Russell downplays early F1 lead despite Melbourne win

12 Mar 2026 • 5:50 PM MYT
The Sun Daily
The Sun Daily

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Mercedes driver George Russell says the championship standings are meaningless after just one race, despite starting the season with a victory in Australia.

GEORGE Russell has dismissed the significance of leading the Formula One world championship after just one race, insisting the standings “mean nothing at this point” as he prepares for this weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix.

The Mercedes driver, who won the season-opener in Melbourne last Sunday, said his focus remains on improving the car’s performance rather than celebrating an early advantage.

“It feels no different to any other day, to be honest, here in China,” the 28-year-old Briton said in Shanghai on Thursday.

Russell, who started the Australian Grand Prix from pole position and led home a Mercedes one-two with teammate Kimi Antonelli, emphasised that the team’s ability to develop the car is his primary satisfaction.

“I’m most happy about the fact that the car is quick and reacting as we think,” he said, while acknowledging there is “still room to improve”.

The victory confirmed Mercedes’ status as pre-season favourites following sweeping rule changes for 2026, including a new 50-50 power unit split between conventional and electrical energy.

Despite the dominant start, Russell expects a fierce title battle with Ferrari, who finished third and fourth in Melbourne with Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton respectively.

Russell believes the season will be “quite a close fight between ourselves and Ferrari”, a view he said was shared by his former teammate Hamilton, with whom he shared a flight to Shanghai.

The Mercedes driver warned that Ferrari’s race pace was particularly strong, noting that “when you look at Ferrari… they were basically doing the same lap times as us” during the grand prix.

Russell also cautioned against underestimating other rivals like Red Bull and McLaren, suggesting several teams failed to optimise their qualifying performance in Melbourne.