Data from the 2026 Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix reveals Mercedes maintaining a performance advantage over Ferrari despite close battles. Kimi Antonelli secured his maiden victory for Mercedes, with Lewis Hamilton achieving his first podium for Ferrari. Ferrari's strong starts have not translated into wins due to deficits in top speed and tyre management.
The 2026 Formula 1 season began with Mercedes winning all three events so far: two grands prix and one sprint race. Ferrari challenged strongly at the starts, briefly leading each time, but Mercedes' overall package proved superior, particularly at the Chinese GP in Shanghai. Kimi Antonelli took pole and victory in his Mercedes, while Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton finished on the podium for Ferrari, with Hamilton noting it as one of his most enjoyable races. Qualifying showed Ferrari closing the gap to 0.351 seconds behind pole in Shanghai, down from 0.809 seconds in Australia. Sector times in Q3 highlighted Ferrari's competitiveness: Mercedes led sector one by 0.060 seconds, Leclerc set the fastest sector two (0.004 seconds quicker than Antonelli), but sector three saw larger deficits of 0.148 seconds for Hamilton and 0.263 for Leclerc due to Mercedes' higher top speeds and superior super-clipping. Race pace analysis indicated average deficits for Ferrari: 0.64 seconds per lap in Australia and 0.58 in China, averaging 0.61 seconds overall after strategy adjustments. Tyre management emerged as a key differentiator. Post-safety car on lap 14, Ferrari matched Mercedes initially (1:37.2 vs 1:36.9 lap averages to lap 29), but later fell to a 0.7 seconds deficit (1:36.5 vs 1:35.8 from laps 30-56). Degradation rates confirmed Mercedes' edge: 0.021 seconds per lap lost versus Ferrari's 0.037. Compared to 2025, Ferrari trails further from the leaders statistically. This positions Mercedes as highly dominant, reminiscent of early hybrid era advantages.