Formula 1’s back-to-back swing through the Red Bull Ring and Silverstone has reshaped the 2026 championship in ways few saw coming a fortnight ago.
At Spielberg, George Russell converted a controversial pole — set under yellow flags — into his second win of the season, holding off a fast-recovering Max Verstappen. The result pushed Russell back to second in the standings and cut Kimi Antonelli’s championship lead to 40 points, even as the Mercedes rookie’s third-place finish kept his team’s advantage at the top intact.
Days later at Lewis Hamilton’s home Grand Prix, it was Charles Leclerc who crossed the chequered flag ahead of the pack to secure his first win in well over a year. However, the headlines belonged just as much to the race’s chaotic finish following confusion surrounding the safety car restart procedure.
Same narrative
Two circuits, two very different races, but the same underlying narrative: a title fight that’s no longer a formality for anyone at the front.
Saturday’s qualifying in Austria set the tone for what followed. Kimi Antonelli, the championship leader heading into the weekend, aborted his final flying lap after mistaking single waved flags for a double-yellow zone, dropping down to fourth. With Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton sandwiched between the two Mercedes drivers, the grid was set for a tense Sunday.
Russell converted pole into a clean getaway, while behind him, the opening laps were scrappy. Antonelli ran wide almost immediately and rejoined in fourth, then went off-track again a lap later — forcing him to hand a position back after being flagged for gaining an advantage. It was a rough start for a driver who had looked untouchable through practice and qualifying, and he later admitted as much, saying he’d gotten “too excited” in the opening exchanges.
Further back, Hamilton was making his own case for the podium. He muscled past Leclerc for second early on, temporarily putting a Ferrari-Mercedes-Red Bull sandwich on its head. However, the Ferrari challenge faded away in the latter stages of the race and it was Verstappen who did the more sustained work. Starting fifth after his qualifying crash, the Red Bull driver spent the middle stint locked in a physical battle with Hamilton before working his way up to second — setting up a genuine grandstand finish as he closed on Russell in the closing laps. Despite the scorching Spielberg conditions and 4-time champion’s late surge, the British Driver crossed the line to take his second win of the season, finishing 1.986 seconds clear of Antonelli in the final reckoning — with Verstappen splitting the two Mercedes drivers in second.
Russell’s win moved him back past Hamilton and up to second in the drivers’ championship, cutting Antonelli’s lead at the top to 40 points. The Bologna native’s third place — messy as the drive was — still did enough to protect Mercedes’ overall advantage in the standings even as his individual buffer over Russell shrank.
Elsewhere, the picture was mixed. McLaren secured a double points finish with Oscar Piastri finishing fourth and Lando Norris seventh, while Ferrari left Austria with Hamilton fifth and Leclerc down in eighth — a quiet weekend by the Scuderia’s recent standards, reportedly attributed to over-focusing on Mercedes rather than their own car. Racing Bulls had reason to celebrate, with Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad scoring ninth and 10th, respectively.

Antonelli, for his part, takes the more instructive lesson from Spielberg — his pace was never in question, but a series of avoidable errors under pressure cost him a result that once looked routine. Verstappen’s recovery from fifth was arguably Red Bull’s most encouraging drive of the season. A driver who crashed out of contention for pole on Saturday produced exactly the kind of measured, race-long fightback that has defined his career, applying sustained pressure on Russell without the benefit of track position.
While Ferrari had a subdued weekend, with both cars outside the top four, the Scuderia’s underwhelming weekend would attract some scrutiny. For a team hoping to challenge for the title, a quiet weekend at the Red Bull Ring is one it can scarcely afford as the championship enters its more competitive phase.
Formula 1 arrived at Silverstone with barely time to catch its breath after Austria — and the British Grand Prix weekend wasted no time delivering drama of its own. After securing Spring Pole at his home race, Lewis Hamilton held the lead off the line at Turn 1, resisting early pressure from Antonelli, but the Mercedes driver never let the gap grow. On lap 8, Antonelli made his move down the Hangar Straight into Stowe, seizing the lead and pulling clear to win by 2.745 seconds — his first career Sprint victory. Norris completed the podium, ahead of Russell and Leclerc, while Verstappen faded to sixth after a poor start. The result extended Antonelli’s championship lead over Russell to 43 points.
