Samwise F1 Newsletter
Sunday March 29 2026 | Japanese Grand Prix
Your daily briefing on everything that matters in Formula 1 — fresh from the last 48 hours.
Antonelli Wins Japanese GP, Becomes Youngest-Ever Championship Leader
Kimi Antonelli won the 2026 Japanese Grand Prix from pole position at Suzuka, becoming the youngest driver in Formula 1 history to lead the world championship at 19 years and 216 days. The Mercedes driver dropped to sixth off the line as Oscar Piastri seized the lead into Turn 1, but a lap-22 safety car for Ollie Bearman’s crash handed Antonelli a free pit stop that proved decisive. He emerged in front and pulled away to win by 13.7 seconds over Piastri, with Charles Leclerc completing the podium. Mercedes has now won all three races in 2026, each from pole position.
Sources: The Race | Crash.net | RacingNews365 | Motorsport.com
Source Dates: 2026/03/29
Piastri Scores McLaren’s First 2026 Podium After Season of Misfortune
Oscar Piastri finished second in Japan for McLaren’s first podium of 2026, a remarkable result given his season of misfortune. Piastri crashed on a reconnaissance lap in Melbourne and retired with an electrical fault in Shanghai, making Suzuka his first actual race start of the year. He made it count, launching from third on the grid to grab the lead into Turn 1 while both Mercedes drivers lost positions. The safety car erased his advantage and handed Antonelli the win, but Piastri held second comfortably. He finished 13.7 seconds behind Antonelli but 4.5 seconds clear of Leclerc in third.
Sources: Formula1.com | The Race | Crash.net
Source Dates: 2026/03/29
Bearman Escapes 50G Crash at Spoon as Closing Speeds Alarm F1
Ollie Bearman escaped a terrifying 50G impact at Suzuka’s Spoon Curve on lap 22 after losing control of his Haas at 308 km/h while approaching Franco Colapinto’s slower Alpine. Bearman, fighting for 17th, encountered a 50 km/h speed differential caused by Colapinto harvesting electrical energy under the 2026 power unit regulations. The Haas dipped onto the grass, slid across the track, and slammed into the barriers. Medical center X-rays confirmed no fractures, though Bearman sustained a right knee contusion. The resulting safety car reshaped the race, handing Antonelli a free pit stop and costing Piastri a shot at victory.
Sources: Motorsport.com | Crash.net | RacingNews365
Source Dates: 2026/03/29
FIA Confirms April Review Meetings After Closing Speeds Crisis
The FIA confirmed it will hold review meetings in April to address dangerous closing speed differentials exposed by Bearman’s crash. The 2026 power units split output equally between the internal combustion engine and electrical motor, creating dramatic speed variations when cars harvest energy on straights. The GPDA had already warned the FIA that such accidents were inevitable under the new regulations. Drivers including Carlos Sainz argued the FIA ignored their concerns, and Franco Colapinto called the speed differentials outright dangerous. Multiple drivers flagged future risks at high-speed street circuits like Baku, Singapore, and Las Vegas, where run-off areas are minimal.
Sources: Sky Sports | PlanetF1 | The Race
Source Dates: 2026/03/29
Leclerc and Hamilton Slam Ferrari’s Power Deficit at Suzuka
Charles Leclerc erupted over team radio during qualifying with a blistering assessment of Ferrari’s 2026 competitiveness. Leclerc, who qualified fourth, told his team the energy management rules negate his cornering advantage, calling the situation a joke after losing all his time gains on the straights. Lewis Hamilton echoed the frustration after finishing sixth in the race, lamenting Ferrari’s lack of straight-line speed against Mercedes and McLaren. Despite the power deficit, Leclerc salvaged third in the race by fending off George Russell. Ferrari sits third in the constructors’ championship with 57 points, trailing Mercedes’ dominant 138.
Sources: Motorsport.com | RacingNews365 | GrandPrix247
Source Dates: 2026/03/28–2026/03/29
Red Bull Falls Behind Alpine in Constructors’ Championship
Red Bull dropped to sixth in the constructors’ championship after the Japanese Grand Prix, falling behind Alpine on countback with both teams on 16 points. Pierre Gasly has been Alpine’s standout, scoring points in every race of 2026 with finishes of 10th in Melbourne, sixth in Shanghai, and seventh at Suzuka, where he held off Max Verstappen in a straight fight. Red Bull’s problems are compounded by technical failures that retired Isack Hadjar from Melbourne and Verstappen from Shanghai when both were running in points positions, costing an estimated 16 points. Alpine’s early pivot to 2026 development is paying dividends.
Sources: Motorsport.com | GPBlog | RacingNews365
Source Dates: 2026/03/29
Verstappen’s Q2 Exit Deepens Red Bull’s 2026 Nightmare
Max Verstappen was eliminated in Q2 at Suzuka after managing only the 11th-fastest time, 1.2 seconds off Kimi Antonelli’s pole lap. Verstappen was beaten by his own team’s junior driver Arvid Lindblad in a Racing Bulls and told his engineer the car was completely undriveable, citing problems through the Esses and Spoon. He recovered to eighth in the race but finished 0.3 seconds behind Gasly’s Alpine. Verstappen admitted the RB26 has bigger fundamental problems than last year’s car. His season includes a DNS in China due to a technical failure and zero points from the sprint race.
Sources: ESPN | Formula1.com | Sky Sports
Source Dates: 2026/03/28–2026/03/29
Verstappen Ejects Guardian Journalist from Press Conference
Max Verstappen refused to speak at his Japanese Grand Prix media session until Guardian journalist Giles Richards left the room, telling him to get out. The confrontation stems from the 2025 Abu Dhabi finale, where Verstappen narrowly lost the championship to Lando Norris by two points. Richards asked Verstappen whether a collision with George Russell that earned a 10-second penalty had cost him the title. Verstappen accused Richards of laughing while asking the question, calling it a massive lack of respect. Multiple F1 journalists have since called on the FIA to take action, arguing drivers cannot dictate who covers them.
Sources: GPFans | PlanetF1 | Speedcafe | GPFans
Source Dates: 2026/03/27–2026/03/29
Porsche Support Race Crash Delays Japanese GP Start
The Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix start was delayed by 10 minutes after a Porsche Carrera Cup car launched over the fence at Suzuka’s Turn 12 during a support race. The crash caused significant damage to barriers and catch fencing, requiring emergency repairs before the F1 cars could take to the track. The formation lap was pushed back from 2pm to 2:10pm local time. The delay also introduced a weather complication, with rain probability rising from 15 to 25 percent during the extended race window. Fortunately, the Porsche driver escaped without serious injury despite the spectacular nature of the accident.
Sources: The Race | GPFans | Speedcafe
Source Dates: 2026/03/29