T-minus 4 hours to lights out.
The last 48 hours in Miami have been a masterclass in the highs and lows of the 2026 season. From technical breakthroughs to the harsh reality of the FIAโs rulebook, this weekend is shaping up to be one for the history books.
The Silver Arrows Find Their Range
Mercedes is finally looking like the powerhouse weโve been waiting for. After their latest press release confirmed the persistent vibration issues which Adrian Newey noted were severe enough to risk nerve damage have finally been quelled, the W17 looks stable.



Kimi Antonelli is proving exactly why the hype is real, securing pole position with a blistering 1:27.798. Despite the suspension struggles that have plagued the team (and Toto Wolffโs vocal petitions for regulation flexibility), theyโve found a window of performance just in time for the race. With a major upgrade package rumored for Montreal, this could be the start of a serious mid-season surge.
The Veterans and the Vanguard
Watching Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton go wheel-to-wheel was pure nostalgia fused with 2026 technical grit. Seeing Max force the seven-time champ wide, only for Lewis to retaliate by holding a deep inside line through Turn 17, reminded everyone why these two are the titans of the grid.


Meanwhile, Fernando Alonso showed his veteran class, climbing the boards after a grueling pit-lane battle. While Aston Martin experienced a weekend of mixed fortunes eventually seeing both cars disqualified from qualifying due to technical infringements the raw pace Alonso extracted from that Honda-powered chassis suggests that when the car holds together, heโs still a podium threat.


Ferrariโs Sunday Dance
Itโs the same old story for the Scuderia: the Kings of Saturday struggling to translate raw speed into race-day dominance. Charles Leclerc was a highlight reel on his own, notably pulling off a spectacular drift through corners 14 and 15 while on hards a testament to his car control even when the Ferrari is “being Ferrari.”
Leclerc starts P3 today, sandwiched between Verstappen in P2 and pole-sitter Antonelli.
The Stewardsโ Hammer: DQ Details
The grid looks significantly different this morning following two major disqualifications that shifted the midfield:
- Isack Hadjar: The Red Bull rookie lost his P9 start after a post-qualifying inspection. The FIA found the floorboards on his RB22 protruding 2mm beyond the permitted reference volume (violating Article C3.5.5). Red Bull admitted the error, citing a “process mistake” with no performance intent, but the penalty was absolute: Hadjar starts from the back.
- Gabriel Bortoleto: The Audi driver also saw his qualifying times deleted. The disqualification moves him to the rear alongside Hadjar, a massive blow for the young Brazilian who has been fighting to put Audi in the points consistently.
Provisional Top 5 Grid
| Position | Driver | Team |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes |
| 2 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull |
| 3 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari |
| 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren |
| 5 | George Russell | Mercedes |
As we look toward Montreal, the big question remains: can Mercedes maintain this momentum, or will Ferrari finally find the race pace to match their qualifying brilliance? Weโll find out in four hours.



