2026 F1 Japanese GP Race Results: Antonelli Wins Again, Takes Championship Lead at 19

Antonelli Wins Again at Suzuka — 19-Year-Old Takes Championship Lead

The 2026 F1 Japanese Grand Prix is done. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) converted pole position into victory, claiming his second consecutive win after China. At 19 years, 6 months, and 25 days old, he becomes the youngest driver in F1 history to win back-to-back races and the youngest championship leader ever.

But the race was far from straightforward. Antonelli dropped to P6 off the start with excessive wheelspin, only to be rescued by Safety Car fortune. George Russell was left fuming. Oliver Bearman suffered a terrifying 50G crash, Verstappen struggled all race, and Piastri delivered a standout performance. Here’s everything that happened across 53 laps at Suzuka.

A thrilling shot of a Ferrari on the race track during the Italian Grand Prix.
Photo by Jenda Kubeš / Pexels

Race Classification: Full Results

Pos Driver Team Laps Time/Gap Pts
1 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 53 1:28:03.403 25
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren 53 +13.722s 18
3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 53 +15.270s 15
4 George Russell Mercedes 53 +15.754s 12
5 Lando Norris McLaren 53 +23.479s 10
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 53 +25.037s 8
7 Pierre Gasly Alpine 53 +32.340s 6
8 Max Verstappen Red Bull 53 +32.677s 4
9 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 53 +50.180s 2
10 Esteban Ocon Haas 53 +51.216s 1
11 Nico Hulkenberg Audi 53 +52.280s 0
12 Isack Hadjar Red Bull 53 0
13 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi 53 0
14 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls 53 0
15 Carlos Sainz Williams 53 0
16 Franco Colapinto Alpine 53 0
17 Sergio Perez Cadillac 53 0
18 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 52 +1 Lap 0
19 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac 52 +1 Lap 0
20 Alexander Albon Williams 51 +2 Laps 0
DNF Lance Stroll Aston Martin 30 Water pressure 0
DNF Oliver Bearman Haas 20 Crash 0

From Start to Safety Car: How Antonelli Came Back

Antonelli started from pole but suffered excessive wheelspin off the line, dropping to P6 almost immediately. The quickest off the mark was Oscar Piastri, who lunged from P3 to seize the lead into Turn 1 — one of the most aggressive starts of the 2026 season.

Norris slotted into P3 while Russell immediately entered recovery mode. Piastri maintained a comfortable lead through Lap 21, when Russell completed his pit stop.

Then came Lap 22, and everything changed.

Bearman’s 50G Crash: Terror at Spoon Corner

On Lap 22, Haas driver Oliver Bearman suffered a 50G impact at Spoon Corner (Turn 13). Franco Colapinto’s Alpine lost battery charge ahead, causing a sudden drop in speed. Bearman, closing rapidly, took evasive action onto the grass and speared into the barriers.

Despite the enormous impact, Bearman escaped without fractures — only a right knee contusion. Stewards investigated Colapinto but concluded with “no further action.”

The crash brought out the Safety Car, and it became the defining moment of the race.

dramatic F1 safety car leading a pack of F1 cars through Suzuka circuit at high speed, evening light, rain clouds in background, photorealistic digital art with motion blur
AI generated image

Safety Car Beneficiary: Antonelli’s ‘Free’ Pit Stop

The Safety Car timing decided the race winner. Here’s the critical sequence:

  • Russell: Completed his pit stop on Lap 21 — one lap before the Safety Car
  • Antonelli: Had not yet pitted — able to take a ‘free’ pit stop under Safety Car conditions

Antonelli ducked into the pits during the Safety Car period, changed tires with virtually no time loss, and emerged in the lead. Russell, having pitted under green flag conditions, had already lost ~22 seconds.

Russell’s radio message captured his frustration:

“Unbelievable. Wow, f*** our luck in these last two races.”

After the Lap 27 restart, Antonelli pulled away cleanly, immediately building over a second of gap and controlling the remainder of the race with ease.

Piastri Shines: From P3 to Race Leader to Driver of the Day

Oscar Piastri delivered the drive of the weekend. Starting P3, he seized the lead at Turn 1 with a sensational start. He led until around Lap 18 when he made his pit stop, and maintained strong pace throughout.

He finished P2, 13.722 seconds behind Antonelli. While McLaren couldn’t match Mercedes’ raw pace, Piastri comprehensively outperformed teammate Norris (P5), cementing his position within the team. He was voted Driver of the Day by fans.

How Did Verstappen’s Race Go from P11?

Verstappen’s weekend went from bad to worse. After the shock of Q2 elimination, the race offered little relief.

He made steady progress through the lower midfield early on, but reported from Lap 14 that it felt like he was “driving without power steering.” The Safety Car bunched the field and gave him another chance, but a late lunge against Gasly at the chicane ended with a major tail snap, and the overtake failed.

He finished P8, just 0.337 seconds behind Gasly. He sits P9 in the championship with 12 points — a dismal start for the defending champion.

