This one’s a bit late — okay, really late. The race happened a week ago. But I couldn’t skip writing about this one. Kimi Antonelli’s maiden F1 victory and Lewis Hamilton’s first podium for Ferrari — two historic moments in a single race deserve to be documented, even if it takes a little longer.
We covered the Sprint Qualifying results in the previous post. This post covers both the Sprint race and the main race results.
Race result: How did Antonelli become the second youngest F1 winner?
The winner of the 2026 F1 Chinese Grand Prix was Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli. He crossed the line with a race time of 1:33:15.607, finishing 5.515 seconds clear of teammate George Russell.
Antonelli is 19 years and 202 days old, making him the second youngest Grand Prix winner in F1 history — only behind Max Verstappen (18 years, 228 days at the 2016 Spanish GP). This is a remarkable turnaround from the Sprint, where he finished P5 after receiving a 10-second penalty for a first-lap collision with Hadjar.
In the main race, Antonelli never lost the lead. After his sole pit stop under the Safety Car period early in proceedings, he maintained his position at the front. He also set the fastest lap of the race (1:35.275 on Lap 52), delivering a near-perfect Grand Slam performance.

How did Hamilton secure his first Ferrari podium?
Third place went to Lewis Hamilton — his first Grand Prix podium since joining Ferrari. He finished 25.267 seconds behind Antonelli, but the real highlight was his intense battle with teammate Charles Leclerc (P4, +28.894s).
After the race, Hamilton said it was “the best racing of my entire F1 career.” For a 40-year-old seven-time World Champion to say that after his first podium with a new team tells you everything about the quality of this race. The gap between Hamilton and Leclerc was just 3.6 seconds — a thriller right to the end.

Full race classification — 2026 F1 Chinese Grand Prix
| Pos | Driver | Team | Time/Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 🥇 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 1:33:15.607 |
| 2 🥈 | George Russell | Mercedes | +5.515s |
| 3 🥉 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | +25.267s |
| 4 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | +28.894s |
| 5 | Oliver Bearman | Haas | +57.268s |
| 6 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine | +59.647s |
| 7 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls | +1:20.588s |
| 8 | Isack Hadjar | Red Bull | +1:27.247s |
| 9 | Carlos Sainz | Williams | +1 Lap |
| 10 | Franco Colapinto | Alpine | +1 Lap |
| 11 | Nico Hulkenberg | Audi | +1 Lap |
| 12 | Arvid Lindblad | Racing Bulls | +1 Lap |
| 13 | Valtteri Bottas | Cadillac | +1 Lap |
| 14 | Esteban Ocon | Haas | +1 Lap |
| 15 | Sergio Perez | Cadillac | +1 Lap |
DNF: Max Verstappen (Red Bull), Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin), Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
DNS: Lando Norris (McLaren), Oscar Piastri (McLaren), Gabriel Bortoleto (Audi), Alexander Albon (Williams)
Fastest Lap: Kimi Antonelli — 1:35.275 (Lap 52)
Team-by-team analysis: Key takeaways from Shanghai
Mercedes: The perfect weekend
Sprint win for Russell, race win for Antonelli. Both drivers taking turns at the top is an ideal situation for the team. Following their dominance in Melbourne, Mercedes has confirmed they have the strongest package under the 2026 regulations. Antonelli’s mental resilience — bouncing back from a Sprint penalty to deliver a flawless race — is particularly impressive for a 19-year-old.
Ferrari: Hamilton-Leclerc battle is an asset
Consistent P3-P4 finishes keep Ferrari in the championship fight, but the gap to Mercedes is clear. The positive sign is that both drivers are performing at a competitive level. Hamilton’s experience and Leclerc’s raw speed could create powerful synergy as the team develops their car through the season.
Red Bull: Crisis deepens

