Mercedes secured a commanding 1-2 finish at the 2026 Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix with George Russell winning from pole ahead of teammate Kimi Antonelli, while Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took third — as covered in our race report. The result amplified questions over Ferrari's decision not to pit under virtual safety car periods, a call Lewis Hamilton criticized on team radio amid McLaren's praise for Mercedes' power unit mastery.
Mercedes locked out the front row in qualifying at Albert Park, with Russell on pole by three tenths over Antonelli and eight tenths clear of rivals from Red Bull, Ferrari, and McLaren. Antonelli's session was nearly ruined by an early crash, but the team rebuilt the car in time thanks to a red flag from Max Verstappen's incident — a 'miracle,' per team principal Toto Wolff.
As detailed in our race report, Ferrari's Charles Leclerc led early after overtaking Russell at the start, but the team opted against pitting both drivers during virtual safety cars triggered by Isack Hadjar's retirement on lap 12 and Valtteri Bottas' on lap 19. Hamilton, running strongly, vented over radio: "At least one of us should have come in!" Sky Sports F1 analyst Bernie Collins, formerly Aston Martin strategist, highlighted the controversy, especially for the second VSC: "Lewis Hamilton was quite strong on the radio... 'Why didn't we do one car at least?'" She noted the 19-second yellow flag duration gave potential reaction time.
McLaren principal Andrea Stella dissected Mercedes' superiority using GPS data from qualifying and race, pointing to Russell's superior energy deployment from Turns 6-9 — sustaining over 20 km/h more speed than Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris at peaks. "Mercedes is doing a better job than us at exploiting the power unit, but they have also done a better job in terms of overall grip in the corners," Stella said, attributing it to downforce levels. McLaren aims to close the gap via Mercedes HPP collaboration on power units and aerodynamic improvements, especially in cold conditions where grip faded.
Wolff hailed the shift from 'messy' ground-effect cars to new regulations favoring Mercedes' strengths, crediting the car's stability — 'on rails' despite lower downforce — and Russell's maturity over the less experienced Antonelli. This victory underscored Mercedes' early-season edge under the revised hybrid rules emphasizing energy management.