
George Russell is back in the winners’ circle after a solid drive in the class-leading Silver Arrows to take victory at the Austrian Grand Prix. He finished ahead of Max Verstappen’s Red Bull and Kimi Antonelli, his Mercedes teammate and championship contender.
The Mercedes driver crossed the finishing line 1.6 seconds clear of the four-time world champion with Antonelli completing the podium.
This has given Russell his first win since the Melbourne season opener after an disappointing start to 2026, as Antonelli ha taken five victories during that time to claim the championship lead.
But Kimi’s retirement in Barcelona last time out, which was won by Lewis Hamilton, gave Russell the perfect opportunity to strike back his points deficit after finishing second in Spain.
Russell followed that up by snatching pole from Charles Leclerc at the Red Bull Ring after Verstappen’s late crash, with Hamilton and Antonelli behind on the second row.
All four started on the medium tyres and it was a frantic opening lap that saw Russell holding track position, Antonelli go wide at Turns 1 and 3, before Hamilton overtook Ferrari teammate Leclerc at Turn 5.
That put Charles immediately under pressure from Kimi, who had still managed to keep fourth, and the championship leader launched his attack at Turn 1 on the second lap.
Although he briefly got ahead, he went off in the process much like lap one, so was forced to hand third position back heading into Turn 3 but this left room for fifth-placed Verstappen.
The Red Bull driver therefore made quick progress by overtaking Antonelli at Turn 5, before passing Leclerc the following corner, and subsequently closing in on Hamilton.
This set up an awesome fight between the former title rivals with Verstappen lunging down the inside of Turn 3 on lap 11, before Hamilton strike back at Turn 5 and completed his move the following corner.
It put Verstappen onto the gravel at the exit, prompting complaints from the four-time world champion, before the fight resumed after the first pit window where drivers all kept position.
On this occasion, however, Verstappen finally took second from Hamilton by again going down the inside of the Turn 3 hairpin on lap 22, before the Ferrari driver reclaimed place at Turn 5.
But having learnt from the previous occasion where he was on the outside into Turn 6, this time Verstappen moved down the inside of that corner to finally end the wheel-to-wheel duel.
It was only three laps later that Hamilton made his second pitstop though, moving from hards to softs, after Carlos Sainz suddenly lost power and stopped next to the pit wall to cause a VSC.
Yet Hamilton’s rivals stayed out – though Antonelli pitted seconds before the VSC – and in clean air Verstappen began to close on leader Russell while drivers fighting behind.
On lap 30, Antonelli overtook Leclerc for third at Turn 5 before the Ferrari driver dropped into sixth behind Oscar Piastri and Hamilton just seven laps later.
By this point Ferrari had resigned to fighting in the mid-points positions, as the Mercedes duo and Verstappen had moved clear come the second pit window.
It saw Russell stop for hards again on lap 44, just as Verstappen had got within two-seconds, but instead of instantly reacting, Red Bull opted to keep Max out for five extra laps.
That was ultimately the wrong strategy decision though as Verstappen left the pitlane ten seconds behind Russell, who had benefitted from fresher tyres during that window to all-but end hopes of Red Bull victory.
Red Bull was therefore left ruing what could have been and despite Max closing the gap across the final stages, George had done enough to take victory.
But Antonelli was not far behind Verstappen either, just 0.3 seconds, after late pressure, while a further 19.823 seconds off the podium was fourth-placed Piastri with Hamilton completing the top five.
Isack Hadjar and McLaren’s Lando Norris completed late overtakes on Leclerc to take sixth and seventh, the Ferrari in eighth, while Racing Bulls duo of Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad rounded out the top ten.
This leaves Antonelli top of the championship on 171 points, 40 clear of second-placed Russell, who has now moved ahead of third-placed Hamilton with 125 points.
Silverstone is the next race and with two British winners in the previous two races, the home fans will be cheering for another popular winner at the British Grand Prix.

Austrian Grand Prix, race results:
1 George Russell Mercedes 1:26:37.979
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford +1.611s
3 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +1.986s
4 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes +21.809s
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +26.393s
6 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford +29.399s
7 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes +31.505s
8 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +45.659s
9 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford +1 lap
10 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford +1 lap
11 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi +1 lap
12 Nico Hulkenberg Audi +1 lap
13 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes +1 lap
14 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari +1 lap
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes +1 lap
16 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari +2 laps
17 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes +2 laps
18 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda +3 laps
Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda DNF
Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes DNF
Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari DNF
Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari DNF

















