George Russell secured pole position for the 2026 Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix with a 1:18.518, leading a Mercedes 1-2 ahead of teammate Kimi Antonelli (1:18.811) in a dramatic session at Albert Park marked by crashes, repairs, and red flags. Antonelli recovered from a heavy FP3 shunt, Max Verstappen crashed out in Q1 to start 20th, and Mercedes faced a €7,500 fine for an unsafe release, underscoring their strong start under new regulations.
The qualifying for the season-opening Australian Grand Prix on March 7, 2026, delivered high drama. Mercedes' George Russell claimed his eighth career pole with a Q3 lap of 1m18.518s, 0.293s ahead of rookie teammate Kimi Antonelli (1m18.811s). Antonelli's day started with a 17G impact at Turn 2 in FP3 after clipping the kerb, totaling his W17. Mechanics, hailed as 'heroes' by Antonelli, rebuilt the car within a two-hour window before qualifying.
A red flag in Q1, triggered by Max Verstappen's crash at Turn 1—where the Red Bull's rear locked under braking—allowed the final fixes. Unharmed but frustrated, Verstappen (cleared after wrist X-rays) starts 20th without a lap time, reporting no prior such lock-up.
Chaos continued in Q3: Antonelli was released with a cooling fan attached to his sidepod, which detached, was run over by Lando Norris' McLaren, and caused another red flag. Norris checked for front-left damage but continued, qualifying sixth. Stewards fined Mercedes €7,500 for the unsafe release, blamed on divided labor from repairs, but cleared Antonelli of penalty.
Red Bull's Isack Hadjar impressed in his debut with third (1m19.303s), ahead of Ferrari's Charles Leclerc (fourth), Oscar Piastri (fifth), Norris (sixth), and Lewis Hamilton (seventh for Ferrari). Racing Bulls' Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad took eighth and ninth, Audi's Gabriel Bortoleto tenth despite a Q3 issue.
Lower down, Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso was 17th, while newcomers Cadillac (Sergio Pérez, Valtteri Bottas as 'America's team') struggled. Lance Stroll sat out with a Honda power unit issue, and Williams' Carlos Sainz missed after a practice problem.
Russell praised the car: 'Everything came together well... It feels more like the Mercedes of the good, old days. The car is just mighty.' Antonelli said: 'A very, very stressful day... the mechanics today were the heroes.' Toto Wolff highlighted the recovery, as Mercedes eye the race amid hotter conditions and reliability concerns under 2026's new power units and chassis.