washington, and he was injured in subsequent years. In assembling this year's schedule, United not only passed over its own 20,000-capacity venue in the city, but Northwest Stadium, the unappealing home to the NFL's Washington Commanders, located a few miles east of the city.

The crowd of 75,673 at the Coliseum on Feb. 21 was the second largest for a standalone match in league history, behind the LAFC-L.A. Galaxy derby at the Rose Bowl (82,110) in 2023. Most fans this year supported the home team, not Miami.

Next month, Miami's match in Denver will take place at the NFL venue instead of the small MLS park.

In Baltimore, ticket prices were considerably higher than for a common match at Audi Field, and the cheapest seats on the resale market still available before kickoff started at $78.65 for the corner of the upper deck.

The crowd was a blend of those wanting to see Messi and Miami, those supporting D.C., and those interested in attending a big event. On a backdrop of the Ravens' purple seats, United's black and red mixed with Miami's pink.

The visiting team has been neither fazed nor emboldened by the larger-than-normal crowds.

"The people outside, they can make some noise," Mascherano said, "but they don't play."

Given the proximity to Washington, United should have enjoyed more support. But after years of D.C. ownership neglect and bad-to-bland performances, the stadium looked and sounded like a neutral venue.

Miami went ahead in the 17th minute, courtesy of a D.C. blunder. Lucas Bartlett coughed up possession at the end line to Germán Berterame, who supplied Telasco Segovia, who found Rodrigo De Paul for a neat, 12-yarder.

"It was a gift, the first goal," Weiler said. "That was not expected, but maybe [D.C. was] a little bit nervous because of the atmosphere, the spectators in the stadium and, of course, the opponent."

Ten minutes later, Messi timed his run behind Bartlett to latch onto Mateo Silvetti's lovely ball and one-time an 8-yarder past helpless goalkeeper Sean Johnson.

Aside from an overhead kick by D.C.'s Louis Munteanu that missed by a whisker, the second half trudged along without superlatives or suspense until the 75th minute.

Miami's sloppiness gifted a counterattack to United. St. Clair's diving save thwarted Jackson Hopkins, but Tai Baribo cleaned up the rebound.

United hummed with confidence, while Miami's suspect defense found itself under duress. Given the gap between the clubs, it was an unexpected development, indeed.

"The feeling of not controlling the game is unusual for us because we usually do," Mascherano said. "When we don't, you can see we're displeased."

De Paul squandered a golden opportunity to seal the outcome. Messi kept going until the final whistle. The star-struck portion of the audience seemed satisfied.

Miami's — and Messi's — work was done here, albeit with some discomfort. The show goes on.

When the Lionel Messi circus comes to town, MLS teams need a bigger tent

BALTIMORE — Messi League Soccer — or Major League Soccer, as it shall again be known when the Argentine maestro heads hom...
Khalil Mack, Chargers agree to new contract before NFL free agency

Return of the(Khalil) Mack.

USA TODAY Sports

Khalil Mack has agreed to a new contract with theLos Angeles Chargersto avoid free agency, according to multiple reports. He will sign a one-year deal worth $18 million that is fully guaranteed, as first reported byESPN's Jeremy Fowler.

The 35-year-old Mack was considered the 21st-best player in free agency this year, according toUSA TODAY Sports' Nate Davis. He ranked as the fourth-best outside linebacker and defensive end on the board, with teammateOdafe Owehalso on the list as a pending free agent.

Mack played the 2025 season with theChargers on a one-year deal worth $18 million. He appeared in only 12 games for L.A., thanks to a dislocated elbow that kept him out four games. Regardless, the pass-rusher still recorded 5.5 sacks and 11 quarterback hits to go along with 32 total tackles.

He is no longer at the height of his powers, but Mack can still strike fear into opposing quarterbacks. The Chargers' investment signals that they also agree.

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Here's a look at the contract details for Mack.

<p style=OT Tytus Howard: Traded to Cleveland Browns (previous team: Houston Texans)

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=CB Trent McDuffie: Traded to Los Angeles Rams (previous team: Kansas City Chiefs)

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2026 NFL offseason tracker: Player signings, trades

OT Tytus Howard:Traded to Cleveland Browns(previous team: Houston Texans)

Khalil Mack contract details

Mack inked a one-year, $18 million deal. Here's a look at the full terms, per multiple reports:

  • Term: 1 year

  • Total contract value: $18 million

  • Guaranteed money: $18 million

While the number jumps off the screen, Mack is only the 19th highest-paid at the position in terms of average annual value (AAV), according toOverTheCap.

