Skip to content
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Linkedin
  • WhatsApp
  • YouTube
  • Associate Journalism
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • 033-46046046
  • editor@artifex.news
Artifex.News

Artifex.News

Stay Connected. Stay Informed.

  • Breaking News
  • World
  • Nation
  • Sports
  • Business
  • Science
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Toggle search form
  • Russia’s Luna-25 spacecraft crashes into the Moon
    Russia’s Luna-25 spacecraft crashes into the Moon Science
  • Gautam Gambhir, Ajit Agarkar Blasted For Ignoring T20 World Cup-Winner: “Suddenly Disappeared…”
    Gautam Gambhir, Ajit Agarkar Blasted For Ignoring T20 World Cup-Winner: “Suddenly Disappeared…” Sports
  • Barack Obama’s Birthday Post For The “Love Of His Life” Michelle
    Barack Obama’s Birthday Post For The “Love Of His Life” Michelle World
  • “It Has Made A Big Difference”: Ravi Shastri Backs Impact Player Rule
    “It Has Made A Big Difference”: Ravi Shastri Backs Impact Player Rule Sports
  • Access Denied Business
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Access Denied World
  • Access Denied World
Formula One: The chaos in Canada

Formula One: The chaos in Canada

Posted on May 28, 2026 By admin


There is a particular tension that settles over a Formula 1 pit wall when two teammates are fighting each other for the lead of a Grand Prix. It is not panic. It is something quieter and more complicated: the recognition that whatever happens next, someone inside the team is going to be unhappy.

Toto Wolff sat through 30 laps of that feeling at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve on Sunday, watching Kimi Antonelli and George Russell trade positions, radio messages and, at one point, Pirelli rubber, in a battle that was as gripping as anything seen at this circuit in recent seasons.

Russell arrived in Montreal needing a statement. Three consecutive victories for Antonelli in China, Japan and Miami had pushed him 20 points clear at the top of the championship, and the Briton, who had dominated the Sprint, snatched pole position by 0.068 seconds and looked magnificent all weekend, was not prepared to concede ground quietly. He led from the front. He defended hard. He did everything a number one driver is supposed to do in a race that matters.

It was not enough. On lap 30, his Mercedes lost all electrical power and stopped on track. Russell climbed out slowly, removing the steering wheel with the disbelief of a driver who knew the race had been slipping away from him long before the car stopped. Antonelli drove off into the Quebec afternoon to claim his fourth win from five starts and extend his championship lead to 43 points, the highest-gap recorded in the first five races since 2020.

What happened between those two moments revealed everything about Mercedes’ future. The team now possesses two genuine title contenders, and no obvious way of controlling either.

A battle that couldn’t be managed

The tension between the two Mercedes drivers had been building across the entire weekend. Saturday’s Sprint had already offered a preview: Russell’s aggressive defence at Turn 1 sent Antonelli twice onto the grass and cost the Italian second place to Lando Norris. “That was very naughty! That should be a penalty,” Antonelli protested at the time.

Antonelli and Russell were involved in a riveting battle before the latter retired.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

The stewards disagreed. On the cooldown lap he pushed further: “If we need to race like this, then good to know!”, before Wolff cut him off. Overnight, the two drivers cleared the air. They would race freely, but smartly. It was different. It was also, in its way, more intense. The pair swapped the lead repeatedly during a breathless opening phase, making minor contact, running wide at the hairpin in gusty conditions, and refusing on every occasion to give the other a moment’s comfort. The defining incident came on lap 24. Antonelli locked up approaching the hairpin, Russell came back ahead, and into the final chicane the two cars were side by side, paint rubbing off, before Antonelli was squeezed across the grass and rejoined in front. He was immediately instructed to surrender the position. “Why mate?!” he asked over the radio. “He pushed me off, and I was ahead. What’s the point?” He gave it back anyway.

Race engineer Pete Bonington delivered the pit wall’s verdict to Antonelli in clear terms: “So we’ve got to tidy up this racing. We need to keep it clean. So if we can’t keep it tidy, then we’ll have to stop you racing. Message to both cars.” Marcus Dudley said something similar to Russell. Wolff watched on. “Every time we thought about saying, ‘we have had enough for the moment’,” he would say afterwards, “the next two laps were fast again.”

Russell’s retirement rendered the debate temporarily moot. But it did not close. Wolff also served clear notice that future battles may not be allowed to run quite so freely: “As much as we look very sportsmanlike in Canada allowing it, there could be a situation where we would maybe turn it down a notch.” For a team that has publicly committed to letting both drivers race without imposed hierarchy, that is a significant statement. The 43-point gap has a way of concentrating minds.

Hamilton finds his Ferrari form

With the Mercedes drama consuming the front of the race, the most compelling secondary story came from further back. Lewis Hamilton, starting fifth in his Ferrari, delivered the finest afternoon of his 18 months at Maranello: patient, precise, and when the moment arrived, utterly decisive.

Hamilton held off Verstappen to finish second.

Hamilton held off Verstappen to finish second.
| Photo Credit:
Getty Images

Verstappen had swept past Hamilton early in the race and built a gap of seven seconds once the field had cycled through its pit stops. What followed was a masterclass in controlled aggression. Lap by lap, Hamilton chipped away at the deficit, managing his medium tyres and calculating every deployment of battery power on a car that carries a known power deficit to Mercedes and Red Bull on the straights. With six laps remaining, he made his move, sweeping around the outside of Verstappen at Turn 1 in a pass that drew a roar from the Montreal grandstands and settled the battle for second.

Verstappen stayed within overtake range until the flag, applying relentless pressure, but Hamilton deployed the remaining energy with precision. “Even in overtake mode they still have more power in the straights,” he said. “I was just having to do these calculations, trying to figure out how to maximise the amount of power on my battery bar each straight. Thank God I managed to pull it off.” He called Sunday the “happiest day of my days at Ferrari so far”, his second podium for Scuderia and by some distance his most complete performance.

For Verstappen, third place was Red Bull’s first podium of the 2026 season, a small but meaningful sign that the team’s difficult adaptation to the new regulations may slowly be stabilising. “In a weekend when it’s not that easy to get things right, to be on the podium is extremely positive,” he said. Charles Leclerc, who had called Saturday the worst weekend of his career, recovered quietly to finish fourth, giving Ferrari two drivers in the top four.

McLaren’s strategic implosion

If the Mercedes drama was the race’s defining story, McLaren’s afternoon was its most painful subplot. The reigning constructors’ champions arrived in Montreal as genuine contenders. They left without a single point, their weekend undone by a tyre decision that backfired almost immediately and then spiralled beyond recovery.

With light rain falling before the race and the track surface cold and greasy, the team sent both Norris and Piastri out on intermediate tyres. The logic was understandable. Intermediates offered quicker warm-up on a cold and greasy circuit. But two additional formation laps altered the conditions completely, and by the time the race finally began the track was already drying. Piastri had asked for slick tyres before the start. McLaren persisted anyway.

Both drivers pitted almost immediately for slick tyres and spent the rest of their afternoon firmly in damage limitation mode. Norris retired mid-race with a suspected gearbox failure. Piastri’s afternoon deteriorated further when he collided with Alex Albon’s Williams while attempting an overtake, was handed a ten-second penalty, and eventually finished eleventh, two laps down. Team principal Andrea Stella defended the original call but accepted the outcome: “In hindsight, we were penalised by the decision.” The uncomfortable truth for McLaren is that this is not an isolated lapse. A pattern of strategic errors has accompanied their 2026 season, even as the car itself remains quick. Norris starts every weekend as the defending world champion and has yet to convert pace into points with the consistency Mercedes demands. That, rather than outright speed, remains the team’s most pressing challenge going forward.

What the standings say

Five races in, Kimi Antonelli leads the Drivers’ Championship on 131 points. George Russell is second on 88. Leclerc holds third on 75, Hamilton fourth on 72. Mercedes leads the Constructors’ standings comfortably.

The season is still young, and Russell’s retirement in Montreal accounts for much of a gap that does not fully reflect the closeness of their race pace. But championships are not decided on what might have been. Forty-three points is a very real number indeed. Wolff knows it. Russell knows it. Antonelli, for all the overnight reconciliations and press conference diplomacy, races like someone who knows it too.

Monaco is next. Mercedes will arrive on the Cote d’Azur still leading both championships, but carrying a problem every dominant Formula One team eventually encounters, two drivers convinced the future belongs to them. Montreal did not create the rivalry between Antonelli and Russell. It merely confirmed that neither man intends to yield.



Source link

Sports

Post navigation

Previous Post: AI chiefs walk back job apocalypse warnings
Next Post: JSW Group commences construction of mega steel project in Odisha

Related Posts

  • Access Denied Sports
  • T20 World Cup: New York’s notorious drop-in pitches gets six ‘satisfactory’ ratings
    T20 World Cup: New York’s notorious drop-in pitches gets six ‘satisfactory’ ratings Sports
  • Error – NDTV Sports Sports
  • Asian Games: Indian Men Beat Cambodia 3-0 To Begin Volleyball Campaign On Perfect Note
    Asian Games: Indian Men Beat Cambodia 3-0 To Begin Volleyball Campaign On Perfect Note Sports
  • First Time Since 1877: India Achieve Unbelievable Feat In Test Cricket
    First Time Since 1877: India Achieve Unbelievable Feat In Test Cricket Sports
  • IPL-17: SRH vs PBKS: Confident Sunrisers Hyderabad take on a depleted Punjab Kings
    IPL-17: SRH vs PBKS: Confident Sunrisers Hyderabad take on a depleted Punjab Kings Sports

More Related Articles

“Very Slim Chances”: Ex-Pakistan Board Chief’s Blunt Admission On India Travelling For Champions Trophy “Very Slim Chances”: Ex-Pakistan Board Chief’s Blunt Admission On India Travelling For Champions Trophy Sports
Access Denied Sports
Access Denied Sports
Access Denied Sports
CSK Coach Stephen Fleming Explains MS Dhoni’s Batting Approach Against Delhi Capitals CSK Coach Stephen Fleming Explains MS Dhoni’s Batting Approach Against Delhi Capitals Sports
Access Denied Sports
SiteLock

Archives

  • May 2026
  • April 2026
  • March 2026
  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • June 2023
  • May 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • December 2022
  • November 2022
  • October 2022
  • September 2022
  • August 2022
  • July 2022
  • June 2022
  • May 2022

Categories

  • Business
  • Nation
  • Science
  • Sports
  • World

Recent Posts

  • JSW Group commences construction of mega steel project in Odisha
  • JSW Group commences construction of mega steel project in Odisha
  • Formula One: The chaos in Canada
  • AI chiefs walk back job apocalypse warnings
  • Chandrayaan-2 detects possible presence of subsurface ice near south pole of moon

Recent Comments

  1. AlbertBed on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  2. Jimmydiorn on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  3. TravisIcoth on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  4. WilliamBlara on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  5. Robertcew on UP Teacher Who Asked Students To Slap Muslim Classmate
  • 2 Arrested In Sambhal Mosque Survey Violence That Killed 4
    2 Arrested In Sambhal Mosque Survey Violence That Killed 4 Nation
  • ‘Kanakadasa built 68 lakes and his social work is a model for us’
    ‘Kanakadasa built 68 lakes and his social work is a model for us’ Nation
  • Telecom AGR dues: Supreme Court dismisses curative pleas on computation ‘errors’
    Telecom AGR dues: Supreme Court dismisses curative pleas on computation ‘errors’ Business
  • Access Denied Sports
  • Air India-IndiGo Aircraft Involved In Minor Incident At Mumbai International Airport Business
  • Four Killed, Three Injured In Road Accident In Bihar: Cops
    Four Killed, Three Injured In Road Accident In Bihar: Cops Nation
  • Four Killed, Three Injured In Road Accident In Bihar: Cops
    Supporters Of JDU MP Allegedly Trash 2 Local Journalists In Bihar Nation
  • Indians In Kenya Asked To Limit “Non-Essential” Movement Amid Violent Protests
    Indians In Kenya Asked To Limit “Non-Essential” Movement Amid Violent Protests Nation

Editor-in-Chief:
Mohammad Ariff,
MSW, MAJMC, BSW, DTL, CTS, CNM, CCR, CAL, RSL, ASOC.
editor@artifex.news

Associate Editors:
1. Zenellis R. Tuba,
zenelis@artifex.news
2. Haris Daniyel
daniyel@artifex.news

Photograher:
Rohan Das
rohan@artifex.news

Artifex.News offers Online Paid Internships to college students from India and Abroad. Interns will get a PRESS CARD and other online offers.
Send your CV (Subjectline: Paid Internship) to internship@artifex.news

Links:
Associate Journalism
About Us
Privacy Policy

News Links:
Breaking News
World
Nation
Sports
Business
Entertainment
Lifestyle

Registered Office:
72/A, Elliot Road, Kolkata - 700016
Tel: 033-22277777, 033-22172217
Email: office@artifex.news

Editorial Office / News Desk:
No. 13, Mezzanine Floor, Esplanade Metro Rail Station,
12 J. L. Nehru Road, Kolkata - 700069.
(Entry from Gate No. 5)
Tel: 033-46011099, 033-46046046
Email: editor@artifex.news

Copyright © 2023 Artifex.News Newsportal designed by Artifex Infotech.