Verstappen retired from the race, facing the prospect of back-to-back pointless weekends. He only managed P9 in the Sprint, and teammate Hadjar’s P8 was the best Red Bull could do in the race. The fall from 2024’s dominance shows just how much the 2026 regulations have reshuffled the order. Without fundamental fixes to their drivetrain issues, Red Bull could lose the entire first half of the season.
McLaren: Shanghai nightmare
After a decent Sprint showing (Norris P4, Piastri P6), the main race was a disaster — both drivers DNS due to car issues. Four cars in total failed to start (Norris, Piastri, Bortoleto, Albon), making this an exceptional race. McLaren needs to sort their reliability urgently.
Haas & Alpine: Midfield standouts
Oliver Bearman (Haas, P5) and Pierre Gasly (Alpine, P6) delivered impressive results. Bearman in particular has been consistently strong across Sprint and race, establishing himself as a Rookie of the Year contender.
Sprint race results — 2026 Chinese GP
Saturday’s Sprint saw George Russell take a lights-to-flag victory, finishing just 0.674 seconds ahead of Leclerc, with Hamilton completing the podium.
| Pos | Driver | Team | Time/Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 🥇 | George Russell | Mercedes | Winner |
| 2 🥈 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | +0.674s |
| 3 🥉 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | +2.554s |
| 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren | +4.433s |
| 5 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | +5.688s |
| 6 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | +6.809s |
| 7 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls | +10.900s |
| 8 | Oliver Bearman | Haas | +11.271s |
| 9 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull | +11.619s |
| 10 | Esteban Ocon | Haas | +13.887s |
P11 onwards: Gasly (Alpine), Sainz (Williams), Bortoleto (Audi), Colapinto (Alpine), Hadjar (Red Bull), Albon (Williams), Alonso (Aston Martin), Stroll (Aston Martin), Perez (Cadillac)
DNF: Hulkenberg (Audi), Bottas (Cadillac), Lindblad (Racing Bulls)
Antonelli started from P2 on the front row but collided with Hadjar on the opening lap, earning a 10-second penalty. The fact that he recovered to P5 even after serving the penalty speaks to the competitiveness of the Mercedes car.
Championship standings after the Chinese GP
| Pos | Driver | Team | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | George Russell | Mercedes | Leader |
| 2 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | -4 pts |
| 3 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | – |
| 4 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | Leclerc -1 pt |
Russell leads by 4 points, with Antonelli closing the gap after his victory. Leclerc and Hamilton are separated by just 1 point in the fight for P3. Mercedes holds a commanding lead in the constructors’ championship.
What to expect at the Japanese Grand Prix (Suzuka)?
The next race is the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit, March 26-29 — Round 3 of the 2026 season and the final leg of the Asian triple-header.
Suzuka is a 5.807km circuit raced over 53 laps, and it’s widely regarded as one of the most technically demanding tracks on the calendar. The high-speed S-curves and the legendary 130R corner test both aerodynamic performance and driver courage in equal measure.
Key storylines to watch:
- Can anyone stop Mercedes? — After back-to-back 1-2 finishes, will they make it three in a row at Suzuka?
- Red Bull’s fightback — Verstappen won at Suzuka three years in a row (2022-2024). Can he channel those memories into a comeback after fixing their drivetrain issues?
- McLaren reliability — Can they recover from the China DNS nightmare?
- Antonelli’s momentum — Will the maiden winner carry his confidence into a winning streak, or will the pressure of expectations catch up?
- Hamilton vs Leclerc — How will the intra-team Ferrari battle play out through Suzuka’s high-speed sections?
Japanese GP schedule:
- FP1: Friday, March 27 — 11:30 local time
- FP2: Friday, March 27 — 15:00
- FP3: Saturday, March 28 — 11:30
- Qualifying: Saturday, March 28 — 15:00
- Race: Sunday, March 29 — 14:00 JST
Suzuka uses the traditional weekend format (no Sprint), giving teams three practice sessions to fine-tune their setups. Whether anyone can challenge Mercedes’ dominance remains the biggest question heading into Round 3.
I’ll try to get the next race report up on time. Probably.
This post was written by AI (Claude Code) and reviewed by a code-illiterate human.