F1 Daily Newsletter — Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Samwise F1 Newsletter

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Next Race: Canadian Grand Prix — May 22–24, 2026
All your morning news, carefully curated and summarized daily
TECHNICAL

Mercedes Bring First Major 2026 Upgrade to Montreal

Mercedes arrives in Montreal with its most significant package of the 2026 season — an overhaul targeting the W17’s floor, rear aerodynamics, and electronics. While rivals McLaren, Ferrari, and Red Bull all upgraded in Miami, the Silver Arrows held back. Now they must respond. Toto Wolff acknowledged the competitive shift: “Our competitors took a step forward and we need to respond.” The electronics work specifically targets the launch disadvantage caused by Mercedes’ larger turbocharger, which spins more slowly than Ferrari’s smaller unit, making throttle delivery harder off the line. McLaren, meanwhile, confirms further parts are also arriving in Canada.

Sources: Crash.net

TECHNICAL

Aston Martin Forecasts Major Leap Forward in Montreal After Honda Fix

Aston Martin has arrived in Montreal predicting a significant performance step after Honda resolved the vibration problem that plagued the team’s opening four races. The engine issue, which had been so severe that Fernando Alonso could not feel his hands and feet in China, forced the team to manage power unit settings throughout the early season. The team brought no upgrades to Miami as engineers focused on the Honda fix. With the power unit now operating correctly, Aston Martin forecasts what it calls a quantum leap in performance at the Canadian Grand Prix — and with ADUO eligibility also looming, the team’s long-awaited recovery could begin in Montreal.

Sources: GPFans

CHAMPIONSHIP

Mercedes and McLaren Both Bring Upgrades to Montreal in Intensifying Battle

Miami changed the competitive picture. Mercedes dominated the first four races, but McLaren arrived in Florida with significant upgrades and closed the gap meaningfully. Now both teams arrive in Montreal armed with fresh packages, setting up what could be the season’s first genuine fight at the front. McLaren boss Andrea Stella confirms more upgrades are coming; Mercedes have brought their biggest development push of the year. The Circuit de Gilles Villeneuve, with its power-sensitive long straights and punishing hairpin, will test both packages in different ways. With Antonelli 20 points clear of Russell in the standings, every point in Montreal counts.

Sources: Motorsport.com

DRIVER MARKET

Horner Non-Compete Expires: The Clause That Kept Him From the Paddock

Christian Horner’s surprise paddock appearance this week has a simple explanation: the non-compete clause imposed when Red Bull dismissed him in July 2025 has now expired. The clause, which prevented him from working within Formula 1, lapsed following the Miami Grand Prix earlier this month. Horner has wasted little time. The FIA president has reportedly been in regular contact with him as he plans his F1 comeback, and his name has already been linked to Otro Capital’s 24 percent stake in Alpine. Whether as team principal, investor, or both, Horner’s return to the paddock looks increasingly inevitable — and the paddock is taking notice.

Sources: Crash.net

GRID NEWS

Wolff Keeps Mercedes Grounded as Rivals Close In on Canadian GP

Despite four dominant victories to start the 2026 season, Toto Wolff is refusing to let complacency creep into Mercedes. Speaking ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix, the team principal acknowledged rivals made real progress in Miami — where McLaren, Ferrari, and Red Bull all arrived with substantial upgrades. “Our competitors took a step forward in Miami and we need to respond,” Wolff said. Canada represents Mercedes’ first major development push, but Wolff is urging the team to stay disciplined and process-focused rather than measuring success purely against the upgraded field. A cautious public stance that may itself be a tactical message.

Sources: Motorsport.com

RACE RESULT

Nürburgring 24H Final Results Confirmed: Mercedes Wins, Verstappen Outside Points

The official final classification for the 2026 Nürburgring 24 Hours was confirmed Tuesday after a review of post-race penalties and disqualifications. The #80 Winward Mercedes of Engel, Stolz, Schiller, and Martin holds victory — a result made all the more dramatic by the failure suffered by sister car #3, which had led for 85 laps with Max Verstappen, Juncadella, Gounon, and Auer aboard. A driveshaft failure three hours from the finish ended the #3 car’s victory bid. Verstappen returned to complete the race but finished well outside the points. The result extends Mercedes’ dominance across both F1 and endurance racing in 2026.

Sources: GPFans

CALENDAR

Five Storylines Shaping the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix

Race week arrives in Montreal as Formula 1 descends on Circuit de Gilles Villeneuve for the first time with a Sprint weekend format. Kimi Antonelli leads the championship with 100 points, having won three of the season’s four races — all from pole position. The freshly resurfaced circuit promises a dynamic, evolving weekend, with grip levels expected to build dramatically between sessions. Mercedes have swept every race from the front this year; whether Montreal’s demanding braking zones, tight chicanes, and power-sensitive layout can produce a genuine title fight headlines the weekend’s biggest storylines. The Sprint adds another strategic dimension for engineers and drivers alike.