The positional value has exploded in recent years as the likes ofMicah Parsons,Myles Garrettand others have pushed the market into the $40 million range.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Khalil Mack contract details: Chargers ink one-year deal with LB

Khalil Mack, Chargers agree to new contract before NFL free agency

Return of the(Khalil) Mack. Khalil Mack has agreed to a new contract with theLos Angeles Chargersto ...
Decades after violence in Selma spurred the Voting Rights Act, organizers worry about its fate

SELMA, Ala. (AP) — Sixty-one years after state troopers attacked Civil Rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, thousands are gathering in the Alabama city this weekend, amid new concerns about the future ofthe Voting Rights Act.

Associated Press FILE - State troopers hit protesters with billy clubs to break up a civil rights voting march in Selma, Ala., on Sunday, March 7, 1965. (AP Photo/File) FILE - Tear gas fills the air as state troopers, ordered by Gov. George Wallace, break up a march at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., on Sunday, March 7, 1965. (AP Photo/File)

Bloody Sunday Anniversary

The March 7, 1965, violence that became known asBloody Sundayshocked the nation and helped spur passage of the landmark legislation that dismantled barriers to voting for Black Americans in the Jim Crow South.

But this year's anniversary celebrations — events run all weekend and end with a commemorative march across the bridge Sunday — come asthe U.S. Supreme Court considers a casethat could limit a provision of theVoting Rights Actthat has helped ensure some congressional and local districts are drawn so minority voters have a chance to elect their candidate of choice.

"I'm concerned that all of the advances that we made for the last 61 years are going to be eradicated," said Charles Mauldin, 78, one of the marchers who was beaten that day.

Justices are expected to rule soon on a Louisiana case regarding the role of race in drawing congressional districts. A ruling prohibiting or limiting that role could have sweeping consequences, potentially opening the door for Republican-controlled states to redistrict and roll back majority Black and Latino districts that tend to favor Democrats.

Democratic officeholders, civil rights leaders and others have descended on the southern city to pay homage to the pivotal moment of the Civil Rights Movement and to issue calls to action. Likethe marchers on Bloody Sunday, they must keep pressing forward, organizers said.

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Former state Sen. Hank Sanders, who helped start the annual commemoration, said the 1965 events in Selma marked a turning point in the nation and helped push the United States closer to becoming a true democracy.

"The feeling is a profound fear that we will be taken back — a greater fear than at any time since 1965," Sanders said.

U.S. Rep. Shomari Figures won election in 2024 to an Alabama district that was redrawn by the federal court. He said what happened in Selma and the subsequent passage of the Voting Rights Act "was monumental in shaping what America looks like and how America is represented in Congress."

"I think coming to Selma is a refreshing reminder every single year that the progress that we got from the Civil Rights Movement is not perpetual. It's been under consistent attacks almost since we've gotten those rights," Figures said.

In 1965, the Bloody Sunday marchers led by John Lewis and Hosea Williams walked in pairs across the Selma bridge headed toward Montgomery. Mauldin, then 17, was part of the third pair behind Williams and Lewis.

At the apex of the bridge, they could see the sea of law enforcement officers, including some on horseback, waiting for them. But they kept going. "Being fearful was not an option. And it wasn't that we didn't have fear, it's that we chose courage over fear," Mauldin recalled in a telephone interview.

"We were all hit. We were trampled. We were tear-gassed. And we were brutalized by the state of Alabama," Mauldin said.

Decades after violence in Selma spurred the Voting Rights Act, organizers worry about its fate

SELMA, Ala. (AP) — Sixty-one years after state troopers attacked Civil Rights marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Sel...
Cocoa beans rot and West African farmers seek other options after commodity crash

KONA, Ghana (AP) — Manu Yaw Fofie was born into the cocoa farming business, but the land bequeathed to him has become more of a burden than a blessing. Asharp fall in cocoa pricesover the past year has left beans rotting in some West African warehouses, while global chocolate makers scramble for supplies and consumers seek their fix.

