
The Silver Arrows is back! Mercedes finished in P1 and P2 in the Australian Grand Prix in Formula 1’s new rules era, with George Russell winning from teammate Kimi Antonelli while a bad call on strategy cost Ferrari’s challenge.
The race started with heartbreak for the home fans as local hero Oscar Piastri crashed on his lap making his way to the starting grid. The McLaren driver lost control of his MCL40 at the exit of Turn 4, and therefore unable to start the race – like Nico Hulkenberg – whose Audi R26 encountered a problem on his way to the grid.
As indicated by pre-season testing, the Ferraris had the quickest getaway. Charles Leclerc, from fourth, grabbed the lead away from polesitter Russell, leading Isack Hadjar as Antonelli dropped from second to seventh. Arvid Lindblad jumped from ninth to fourth ahead of Lewis Hamilton, who overtook the Racing Bulls and the Red Bull on his way to third.
Russell recovered and made his way past Leclerc on lap 2, on the run towards Turn 11. And yet it was not easy, as Leclerc enjoyed much better battery deployment on Lakeside Drive on the next lap and swept around the outside of the Mercedes in Turn 9.
On lap 8, as Max Verstappen made his way into the top ten from the back of the grid while Antonelli recovered to fourth, Russell kept pressuring Leclerc and outbraked him on the inside of Turn 3 – but Leclerc attacked by going around the outside with a move in Turn 9 as their energy management duel continued.
Russell hit back on the next lap in Turn 1 but had a big lock-up and could not stay ahead. By then, Hamilton and Antonelli had caught up with the leading duo.
Fifth-placed Hadjar retired with a technical issue on lap 12, causing the race to be neutralised by the virtual safety car. The incident promoted Lando Norris to sixth, with the defending world champion the leading frontrunner to pit straight away. Having started the race on hard tyres unlike most of the field on mediums, Verstappen stayed out and took sixth.
The Mercedes cars did pit on the following lap, switching to hard tyres, and rejoined in third and fifth, separated by Lindblad. Russell and Antonelli were respectively 12 seconds and 17 seconds down on race leader Leclerc. Now in second, Hamilton was unconvinced by Ferrari’s strategy: “At least one of us should have come in,” he suggested on the team radio.
Another retirement gave them the chance to do just that with another virtual safety car intervention, as Valtteri Bottas broke down on the inside of the last corner. Still, the Ferraris stayed out at the first time of asking, and the pitlane entry was subsequently closed. They were the only cars to stay out during both VSC sequences.
On lap 20, Russell’s gap to race leader Leclerc was down to eight seconds. The Mercedes was lapping 7.5 tenths faster than second-placed Hamilton on average.
Leclerc ended up pitting at the end of lap 25 and rejoined 16 seconds down on Russell, who started pressuring his former teammate on lap 27 and found a way back to the lead on the next lap. Hamilton pitted straight away and rejoined in fourth, with a 21-second gap on Russell, who now enjoyed a seven-second gap to Antonelli as his closest challenger.
The Mercedes driver was faster at that time and brought the gap down to five seconds in four laps – after which yet another virtual safety car intervention occurred due to debris from Sergio Perez on Lakeside Drive. The timing of the VSC was favourable to Russell, with Antonelli now six seconds down.
With ten laps remaining, the gaps were largely unchanged at the front. Russell led Antonelli by six seconds, Leclerc by 15 seconds and Hamilton by 19 seconds.
Mercedes therefore scored a comfortable 1-2 ahead of the Scuderia, with Russell victorious three seconds ahead of Antonelli. The race winner led Leclerc and Hamilton by 16 seconds.
The battle for fifth was contested between the champions Verstappen and Norris, with the McLaren driver coming out on top, but he was 52 seconds down on Russell.
Oliver Bearman prevailed in the midfield battle for Haas, leading Lindblad, Gabriel Bortoleto and Pierre Gasly as the remaining points scorers.
Sergio Perez finished P16 and virtually last on Cadillac’s Grand Prix debut, two laps down.
Aston Martin’s well-documented Honda powertrain issues meant completing the whole race was impossible due to engine vibrations, so Fernando Alonso pitted at the end of lap 13, rejoined ten laps down and retired definitively later.
Lance Stroll drove over half the race consecutively – which exceeded expectations – and pitted at the same time as his teammate retired, rejoining the race 15 laps down but still taking the chequered flag.
So after an underwhelming qualifying with the cars super clipping plus lift and coast on their push lap, the new rules have definitely provided some entertaining track action in the race. The start and the battle between Leclerc and Russell was the highlight. So a positive start in the 2026-spec regulations.

Australian Grand Prix, race results:
1 George Russell Mercedes 1:23:06.801
2 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +2.974s
3 Chalres Leclerc Ferrari +15.519s
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +16.144s
5 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes +51.741s
6 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford +54.617s
7 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari +1 lap
8 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford +1 lap
9 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi +1 lap
10 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes +1 lap
11 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari +1 lap
12 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes +1 lap
13 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford +1 lap
14 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes +2 lap
15 Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes +2 laps
16 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari +3 laps
17 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda +15 laps
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda DNF
Valterri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari DNF
Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford DNF
Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes DNS
Nico Hulkenberg Audi DNS



















