George Russell led teammate Kimi Antonelli to a commanding Mercedes one-two at the 2026 Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne, the Formula 1 season opener featuring 11 teams for the first time since 2016 under major new regulations. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton followed in third and fourth amid strategic missteps, while debuts for Audi and Cadillac brought midfield promise despite challenges.
The 2026 F1 season kicked off at Albert Park with Mercedes asserting dominance. George Russell secured pole and fended off early pressure from Ferrari's Charles Leclerc—who briefly led after the start—to claim victory. Teammate Kimi Antonelli recovered impressively from a heavy FP3 crash, starting on the front row but dropping to seventh before clawing back to second.
Ferrari's Leclerc held third after opting not to pit during two virtual safety car periods: lap 12 (Isack Hadjar retirement) and lap 19 (Valtteri Bottas retirement). Lewis Hamilton, in his Ferrari debut, closed to within 0.6 seconds of Leclerc by the flag but couldn't challenge the Mercedes pair. McLaren, last season's constructors' champions, struggled for pace with Lando Norris fifth—over 50 seconds adrift—after holding off Max Verstappen, who recovered to sixth from 20th following a qualifying crash. Home favorite Oscar Piastri crashed en route to the grid pre-race, denying him debut laps in the new car.
Racing Bulls rookie Arvid Lindblad shone with eighth from ninth on the grid. Audi, via its Sauber takeover, saw Gabriel Bortoleto qualify 10th and finish ninth for first points, while Nico Hulkenberg failed to start due to telemetry issues (resolved post-race). Team boss Jonathan Wheatley called P9 'encouraging,' predicting midfield shakeups under the 'biggest change in technical regulations' in his career. Cadillac fielded Sergio Perez and Bottas in their grid-entry debut; CEO Dan Towriss noted data gains ahead of China, despite Bottas's retirement. Aston Martin endured Honda power unit reliability woes, limiting laps.
The new 50-50 hybrid units and active aerodynamics demanded careful energy management, with coasting and harvesting impacting straights. Max Verstappen labeled them 'anti-racing,' evoking video game comparisons. Mercedes' Toto Wolff anticipated a 'fight' with Ferrari, while Hamilton puzzled over their power edge: "I don’t understand it exactly... hopefully it’s just pure power." Ferrari's Fred Vasseur defended the no-pit strategy; commentator Will Buxton criticized it for potentially 'robbing' a closer race. Mercedes leads the championship early, with rapid development expected.