George Russell guided Mercedes to a commanding 1-2 finish with rookie teammate Kimi Antonelli at the Formula 1 season-opening 2026 Australian Grand Prix on March 8 at Albert Park, heralding the new regulations era of 50/50 hybrid power units, active aerodynamics, and sustainable fuels. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc held third ahead of Lewis Hamilton by one second, while McLaren's Lando Norris took fifth after Oscar Piastri crashed pre-start.
The 2026 Australian Grand Prix delivered drama under F1's overhauled technical rules, featuring intense early battles, strategy gambles, and reliability tests amid energy management demands.
In qualifying, Russell took pole by 0.293 seconds over Antonelli, with Red Bull's Isack Hadjar third and Ferrari's Leclerc fourth. Hamilton struggled to seventh, Verstappen spun out in Q1 starting 20th, Aston Martin's Lance Stroll missed the session with an engine issue starting 22nd, and Cadillac debutants Valtteri Bottas and Sergio Perez languished at 19th and 18th due to downforce woes.
Leclerc surged to the lead at the start, ahead of Russell, with Antonelli dropping to seventh. The duo traded positions amid seven lead changes in the first 10 laps, as overtaking required battery management for defense. Antonelli recovered strongly, while a lap-11 Virtual Safety Car from Hadjar's engine failure allowed Mercedes to pit both cars decisively. Ferrari stayed out longer with Hamilton, but he couldn't close on Leclerc.
Russell won by 0.785 seconds over Antonelli, with Leclerc third and Hamilton fourth. Norris held fifth after a late duel with Verstappen, who recovered to sixth. Haas' Ollie Bearman and Racing Bulls' debutant Arvid Lindblad impressed in seventh and eighth. Piastri's McLaren suffered a torque spike/power unit failure at Turn 4 on the formation lap, while Bottas retired with a fuel issue, Hadjar stopped early, and Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso and Stroll faced setbacks, Stroll last.
Mercedes' edge in energy deployment baffled customers like McLaren. Ferrari's Fred Vasseur praised Hamilton: "I'm very pleased... good to have two cars fighting at the top." Hamilton, after a tough 2025, added: "I could have kept going... it was a really fun race." Leclerc rued strategy: Ferrari should have pitted to pressure Mercedes. Norris called it "chaos" with safety risks from energy tactics, Verstappen deemed it "super frustrating," and Russell flagged active front wing understeer as a concern.
Analysts hailed the spectacle as a 'sigh of relief' but warned optimization might curb overtaking. Bottas noted Cadillac's cornering deficits. As F1 heads to China's first sprint weekend, teams face a steep learning curve.