Suzuka Weekend Summary: Mercedes Total Domination
The 2026 F1 Japanese Grand Prix weekend at Suzuka has been defined by one word — Mercedes. The Silver Arrows locked out the top two in all four sessions, from FP1 through qualifying, establishing complete authority over the field.
Meanwhile, Max Verstappen was eliminated in Q2, and Lando Norris battled reliability gremlins across multiple sessions. Here’s the full breakdown from FP1 to qualifying.

FP1: Russell Leads, Mercedes Fires the Opening Salvo
George Russell topped the opening session with a 1:31.666, edging teammate Kimi Antonelli by just 0.026 seconds (1:31.692). The top six was a clean split between the big three: Mercedes 1-2, McLaren 3-4 (Norris, Piastri), Ferrari 5-6 (Leclerc, Hamilton).
Verstappen was down in 7th at +0.791s — the first hint of Red Bull’s struggles. An incident between Albon and Perez at the Casio Triangle triggered an FIA investigation, while Albon had earlier bounced through the gravel at Degner 2 and hit the tire barriers.
FP2: Piastri Strikes Back for McLaren
McLaren hit back in the second session. Oscar Piastri posted 1:30.133 on soft tires to go fastest, with Antonelli just 0.092s behind and Russell in third.
Verstappen dropped to 10th at +1.376s — the gap widening from FP1’s +0.791s. An ominous trend was forming.
The headline concern was Norris’s hydraulics failure. He sat in the garage for the first 23 minutes, losing crucial long-run data. He recovered to post the 4th fastest time, but the damage to his race preparation was done.
Franco Colapinto was summoned to the stewards for impeding Verstappen on the back straight. Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls) completed zero laps due to technical issues.

FP3: Antonelli Untouchable — Nearly 1 Second Clear of the Rest
Antonelli put down a 1:29.362 in the final practice session. Russell followed at +0.254s. But the real shock was the chasm to third place:
- Leclerc (Ferrari): +0.867s
- Piastri (McLaren): +1.002s
- Hamilton (Ferrari): +1.021s
- Norris (McLaren): +1.238s
Mercedes was nearly a full second clear of everyone else. If this gap held into qualifying, pole was going to be an intra-team affair.
Norris was hit with yet another issue — a battery problem discovered before the session started. McLaren completed emergency repairs with just 22 minutes remaining. Two reliability failures in consecutive sessions left the defending champion severely compromised heading into qualifying.
Verstappen was 8th (+1.548s). The downward trend from FP1 (+0.791s) to FP2 (+1.376s) to FP3 (+1.548s) was accelerating.
Qualifying Results: Antonelli Takes Pole, Mercedes 1-2 Confirmed
Antonelli sealed pole with a stunning 1:28.778 — the fastest lap of the entire weekend. Russell completed the fourth consecutive Mercedes 1-2 at +0.298s.
| Pos | Driver | Team | Time / Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 1:28.778 |
| P2 | George Russell | Mercedes | +0.298 |
| P3 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | +0.354 |
| P4 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | +0.627 |
| P5 | Lando Norris | McLaren | +0.631 |
| P6 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | +0.789 |
| P7 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine | +0.913 |
| P8 | Isack Hadjar | Red Bull | +1.200 |
| P9 | Gabriel Bortoleto | Audi | +1.496 |
| P10 | Arvid Lindblad | Racing Bulls | +1.541 |
Piastri took P3, with Leclerc and Norris splitting McLaren and Ferrari across P4-P5. Gasly’s P7 for Alpine was a standout, while Bortoleto’s P9 showed Audi’s continued progress.
What Happened to Verstappen? The Q2 Shock Explained
The weekend’s biggest upset: championship leader Max Verstappen was eliminated in Q2, assigned P11 on the grid.
His radio message to the team was stark:
“Undriveable. The car is jumping. Something is fundamentally wrong.”
The progression across sessions told a damning story:
| Session | Position | Gap to P1 |
|---|---|---|
| FP1 | P7 | +0.791s |
| FP2 | P10 | +1.376s |
| FP3 | P8 | +1.548s |
| Qualifying | P11 (Q2 out) | +1.214s |
Teammate Isack Hadjar managed only P8 in Q3 (+1.200s), confirming this isn’t a driver issue — the RB21 package simply doesn’t work at Suzuka’s high-speed corners.
Starting P11 at a circuit notoriously difficult for overtaking, Verstappen faces a real points damage limitation exercise.

Norris Reliability Woes: How Much Will It Cost?
McLaren has the pace — Piastri’s FP2 best and qualifying P3 proved that. But the defending champion’s weekend has been a nightmare of mechanical failures:
- FP2: Hydraulics system failure — 23 minutes lost
- FP3: Battery issue — most of session lost, only 22 minutes of running
- Qualifying: Made Q3 on incomplete preparation, P5 (+0.631s)
Two consecutive sessions of significant lost running means Norris enters the race without proper tire degradation data, fuel load balance information, or a fully optimized setup. The strategic implications could be significant.
Piastri, by contrast, had a clean weekend and outperformed Norris in every session. The intra-team dynamic is shifting.
Midfield Movers: Gasly and Bortoleto Impress
Beyond the big three, several drivers delivered standout performances.
Pierre Gasly (Alpine) qualified P7 at +0.913s — just 0.124s behind Hamilton. Alpine’s upgrade package appears to be working.
Gabriel Bortoleto (Audi) in P9 was another highlight, showing steady progress for the Audi F1 project. Notably stronger than teammate Nico Hulkenberg, who was eliminated in Q2.
Rookie Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls) made Q3 in P10 — an impressive first Suzuka qualifying for the youngest driver on the grid.
Race Day Preview: Five Things to Watch
- Mercedes race pace reality: Qualifying dominance doesn’t always translate. Tire management and fuel-load balance could narrow or widen the gap.
- Verstappen from P11: Suzuka’s DRS zones help, but the high-speed corners make overtaking fundamentally difficult. Undercut/overcut strategy may be his best weapon.
- Piastri vs Norris: Starting P3 vs P5. If Piastri stays ahead in the race, team order discussions become inevitable.
- Ferrari’s constructors’ battle: Leclerc P4, Hamilton P6. Can they split the McLarens and claw back constructors’ points?
- Weather wildcard: Suzuka’s infamous weather variability could reshuffle the entire grid. Rain would be a lifeline for Verstappen.
