
George Russell won the sprint race at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve despite a clash with his Mercedes teammate Kimi Antonelli.
Mercedes, which locked out the front row ahead of the McLarens, Ferraris and Red Bulls, maintained its performance advantage at the start as polesitter Russell led Antonelli, despite the Silver Arrows having previously suffered from slow getaways in 2026.
The only change among frontrunners was Lewis Hamilton going around the outside of Oscar Piastri in Turn 2 for fourth, as Lando Norris stayed third and Charles Leclerc, Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar still made up the top eight.
Antonelli started applying pressure Russell on lap five, and attacked on the next lap around the outside in Turn 1, but he was given no space by Russell and cut through the grass.
Antonelli was not giving up and launched another attempt at Turn 8 but braked perhaps too late and bounced across the grass, losing second place to Norris. “That was very naughty,” Kimi complained of George, though the TV replays did not seem to relate his claim.
Briefly challenged by Hamilton, Antonelli pulled away and eventually closed the gap to Norris, who himself was pressuring leader Russell. The attacked from the McLaren on the last lap, around the outside in Turn 1, but could not make the move stick, so the top three remained unchanged.
Hamilton had to withheld pressure from Piastri and eventually collapsed to sixth on the last lap, behind the McLaren driver and Ferrari teammate Leclerc. Verstappen finished seventh.
Hadjar ended up three laps down after two pitstops, meaning Arvid Lindblad collected the last available point after completing the race on hard tyres for Racing Bulls.
Further back, Lance Stroll finished highest of all five cars which started from the pitlane, having encountered a front suspension issue shortly before the start. Valtteri Bottas, Oliver Bearman, Alexander Albon and Pierre Gasly were in the same starting situation but were outraced by the Aston Martin.
So an exciting sprint race with the major talking point featuring the battle between the two Silver Arrows. The championship leader Antonelli believed he was pushed off by Russell, while team boss Toto Wolff commented on the team radio to not complain and focus on the racing.

Canadian Grand Prix, sprint results:
1 George Russell Mercedes 28:50.951
2 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes +1.272s
2 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +1.843s
4 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes +9.797s
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +9.929s
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +10.545s
7 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford +15.935s
8 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford +29.710s
9 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes +31.621s
10 Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes +36.793s
11 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford +61.344s
12 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi +61.814s
13 Esteban Ocon Alpine-Mercedes +64.209s
14 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari +70.402s
15 Nico Hulkenberg Audi +72.158s
16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda +1 lap
17 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari +1 lap
18 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari +1 lap
19 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes +1 lap
20 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes +1 lap
21 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls-Ford +2 laps
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda DNF