Associated Press Manu Yaw Fofie, a cocoa farmer, walks through a section of his farm that has been given over to sand mining in Kona, Ghana, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Tsraha Yaw) Bags of cocoa beans are stacked in a storage facility in Kona, Ghana, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Tsraha Yaw) Cocoa beans in a storage facility in Kona, Ghana, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Tsraha Yaw) Manu Yaw Fofie, a cocoa farmer, walks through his farm in Kona, Ghana, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Tsraha Yaw) A drone view shows a section of a cocoa farm given over to sand mining in Kona, Ghana, Friday, March 6, 2026. (AP Photo/Tsraha Yaw)

APTOPIX West Africa Cocoa Farmers

With less money coming in, the 52-year-old Fofie in Ghana has taken the desperate step of giving part of his land to illegal sand miners, a lucrative practice driven by high construction demandsince sand is used in concrete.

The cost is severe, however: the sand mining makes the land infertile.

Aware of the danger, Fofie said he had been left with little choice. He said annual cocoa bean yields has been declining over the years, from the past heyday of 300 bags to 50 bags in 2025, affected by factors including climate change.

Fofie is one of many cocoa farmers in Ghana and Ivory Coast — countries responsible for nearly 70% of the global cocoa bean supply — who are putting their land for other uses after the price of the once high-flying commodity crashed.

Ivory Coast, the world's leading cocoa producer, had to purchasean excess supplyof cocoa beans from farmers in January and this week slashed the price by more than half for 2026.

While a global commodity like cocoa beans is prone to occasional crisis, Ghanaian authorities were not prepared for one at this scale, said Edward Karaweh, former general secretary of the General Agricultural Workers Union.

"Preparation allows you to mitigate the crisis. It is not that you prevent the crisis altogether," Karaweh said.

Cocoa futures soared, then crashed

Hundreds of thousands of farmers in West Africa rely on cocoa farming for a living. In Ivory Coast, cocoa bean exports make up 40% of the total export revenue. In neighboring Ghana, they make up nearly 15%.

Government regulators set a fixed price for the cocoa bean at the beginning of every planting season, and the majority of the beans are sold through government-licensed parties to protect farmers from price fluctuations on the international market.

However, aftera surge in cocoa futuresin 2024 on international markets, the futures — a contract to buy a commodity at an agreed-upon price on a future date — reached more than $12,000 per metric ton, the highest in decades. Then it crashed to around $4,000 as supply outstripped demand.

The downturn in price meant global traders would run at a loss if they purchased cocoa beans from the two African countries.

That led to a mounting stockpile of rotting cocoa beans in warehouses, while farmers who already sold their stocks to governments have not been paid for months.

With structural issues, farmers said they missed out on benefiting from the original surge. The whiplash in prices made some decide enough was enough.

Climate also plays a role

Walking through his cocoa trees in Ivory Coast, François N'Gbin pointed to blackened, dried-up pods caused by disease and a lack of rain.

He said he also has given up part of his land, for a fee, to illegal gold miners, then obtained a mining license out of fear of the authorities.

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The mining area, partly filled with murky, yellowish water, covers at least 1,000 square meters (1,200 square yards) on his farm.

"Today, gold is more profitable than cocoa," he said. "We get 1,500 CFA francs ($2.67) per gram of gold, and we're about to negotiate an increase."

Many other farmers are finding other uses for their farms, including leasing them to illegal gold miners, according to Moussa Koné, president of the Ivorian cocoa farmers' union.

"Cocoa is not selling, but farmers still need money to feed their families," he said.

Governments race to find solutions

Ghana has initiated efforts to loosen regulations on price controls, and in January slashed its fixed price for cocoa beans by 28% to 41,392 cedis ($3,881) per metric ton, in an attempt to make the beans more accessible to buyers.

This week, Ivory Coast also slashed the price paid to cocoa farmers by more than half to 1,200 CFA ($2.13) per kilogram ($0.97 per pound) for 2026.

Farmers say the price cut has left their profit margin very slim when they factor in the costs of production.

"Accepting the current price means my son will have to drop out of school," said Mercy Amponsah, a 50-year-old cocoa farmer in Ghana. Shee was among the farmers who visited the capital, Accra, in January to protest the price cut.

Some cocoa producers elsewhere in the world — South America and Asia — have improved their supply but West Africa still makes up the bulk of production.

Farmers like Fofie say they must find other ways to survive, however.

"If I keep this cocoa farm for the next 10 years, I would die a poor man," he said.

Adetayo reported from Lagos, Nigeria.

