Samwise F1 Newsletter
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
Antonelli Wins Canadian GP for Fourth Consecutive Time, Extends Championship Lead to 43 Points
Kimi Antonelli secured his fourth consecutive Formula 1 victory at the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday, winning at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve by 10.7 seconds ahead of Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen. The Mercedes driver fought an extraordinary 30-lap duel with team-mate George Russell before Russell retired with a power unit failure while leading on lap 30. Mercedes intervened mid-race, warning both drivers to keep their racing clean after multiple wheel-to-wheel exchanges. Hamilton overtook Verstappen on lap 62 to claim second for Ferrari, with Verstappen taking Red Bull's first podium of 2026 in third. Antonelli leads the championship with 131 points, 43 clear of Russell.
McLaren's Intermediate Tyre Gamble Destroys Canadian GP; Both Drivers Score Zero Points
McLaren endured a disastrous Canadian Grand Prix after starting both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri on intermediate tyres in damp but drying conditions at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Norris briefly seized the race lead before being forced to pit at the end of lap two as his intermediates overheated on a no-longer-wet track. A delayed start caused by a stationary Racing Bulls car erased any early advantage the tyre choice might have offered. Norris later retired on lap 42 with a gearbox failure, while Piastri received a 10-second penalty after colliding with Alex Albon, eventually finishing eleventh. McLaren scored zero points, and Norris subsequently accepted blame for the strategy decision.
Sources: GPFans, Sky Sports F1
Mercedes Concedes It May Need to Restrict Antonelli-Russell Battles After Montreal War
Mercedes has conceded it may need to place restrictions on Kimi Antonelli and George Russell racing wheel-to-wheel after their fractious battle at the Canadian Grand Prix. The two team-mates traded positions multiple times over 30 laps at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve before the team intervened via radio, warning both cars to tidy up their racing or be stopped. The tensions traced back to Saturday's sprint, where Antonelli collided with Russell at Turn 1 and team principal Toto Wolff personally intervened on the radio to demand Antonelli concentrate on driving. With Antonelli 43 points clear entering the Monaco Grand Prix, Mercedes must balance racing freedom against championship protection.
Russell Receives Suspended FIA Fine for Throwing Headrest After Canadian GP Retirement
George Russell received a suspended 5,000-euro FIA fine after throwing his headrest onto the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve track following his Canadian Grand Prix retirement. Russell exited his stricken Mercedes on lap 30 after a power unit failure ended his race while he was leading, and in frustration discarded the headrest. Stewards investigated the act as unsafe, ultimately issuing a fine suspended for 12 months on the condition Russell avoids repeating similar behaviour. Russell subsequently issued a public apology on social media: “Apologies to the marshals and FIA for making their job harder than it needed to be. Lots of emotions in the moment.”
Sources: Motorsport.com, GPFans
Verstappen Renews F1 Quit Threat, Says 2026 Energy Management Is 'Not Mentally Doable'
Max Verstappen renewed his threat to leave Formula 1 after 2026 ahead of the Canadian Grand Prix, declaring the current energy management requirements are mentally not doable. The four-time world champion, contracted to Red Bull through the end of 2028, said he wanted significant rule changes before committing beyond this season. The FIA last week agreed in principle a 2027 power unit revision that would shift the combustion-to-electric energy split from near 50-50 to 60-40, reducing driver management demands. Verstappen acknowledged the progress but said the exact details remain unresolved among engine manufacturers Mercedes, Ferrari, Red Bull-Ford, Audi, and Honda, leaving his future uncertain.
Sources: GPFans, Sky Sports F1
Alonso Retires from Canadian GP with Seat Pain; Aston Martin to Rethink Reclined Design
Fernando Alonso retired from the Canadian Grand Prix on lap 24 after escalating discomfort from Aston Martin's revised seat design left him unable to continue. For 2026, Aston Martin adopted a more reclined driver seating position to lower the car's centre of gravity and reduce aerodynamic drag, but the change caused progressively worsening physical pain for Alonso during races. Having climbed as high as tenth at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Alonso said the team chose to stop the pain as pressure worsened and points were out of reach. Aston Martin is considering reverting to a previous seat design before the Monaco Grand Prix to address the issue.
Hamilton Delivers Ferrari's Best Result of 2026 Season with Canadian GP Podium
Lewis Hamilton claimed second place at the Canadian Grand Prix for his best result of the 2026 Formula 1 season, with Ferrari emerging as the closest challenger to Mercedes at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Hamilton qualified fifth but benefited from McLaren's failed tyre gamble and George Russell's retirement, before overtaking Max Verstappen on lap 62 of 68 to secure second by a narrow margin. The result moved Hamilton to fourth in the Drivers' Championship with 72 points. Team-mate Charles Leclerc described the weekend as the most difficult of his career after a double-stack pitstop following the first safety car dropped him from third to fourth at the flag.
Sources: Motorsport.com, GPFans
Drivers' Championship
1. Kimi Antonelli — 131 pts
2. George Russell — 88 pts
3. Charles Leclerc — 75 pts
4. Lewis Hamilton — 72 pts
5. Lando Norris — 58 pts
6. Oscar Piastri — 48 pts
7. Max Verstappen — 43 pts
8. Pierre Gasly — 20 pts
9. Oliver Bearman — 18 pts
10. Liam Lawson — 16 pts
11. Franco Colapinto — 15 pts
12. Isack Hadjar — 14 pts
13. Carlos Sainz — 6 pts
14. Arvid Lindblad — 5 pts
15. Gabriel Bortoleto — 2 pts
16. Esteban Ocon — 1 pt
17. Alexander Albon — 1 pt
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 — 219 pts
2. Ferrari — 147 pts
3. McLaren — 106 pts
4. Red Bull Racing — 57 pts
5. Alpine — 35 pts
6. Racing Bulls — 21 pts
7. Haas — 19 pts
8. Williams — 7 pts
9. Audi — 2 pts
10. Cadillac — 0 pts
11. Aston Martin — 0 pts
Curated by JD · samwise.agency

Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.