
Russell wins action-packed Chinese GP Sprint
George Russell won a chaotic Chinese GP Sprint, fending off Ferrari's Charles Leclerc after a late Safety Car. The race featured a fierce early duel with teammate Lewis Hamilton and a remarkable recovery drive from Kimi Antonelli, who finished fifth despite a penalty.
George Russell extended his impressive 2026 season form by winning a dramatic Sprint race at the Chinese Grand Prix, holding off Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton after a late Safety Car restart. The Mercedes driver maintained his perfect points-scoring record this year, while Kimi Antonelli recovered from a poor start to finish fifth despite a penalty.
Why it matters:
Sprint races are designed to deliver immediate, high-stakes action, and the Shanghai event delivered exactly that with wheel-to-wheel battles and strategic drama. For Russell, it reinforces his and Mercedes' strong early-season momentum. For Ferrari, getting both cars on the podium behind the winner keeps them firmly in the championship fight, highlighting the tight competition at the front.
The details:
- Russell started from pole but lost the lead to a fast-starting Lewis Hamilton in the opening corners, setting up a thrilling early duel. The two Mercedes drivers exchanged the lead multiple times, with Russell using straight-line speed and Hamilton countering with battery energy, before Russell made a definitive pass on Lap 5.
- The race was reshaped by a late Safety Car, triggered by Nico Hulkenberg's stricken Audi. The majority of the field pitted for new tires, with Ferrari executing a double-stack stop for Leclerc and Hamilton.
- Antonelli's Recovery Drive: Starting second, Kimi Antonelli had a terrible launch, dropping to ninth and collecting a 10-second penalty for contact with Isack Hadjar on the opening lap. He served the penalty under the Safety Car and mounted a strong charge to finish fifth.
- Verstappen's Missed Chance: Max Verstappen's race was compromised from the start, falling to last place. A late pit stop for new tires under the Safety Car gave him a shot at points, but he ran out of laps to pass Liam Lawson and Oliver Bearman, who finished eighth and ninth on older tires.
What's next:
The focus immediately shifts to setting up the cars for Sunday's main Grand Prix, where full points are on offer.
- Teams will analyze tire degradation and race pace from the Sprint to finalize their strategies for the longer event.
- The battle between Mercedes and Ferrari appears extremely close on race pace, setting the stage for another potential showdown.
- Drivers like Antonelli and Verstappen will be looking to convert their Sprint race speed into better results starting from their grid positions for the Grand Prix.
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