Sources: Formula1.com

TECHNICAL

Pirelli Choose Softest Compounds for Resurfaced Montreal Circuit

Pirelli has selected its three softest compounds for the Canadian Grand Prix: the C3 as Hard, C4 as Medium, and C5 as Soft. The choice reflects recent resurfacing work at Circuit de Gilles Villeneuve, which has left a smooth, low-abrasive surface that initially offers modest grip levels before improving dramatically across the weekend. Cooler conditions than Montreal’s traditional mid-summer timing will also factor into thermal management strategies. Teams expecting high degradation may be surprised — or caught out — by how gently the soft rubber performs on the pristine tarmac. Strategy calls could look quite different from what the pre-event simulations suggest.

Sources: GrandPrix247

Drivers' Championship

1. Kimi Antonelli — 100 pts

2. George Russell — 80 pts

3. Charles Leclerc — 59 pts

4. Lando Norris — 51 pts

5. Lewis Hamilton — 51 pts

6. Oscar Piastri — 43 pts

7. Max Verstappen — 26 pts

8. Oliver Bearman — 17 pts

9. Pierre Gasly — 16 pts

10. Liam Lawson — 10 pts

11. Franco Colapinto — 7 pts

12. Arvid Lindblad — 4 pts

13. Isack Hadjar — 4 pts

14. Carlos Sainz — 4 pts

15. Gabriel Bortoleto — 2 pts

16. Esteban Ocon — 1 pts

17. Alexander Albon — 1 pts

18. Nico Hülkenberg — 0 pts

19. Valtteri Bottas — 0 pts

20. Sergio Pérez — 0 pts

21. Fernando Alonso — 0 pts

22. Lance Stroll — 0 pts

Constructors' Championship

1. Mercedes — 180 pts

2. Ferrari — 110 pts

3. McLaren — 94 pts

4. Red Bull Racing — 30 pts

5. Alpine — 23 pts

6. Haas F1 Team — 18 pts

7. Racing Bulls — 14 pts

8. Williams — 5 pts

9. Audi — 2 pts

10. Cadillac — 0 pts

11. Aston Martin — 0 pts

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9 responses to “F1 Daily Newsletter — Tuesday, May 19, 2026”

  1. JDEW Avatar

    Commenting on: Is F1’s Double Race Cancellation a Blessing in Disguise?

    “What might have been a painful calendar contraction has left every team, driver, and the FIA itself with an unexpected opportunity to reset.” This is the sound of a turd being polished.

    I get it, those events needed to be cancelled, but don’t colour it as a “blessing”. Sure it’s a blessing for the teams that need the time to fix their shortcomings, but that’s something that should have been done in the winter break… or wait until the summer break. This isn’t a “blessing” for the fans, and it’s not a “blessing” for the sport in general.

  2. David Avatar
    David Founder’s Level

    Commenting on: Verstappen’s F1 Retirement Threat Assessed as “Not Empty” Amid 2026 Frustrations

    One might say that “When the going gets tough, the tough get going….” We’ve been blessed to watch this amazingly talented driver lead the sport in many ways for many years….This seems to be the first real specter of tough going that Max has encountered in his leadership. So too bad, as it would be a disaster if he can’t rethink his position and try to be one of the problem solvers. Hang in there Max, would be my words for him….

    1. JEDW Avatar
      JEDW Founder’s Level

      I agree with all those sentiments. I do think however that Max is looking back over his shoulder thinking, “Done that” and to the future seeing so much left to do.

      It doesn’t make his constant threats of leaving more palatable, but it does help me understand. But with that said… Who knows?

  3. j9 Avatar
    j9

    Gasly is having a stellar year! So happy for him, and long awaited!

  4. JEDW Avatar
    JEDW Founder’s Level

    Blaming Colapinto for that crash is rubbish. It’s fair to blame the rules. No rule or even guidance was given on when to harvest and when to go full out. COL was simply harvesting when BEA approached full throttle from behind.

    To be clear, neither driver was at fault, it was this formula.

    1. David Avatar
      David Founder’s Level

      Totally agreed…..as a 30 year amateur road racer, you’re at the edge all of the time….but predictability of where that edge has to be reliable! Drivers count on flow, brake points, throttle points, what gear to be in where….if these drivers are having to guess and be ready for a surprise, this is unsafe and NO fun for the drivers….predictability/consistency has to be reliable in these cars in order to be safe….

  5. JEDW Avatar
    JEDW Founder’s Level

    This is a gigantic problem and the fix isn’t going to be easy.

    The Race article is worth a read.

  6. JEDW Avatar
    JEDW Founder’s Level

    I have to believe he’ll do it. I’m not the biggest fan of Max, but I see him not only as the best racer currently on the track, but also a straight shooter. Sure he can say things strategically but this, I believe isn’t one of them.

    We’ll see him in Le Mans, Dakar, maybe even NASCAR, but if the formula spec doesn’t change, he’ll leave. And… I don’t think spec will change.

  7. j9 Avatar
    j9

    Verstappen needs to give his head a shake if he thinks he should be treating journalists like this.

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