Japanese GP
Oliver Bearman crashes heavily at Japanese Grand Prix
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Haas driver Oliver Bearman suffered a 50G impact during the Japanese Grand Prix after a high closing speed incident with Alpine's Franco Colapinto at Suzuka's Spoon corner. Bearman was diagnosed with a right knee contusion but no fractures. The crash has intensified concerns over Formula 1's 2026 energy management regulations.
Following a troubled debut retirement in Australia due to power issues, Isack Hadjar finished 12th at the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix in a Red Bull car he called undriveable and dangerous, hampered by early battery failure and poor pace. A safety car from Oliver Bearman's heavy crash disrupted his strategy, as Kimi Antonelli took victory.
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Racing Bulls rookie Arvid Lindblad advanced to Q3 and will start the Japanese Grand Prix from 10th on the grid at Suzuka, knocking out four-time champion Max Verstappen. Fans hailed his performance as a standout effort just three races into his Formula 1 career. Lindblad described his qualifying as 'mega' despite missing significant practice time.
Argentine driver Franco Colapinto participated in the first two free practice sessions for the Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit. The sessions began Thursday at 23:30 Argentina time, with the second following at 3:00 Friday, available on Disney+ and Fox Sports. Alpine rolled out winglet improvements on his car for the weekend.
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One week after Jonathan Wheatley’s shock departure as Audi F1 team principal for personal reasons, drivers Nico Hulkenberg and Gabriel Bortoleto gave mixed reactions ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix. F1 TV’s Lawrence Barretto called it a 'shock decision' amid the team’s leadership vacuum, with Audi now eighth in constructors’ standings.