Charles Leclerc secured third place for Ferrari at the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix in Suzuka, holding off Mercedes' George Russell by 0.5 seconds through astute energy management and tactics in the final laps. The result marks Ferrari's third podium in a row—Leclerc's second of the season—providing a vital morale boost amid Mercedes' dominant start with three consecutive wins.
Kimi Antonelli delivered a dominant victory for Mercedes at Suzuka, extending their streak from Australia and China, while Leclerc battled the sister Mercedes of Russell throughout the race on a track notorious for tough overtakes. Antonelli noted the challenge: “I think it was a bit difficult to get by when I was behind Charles because we obviously had two completely different deployments and it was just hard to find the right place to overtake.”
Ferrari's strategy gave Leclerc an early edge against the W17-powered Mercedes, which typically shine in clean air and tire management. Russell briefly overtook at the final chicane, but Leclerc regained third on lap 50, capitalizing on the Briton's energy spend. Under 2026 rules, overtaking modes and boosts create speed gaps up to 25mph. Leclerc used clever deployment exiting the hairpin toward Spoon curve and after Spoon, generating a 'yo-yo' effect that forced Mercedes to burn power, allowing recovery on later straights.
Team principal Fred Vasseur hailed the drive: “It's the third podium in a row. We want to get more, but I think it was a very, very strong drive from Charles at the end with Russell. It was important for us to keep Mercedes behind and Russell behind us. The last 10 laps, it showed also to everybody at the factory and to the team that we can do it.” He highlighted tactics like yielding in the chicane to activate overtake mode into Turn 1.
The podium lifts spirits heading into a month-long break due to ongoing Middle East conflicts, with F1 resuming in Miami on the first weekend of May. Despite Mercedes' strong start contrasting Ferrari's tougher 2026 campaign following a disappointing 2025, a gap to leaders has tempered expectations. With car homologation now open, teams including Ferrari plan upgrades based on data from the first three races. Vasseur added: “Now, we have good data after three races to understand the competitiveness of the car... It will be true for everybody on the grid, so it is a matter of doing a better job than the others and to take a step.”