Antonelli backed up his Sprint win by topping qualifying outright and claiming pole position, with Leclerc second and Hamilton third for Ferrari. Russell could only manage fourth, surviving an off in Q1, as McLaren and Red Bull fought over the next four positions behind him.
Deserving attention
Sunday’s British Grand Prix will be remembered less for its outcome than for the extraordinary way it ended — but the race itself deserved attention on its own merits. Leclerc converted pole into control early, with Hamilton unwittingly playing shield at the front after complaining of graining, allowing the Monegasque to build a four-second cushion. Antonelli, however, was the fastest man on track. He cleared Hamilton at Copse on lap 11 and began chasing down Leclerc, closing to within three seconds by the time the Ferrari came into the pits on Lap 25.
What followed looked, for a long stretch, like the coronation of Formula 1’s championship leader. Antonelli, running on fresher rubber, had steadily eaten into Leclerc’s lead, and by the closing stages the gap between them stood at barely two seconds — the young Italian looked on course to overhaul him and take the win. Then it unravelled. Antonelli radioed that something had broken on his car, a wheel shield failure that forced two unplanned stops and ultimately dropped him out of contention entirely.
With Antonelli’s threat neutralised, the remaining drama centred on Russell and Hamilton. A slow puncture had earlier cost Russell track position to Hamilton, but the sequence reversed when Max Verstappen crashed heavily at Stowe on lap 48, losing the rear of his Red Bull for the second consecutive weekend.
The incident triggered a safety car, and both the Ferrari drivers pitted for fresh tyres – while Russell, gambling on used mediums, stayed out and jumped Hamilton in the process.
It’s what happened next that dominated the headlines. With just laps remaining, race control displayed a “Safety Car In This Lap” message, suggesting a green-flag restart and one lap shootout for glory at Silverstone. The message was then withdrawn, the safety car stayed out, and the race finished in formation — the first time an F1 race had ended fully behind the safety car since Monza 2022. The FIA later confirmed the message had been shown in error due to a software fault, and that regulations under Article B5.13.5 required a full lap to be completed following the unlapping procedure regardless.
Leclerc crossed the line to end a winless run stretching back to Austin 2024, with Russell claiming second just 0.427 seconds behind after his tyre gamble paid off, and Hamilton completing the podium — though facing a separate yellow-flag investigation that was later resolved with only a reprimand.
Antonelli was classified 16th after a five-second penalty for track-limits violations compounded his mechanical misfortune. Norris took fourth, with Hadjar and the Racing Bulls pair of Lawson and Lindblad rounding out the points.
Exposing the vulnerability
Antonelli remains the fastest driver on the grid more often than not, but Spielberg and Silverstone both exposed the same vulnerability — small errors and bad luck combining at exactly the wrong moments.
A five-second penalty here, a wheel shield failure there, and the championship fight looks a lot more intense than it did a month ago in Monaco. Russell, meanwhile, has turned himself into the man applying that pressure.
A win in Austria followed by a hard-fought second at Silverstone has moved him past Hamilton put him in the rearview mirror of Antonelli.
For Ferrari, Silverstone offered exactly the response a title-chasing team needed after Austria. A week after both cars left Spielberg anonymously outside the top four, Leclerc’s win alongside Hamilton’s third-place finish allowed the Scuderia to marginally close the gap in the Constructors’ Championship.
Circumstance and substance
Circumstance played its part — Antonelli’s late mechanical failure handed Leclerc a victory he may not have claimed on pace alone — but the substance behind the result was harder to dismiss. Leclerc controlled long stretches of the race from the front, while Hamilton could consider himself a little unlucky at the lack of a restart.
If Ferrari’s own admission of over-focusing on Mercedes was the diagnosis for Austria, Silverstone at least suggested the correction is taking hold. The real test now lies ahead: proving this was the start of a sustained title push rather than one bright weekend in an otherwise inconsistent campaign.
Two rounds, two winners, and a championship that suddenly feels wide open. Antonelli still leads, but the margin is shrinking race by race, and both Russell and Ferrari have shown they’re capable of capitalising when the moment arrives.
The next few rounds will tell us whether Austria and Silverstone were the start of a genuine four-way fight, or simply the mid-season wobble every dominant campaign goes through. Either way, the title race has found its edge again — and it’s about to get interesting.