Session Position Gap to P1
FP1 P7 +0.791s
FP2 P10 +1.376s
FP3 P8 +1.548s
Qualifying P11 (Q2 exit) +1.214s
Race P8 +32.677s

Tire Strategy: One-Stop Was the Answer

Suzuka’s first taste of the C1 (Hard) compound, alongside C2 (Medium) and C3 (Soft).

  • 21 of 22 drivers started on Mediums (C2) — the sole exception was Bottas on Hards
  • Dominant strategy: One-stop, Medium to Hard (pit window Laps 15-21)
  • Antonelli: Medium start, pitted under Safety Car on Lap 22 for Hards — the decisive advantage
  • Piastri: Pitted around Lap 18 for Hards (before the Safety Car)
  • Russell: Pitted around Lap 21 for Hards (one lap before the crash — worst possible timing)

Norris reported left-front graining from Lap 12, a consequence of insufficient long-run data due to his FP2/FP3 reliability issues.

Leclerc vs Russell: A Breathtaking Final 3 Laps

Leclerc vs Russell manga-style battle - 2026 F1 Japanese GP
Leclerc vs Russell: Final 3 Laps at Suzuka

The battle for P3 heated up late. Russell closed rapidly on Leclerc, but the Ferrari driver defended brilliantly over the final three laps with precise defensive lines at Turn 1. Final gap: 0.484 seconds — Leclerc’s defense was masterful.

Meanwhile, the fight for P5 between Hamilton and Norris went down to the wire. Norris overtook Hamilton at the chicane on the penultimate lap and held on for P5.

Fastest Lap and the ‘Almost Grand Slam’

Antonelli set the fastest lap of 1:32.432 on Lap 49, completing the triple of pole position + race win + fastest lap. Had he not lost the lead at the start, it would have been a Grand Slam (pole + every lap led + win + FL).

Pos Driver Fastest Lap Lap
1 Antonelli 1:32.432 49
2 Russell 1:32.549 53
3 Leclerc 1:32.634 53
4 Hamilton 1:32.777 48
5 Piastri 1:32.996 49

2026 Championship Standings After Round 3

Three races, three wins. Mercedes’ dominance is becoming alarming for the rest of the grid.

2026 F1 Championship Standings after Round 3 - Drivers and Constructors
2026 F1 Championship Standings — After Round 3, Japanese GP

Drivers’ Championship

Pos Driver Team Points
1 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 72
2 George Russell Mercedes 63
3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 49
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 41
5 Lando Norris McLaren 25
6 Oscar Piastri McLaren 21
7 Oliver Bearman Haas 17
8 Pierre Gasly Alpine 15
9 Max Verstappen Red Bull 12
10 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 10

Constructors’ Championship

Pos Team Points
1 Mercedes 135
2 Ferrari 90
3 McLaren 46
4 Haas 18
5 Alpine 16
6 Red Bull 16
7 Racing Bulls 14
8 Audi 2
9 Williams 2
10 Cadillac 0
11 Aston Martin 0

Mercedes leads Ferrari by 45 points. Four-time consecutive constructors’ champions Red Bull have plummeted to joint 5th/6th with Alpine on just 16 points.

Why Has Red Bull Collapsed?

Red Bull’s 2026 struggles reached their nadir at Suzuka. Verstappen’s radio messages tell the story:

  • Qualifying: “The car is undriveable. It’s jumping.”
  • Race, Lap 14: “It feels like I’m driving without power steering.”

Teammate Hadjar finished P12. This isn’t a driver problem — it’s a fundamental issue with the RB21 package. The car simply doesn’t work in Suzuka’s high-speed corners. Without a major upgrade package for the next round, Red Bull’s entire season is at risk.

dramatic wide angle photo of F1 podium celebration at Suzuka Circuit, confetti falling, Mercedes team celebrating, golden hour sunlight, cinematic composition, photorealistic
AI generated image

Midfield Highlights: Gasly and Lawson Impress

Beyond the Big Three (Mercedes, Ferrari, McLaren):

  • Pierre Gasly (Alpine) P7: Matched his qualifying position and fended off Verstappen by just 0.337 seconds. Alpine’s upgrade package is delivering.
  • Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) P9: A steady race for valuable points.
  • Esteban Ocon (Haas) P10: Secured the final point. With teammate Bearman’s retirement, he gave the team a valuable single point.

Looking Ahead: What to Watch Next

  • Can Mercedes keep dominating? Three wins from three, Antonelli on 72 points. But Russell’s frustration could create internal tension.
  • Piastri’s rise: Consistently outperforming Norris. McLaren’s number one debate is brewing.
  • Red Bull’s response: Without upgrades, a return to the front seems impossible. Verstappen on 12 points in P9 is unprecedented.
  • Bearman’s fitness: No fractures from the 50G crash, but his availability for the next round depends on medical clearance.
  • Ferrari vs McLaren: The constructors’ P2 battle intensifies. 90 vs 46 points — Ferrari currently ahead.

Antonelli’s Post-Race Comments

“Of course it’s still early days to think about the championship, but we’re on a good way. The pace was just incredible and it was a really nice second stint.”

Humility from a 19-year-old hiding growing confidence. The 2026 season is becoming Antonelli’s season.

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