For more on Africa and development:https://apnews.com/hub/africa-pulse

The Associated Press receives financial support for global health and development coverage in Africa from the Gates Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP'sstandardsfor working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas atAP.org.

Cocoa beans rot and West African farmers seek other options after commodity crash

KONA, Ghana (AP) — Manu Yaw Fofie was born into the cocoa farming business, but the land bequeathed to him has become mor...
Cracks emerge in Iran's leadership as it reels under bombardment

By Parisa Hafezi and Angus McDowall

Reuters FILE PHOTO: Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, visits Hezbollah's office in Tehran, Iran, October 1, 2024. Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS - THIS PICTURE WAS PROVIDED BY A THIRD PARTY./File Photo FILE PHOTO: Mojtaba Khamenei, the second son of Iran's late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, visits Hezbollah's office in Tehran, Iran, October 1, 2024. Office of the Iranian Supreme Leader/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS FILE PHOTO: Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian attends the 47th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution in Tehran, Iran, February 11, 2026. Iran's Presidential website/WANA (West Asia News Agency)/Handout via REUTERS

FILE PHOTO: Mojtaba Khamenei visits Hezbollah's office in Tehran

DUBAI, March 7 (Reuters) - Iran's hierarchy is showing signs of fracturing over a war its leaders see as existential, with angry divisions between hardliners and more pragmatic factions laid bare by a row over President Masoud Pezeshkian's promise not to strike Gulf states.

Fissures within Iran's ruling elite were long suppressed under ‌the iron rule of Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, but his killing a week ago has allowed them to spill out into the open as U.S. and Israeli strikes ‌pile pressure on Tehran.

The unrelenting bombardment mortally imperils the Islamic Republic and has prompted its fiercest acolytes, the Revolutionary Guards, to seize a bigger role in strategy despite a decapitation campaign that has killed many top commanders.

Sources close to Iran's leadership, ​speaking from inside the country, told Reuters the strains were starting to show among leading figures still alive after a series of killings in the U.S.-Israeli strikes. They spoke anonymously due to the sensitivity of the matter.

In a sign of the growing stresses to the system, clerics are accelerating the appointment of a new supreme leader with a decision possible on Sunday - though it is far from clear if Khamenei's successor will wield enough authority to stamp out factional disputes.

While his son, Mojtaba Khamenei, is seen as a frontrunner backed by the Guards and his father's powerful office, he is untested, junior to most of Iran's senior ‌ayatollahs, and has alienated moderates within the system.

Other potential candidates could struggle ⁠to uphold the unquestioning obedience of the Guards required to maintain discipline within the system.

"Wartime tends to clarify power structures, and in this case the decisive voice is not that of the civilian leadership but of the IRGC," said Alex Vatanka, a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, using an abbreviation ⁠of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

REVOLUTIONARY GUARDS ANGRY AT PEZESHKIAN STATEMENT

Pezeshkian's apology to Gulf states for a week-long blitz of their territory - and his pledge to rein in such attacks - quickly prompted pushback from hardliners in the Revolutionary Guards and clerical elite, forcing him into a partial climbdown.

In one of the most open criticisms of Pezeshkian - and a sign of internal division, hardline cleric and lawmaker Hamid Rasai addressed the president on social media, saying: "your stance ​was ​unprofessional, weak and unacceptable."

When the president later repeated his earlier statement on social media, he left out the ​apology that had so angered the Guards and other hardliners - an embarrassing retreat.

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To ‌be sure, all senior figures within the hierarchy are steadfast in their commitment to defending the Islamic Republic and its revolutionary theocracy from U.S. and Israeli attacks, but there are clear splits over their strategic approach.

Iran's leadership has sometimes played up differences between hardliners and moderates as a tactic in negotiations with the West, but the dispute over Pezeshkian's statement on Saturday revealed genuine divisions, two senior sources said.

A hardliner close to Khamenei's office, which remains a central node in the hierarchy, told Reuters that Pezeshkian's comments had angered many senior commanders in the Guards.

Another senior Iranian source, a moderate former official, said nobody would be able to fill Khamenei's shoes, describing the late leader as a formidable strategist who had led Iran through many difficult periods.

With anxiety increasing in Iran's top ranks, senior ayatollahs began ‌to publicly urge that the clerical body responsible for appointing a supreme leader accelerate its work.

