Albon's track limits violation deleted after Miami sprint qualifying

Alex Albon's Williams team faced penalties in F1 Miami GP sprint qualifying after his track limits breach at Turn 6 went undetected initially. The lap that advanced him from SQ1 was deleted post-SQ2, dropping him to 19th on the grid. Liam Lawson's Racing Bulls team hoped for reinstatement but it came too late.

During SQ1 for the Miami GP sprint race, Alex Albon set a 1m30.216s lap time, placing him 16th and eliminating Liam Lawson in 17th. Albon had exceeded track limits at Turn 6, but tyre marks from support series like McLaren Trophy America, Porsche Carrera Cup, and Formula 2 delayed detection by FIA systems, an FIA spokesperson explained. Race director Rui Marques notified stewards after SQ2 began, too late to alter proceedings immediately. Lawson's team anticipated Albon's penalty might allow his return, briefly shown on the world TV feed in the Racing Bulls garage as SQ2 progressed. Stewards reviewed positioning data, video evidence, and heard from team representatives. They ruled that Car 23 (Albon) clearly exceeded limits in SQ1, but notification came after SQ2 started. Citing Article 11.7.1.a of the International Sporting Code, they deleted the offending SQ1 lap and all Albon's SQ2 times, reverting him to his prior SQ1 lap of 1m31.322s for 19th grid position. The decision echoed a 2022 Austria precedent where Sergio Perez lost SQ2 and SQ3 times for a similar late-detected breach. Red Bull's Christian Horner then argued it 'should have been dealt with before SQ3,' though stewards prioritized fairness to competitors.

Related Articles

Charles Leclerc's damaged Ferrari F1 car spins off-track at Miami GP Turn 3, with FIA penalty overlay dropping him from 6th to 8th.
Image generated by AI

Leclerc drops to eighth after 20-second Miami GP penalty for last-lap off-tracks

Reported by AI Image generated by AI

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc dropped from sixth to eighth place after receiving a 20-second post-race time penalty at the 2026 Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix. The FIA stewards converted an uncompleted drive-through penalty for multiple off-track excursions following a final-lap spin at Turn 3 that damaged his car, ruling he gained a lasting advantage despite impaired handling.

Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli dropped from fourth to sixth in the Miami Grand Prix sprint race following a five-second track limits penalty. A botched start saw him fall from second to fourth, drawing criticism from Jenson Button and Charles Leclerc. Antonelli retains a seven-point championship lead over teammate George Russell.

Reported by AI

Kimi Antonelli was handed a five-second penalty after the Barcelona Grand Prix for exceeding track limits four times. The Mercedes driver had already retired from the race due to an engine failure with three laps remaining.

Williams driver Alex Albon will not take part in sprint qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix after crashing during the only practice session. The incident occurred when he hit a marmot at the exit of Turn 7.

Reported by AI

Isack Hadjar has been officially disqualified from qualifying for the Miami Grand Prix after his Red Bull RB22 breached Formula 1 technical regulations. The 21-year-old Frenchman will start Sunday's race from the pitlane. The infraction involved floorboards protruding 2mm beyond permitted dimensions.

Following Charles Leclerc's 20-second penalty drop to eighth at the 2026 F1 Miami GP (see earlier coverage), Max Verstappen and George Russell have also been summoned to FIA stewards over potential infractions from the race's chaotic finale. Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli won ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris, with Oscar Piastri third.

Reported by AI

Carlos Sainz retired from the Monaco Grand Prix after collisions with Nico Hulkenberg and Franco Colapinto at the restart. The Williams driver accused rivals of taking unnecessary chances that ended his race.

 

 

 

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline