Upstaged, but not unseated — yet: George Russell’s succession struggle


Since time immemorial, one of the key conflicts humanity has faced is the battle for succession. It can play out within kingdoms, corporate boardrooms and families. Sport is no exception to this phenomenon.

Generational showdowns

Across various sports, generational showdowns have produced countless iconic moments, which have emerged from interesting narrative arcs. Sometimes the presumptive successor takes over; sometimes a disruptor challenges the natural line of succession.

In the world of Formula One, Mercedes driver George Russell is currently involved in one such fight.

The British driver, who made his F1 debut in 2019, was marked out for great things at a young age. He won nearly every major category leading up to F1, with titles in F4, GP3 and F2.

His big moment came when he subbed for Lewis Hamilton in Bahrain in 2020 and was immediately faster than the other Mercedes driver, Valtteri Bottas. In 2022, Russell got his dream gig when he was selected to partner seven-time champion Hamilton at the Silver Arrows.

However, Mercedes, which had won the constructors’ title from 2014 to 2021, was dislodged from its perch in the sport’s ground-effect era (2022 to 2025) by Red Bull and then McLaren.

It meant Russell never had a chance to fight for the title and had to settle for the odd win on days when the Mercedes found its sweet spot in certain conditions and on specific track layouts.

But in the first three years, the 28-year-old did have the opportunity to go toe-to-toe with the sport’s most successful driver in Hamilton. It was here that Russell proved his worth as a potential champion, getting the better of his illustrious teammate in two out of their three seasons together. In 2024, Russell out-qualified Hamilton 19-5, underlining his searing pace.

After Hamilton joined Ferrari in 2025, Russell became the natural team leader. So when Mercedes hit the ground running this season under F1’s new rules, which introduced a novel engine concept with increased electrification, the expectation was that Russell would lead the team’s title charge.

And it appeared everything was falling into place for Russell after the first race in Melbourne, which he dominated from pole. However, since then, things haven’t gone to plan for the Briton, who has seen a challenge emerge from the other side of his garage.

Upstaged, but not unseated — yet: George Russell’s succession struggle

Diverging fortunes: Even as matters began to unravel for Russell between the second and sixth rounds, Antonelli went on a winning run.
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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who joined Mercedes last year, is viewed as a generational talent by team boss Toto Wolff, who backed the Italian to step into Hamilton’s shoes at 18. In his rookie season, though, Antonelli had a baptism of fire in a tricky car and was comprehensively beaten.

Russell would have fancied his chances in a championship-winning car this season even as the teenager — highly rated as he may be — found his footing in the big league.

Unfortunately for Russell, he is staring at a situation he would seldom have imagined after the Australian GP.

The early part of 2026 shows how much luck can influence matters, and how things can spiral out of control.

Russell is yet to step onto the top step of the podium after Melbourne, while his teammate went on a five-race winning streak. The result: Russell is now 50 points behind Antonelli and third in the standings behind even Hamilton, who won his first race for Ferrari in Barcelona.

Slippery slope

Things started going downhill for Russell in the second race in China where a technical issue compromised his qualifying. Though he recovered to qualify second, he got mugged at the start by the Ferraris and had to fight his way back to second, allowing his colleague to take his maiden win. In Japan, a Safety Car intervention led to him being jumped by Antonelli.

It was the start of a difficult run, and over the next three rounds, Russell was comprehensively beaten in two — Miami and Monaco — while in between, in Montreal, he suffered a costly retirement due to engine trouble.

Warning sign: Before retiring in Barcelona, Antonelli got the better of Russell in a wheel-to-wheel duel — a cause of concern for the senior driver.

Warning sign: Before retiring in Barcelona, Antonelli got the better of Russell in a wheel-to-wheel duel — a cause of concern for the senior driver.
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Although Russell trimmed his deficit in Barcelona, finishing second while Antonelli retired, the way the weekend unfolded was a source of more concern. Russell had the measure of the 19-year-old for most of the weekend, but the Bologna native slowly kept improving. By the time Antonelli retired, he had surpassed Russell on track with a fine overtaking manoeuvre.

Russell’s strength has been his one-lap pace, but so far this year, he trails 3-4 in qualifying. While a large part of the points difference is down to factors beyond his control, the recent dip in performance is the more alarming sign.

One reason the driver has identified is that his driving style is affecting the tyres.

“The difference is how we’re driving has such an impact on the tyres. He’s just getting the tyres in a nicer window than me, a nicer balance over the course of a lap, and the pace is just coming easier for him. I’m not sure why that is. I’ve been driving in this manner my whole career, and now, for whatever reason, it’s not working with this car,” Russell remarked recently.

He seemed perplexed that what worked in the first few rounds is now hurting him. At the same time, it could also be that he is over-driving to reassert his authority.

Known for his sophisticated and quintessentially British vocabulary, he has even resorted to mind games, tempering expectations by saying the title race is his rival’s to lose despite nearly two-thirds of the season remaining.

But deep inside, Russell will have the unsettling feeling of knowing that the thing he has worked for all his life, which seemed near, is slipping away from him at a critical juncture.

While he has experience on his side, it is no secret that over the last two years, his drive has been under threat from Max Verstappen, whom Wolff has courted for over a decade. In fact, the idea of promoting Antonelli very early was driven by the fact that the Mercedes boss did not want to repeat the mistake he made by failing to sign Verstappen straightaway in 2014.

Considering his compatriot Lando Norris, whom he beat for the F2 title in 2018, is already a world champion, Russell would want to make full use of this opportunity. In F1, you never know when the next chance will present itself.

Crucial period

The races leading into August’s summer break could well prove crucial. Russell can ill-afford any more slips with Ferrari and McLaren mixing it up at the front with Mercedes.

In fact, he can take a lesson from Norris’ title-winning run last year, in which the latter was behind McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri until late in the season before turning the tables in the final stretch. Fortunately for Russell, he has more time to get things back on track. And it is often how one responds under pressure that determines how good one is. Can Russell show that he is a worthy successor to the line of Mercedes champions?



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