"It should expedite the ​process so that it leads to the disappointment of the enemy and the preservation of the unity and solidarity of ​the nation," Ayatollah Nouri Hamedani said in a statement carried by the semi-official Fars News ​Agency.

STRAINS SHOWING EVEN IN TOP LEADERSHIP BODY

In Iran's unusual system, an elected president, government and parliament are subservient to a clerically appointed ayatollah who wields ultimate ‌authority as supreme leader and personally oversees the Revolutionary Guards and other powerful ​bodies of state.

As leader for 36 years, Khamenei often ​played hardline and moderate factions within the ruling system against each other while retaining the ultimate say, allowing them to voice disagreements so long as they bowed to his writ.

When he died, leadership formally passed to a constitutionally mandated interim council that included Pezeshkian, the clerical head of the judiciary and another cleric from a hardline body called the Guardian Council.

In Khamenei's ​absence, strains are showing even inside that tight body, with the judiciary ‌chief, noted hardliner Ayatollah Gholamhossein Mohseni-Ejei, saying some regional states had allowed their territory to be used for attacks.

"Heavy strikes on those targets will continue," he said, contradicting ​Pezeshkian's more conciliatory statement.

Still, even though Khamenei did sometimes allow moderate or reformist voices to carry the day in disputes with hardliners, they were usually overruled when the ​system seemed to come under threat.

(Reporting by Parisa Hafezi; Writing by Angus McDowall; Editing by Rod Nickel)

Cracks emerge in Iran's leadership as it reels under bombardment

By Parisa Hafezi and Angus McDowall FILE PHOTO: Mojtaba Khamenei visits Hezbollah's office in Tehran DU...
Josef Newgarden wins at Phoenix and moves atop the IndyCar standings

AVONDALE, Ariz. (AP) — Back on a familiar oval, Josef Newgarden drove back to victory lane and the top of theIndyCarstandings.

Associated Press

Newgarden won Saturday at Phoenix Raceway, where IndyCar is bundled with NASCAR for adoubleheader in the desert.IndyCar last raced on the 1-mile oval in 2018 and Newgarden won that race, too.

His victory continued what could be a Team Penske sweep at Phoenix: David Malukas won the pole for the IndyCar race,Joey Loganowon the pole for theNASCARrace, Newgarden won the IndyCar race and Ryan Blaney is the BetMGM favoriteto win Sunday.

Team Penske is celebrating its 60th season in racing this year and this doubleheader weekend allowed Roger Penske to bring his combined six drivers from the two series together to commemorate the anniversary.

Newgarden, a two-time Indianapolis 500 winner and two-time IndyCar champion, avoided a winless 2025 season by winning the season finale at his home track at Nashville Superspeedway.

Newgarden has won 12 of the past 25 races on ovals and this victory snapped Alex Palou's stranglehold on the IndyCar standings.

Palou hit the wall when he had contact with Rinus Veekay very early in the race and logged just his 10th DNF in 100 career IndyCar starts. Three of the DNF's came his rookie year when Palou had yet to join Chip Ganassi Racing.

Since moving to Ganassi, the Spaniard has won four of the past five championships and has been the IndyCar points leader since June 2024.

Now Newgarden is on top as IndyCar heads next weekend into the inaugural event on the streets of Arlington, Texas.

"Do we really have the lead? I mean, it's two races in, so it's early," Newgarden said.

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Palou, who won last week's season opener, dropped to fifth in the standings after finishing 21st.

Kyle Kirkwood finished second for Andretti Global and Malukas was third as Penske went first and third. Scott McLaughlin was eighth in the third Penske entry.

"Definitely really satisfied," Malukas said.

Christian Rasmussen was probably the most dominant driver of the race but he hit the wall when trying to pass Will Power on the outside. Power, who was leading at the time, cut a tire on the contact and Rasmussen's car was damaged enough to allow Newgarden to run him down.

Rasmussen finished a disappointing 14th and said Power ran him into the wall.

"We were the class of the field, I had the best car out there," Rasmussen said.

Power, who had crashed in qualifying, rallied from starting at the back of the field to lead the race until the late incident with Rasmussen. Power finished 16th.

Mick Schumacher started fourth in his oval debut but the son of seven-time Formula 1 champion Michael Schumacher faded quickly and finished 18th.

Romain Grosjean didn't start the race because of an issue with his Dale Coyne Racing entry. He didn't turn a lap.

AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

Josef Newgarden wins at Phoenix and moves atop the IndyCar standings

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