Kimi Antonelli claimed a commanding victory in the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka—his second win in three races—recovering from a poor start via a safety car to finish 13.722 seconds ahead of Oscar Piastri and take the Formula 1 drivers' lead. The 19-year-old Mercedes driver became the youngest ever to top the standings, surpassing Lewis Hamilton's 2007 record as the first under-20 leader, with teammate George Russell taking fourth amid pit and software issues.
Antonelli started from pole in a Mercedes front-row lockout with Russell but suffered wheelspin, dropping to sixth behind McLaren's Oscar Piastri, Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, McLaren's Lando Norris, and others including Lewis Hamilton. He fought back, passing Norris for fourth on lap 11 and challenging Leclerc, while Russell climbed to second by lap 4. The top six bunched tightly early on amid intense battles at Turn 1 and Suzuka's chicane.
Oliver Bearman's heavy crash at Spoon corner on lap 23—after being surprised by closing speeds to Franco Colapinto's Alpine, suffering a 50G impact and right knee contusion—triggered the safety car. This allowed Antonelli and Hamilton cheap pits, vaulting Antonelli to the lead and Hamilton to fourth. Post-restart on lap 28, Antonelli pulled away with tremendous pace in clear air, as noted by F1 TV pundit Alex Brundle: a 'tremendous performance.' He won by 13.722 seconds over Piastri, with Hamilton third ahead of Russell, Leclerc (who overtook Russell mid-race), and Norris (fifth late on).
Russell's race was compromised by a software glitch in his electrical system—intended to deploy energy but causing a 'super clip' that slowed him—and suboptimal pit timing: 'If that was one lap later, we'd have won the race,' he said. Mercedes struggled in traffic, but Antonelli held firm to the flag. This followed his maiden China win (second-youngest ever), making it two in three races after Russell's Melbourne victory and Shanghai sprint.
Antonelli, who supplanted Hamilton's record, credited growth: 'It's been a big step... I definitely feel much more in control' from last year's challenges. Russell stayed positive: 'It’s race three of 22, I’m not concerned.' Team boss Toto Wolff urged caution: 'We're three races in... three races from now on people could be saying, well no heroes anymore.'
Antonelli leads by nine points over Russell, with Leclerc third, Hamilton fourth, Norris and Piastri behind. Mercedes tops constructors over Ferrari and McLaren. Other notes: Pierre Gasly P7 for Alpine ahead of Max Verstappen (steering issues), Lance Stroll retired (water pressure), Bearman P7. Next: Miami, May 1-3 (Bahrain/Saudi cancelled).