Williams team principal James Vowles said Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon are “settled” at the team despite Williams’ difficult start to the 2026 season. Vowles said: "They are settled. I can answer really the question you're asking, which is, is there risk? I'm very comfortable with where we are with Alex and Carlos. Our job in all of this, irrespective of Alex and Carlos, but for the wider picture, is to develop this car and prove to ourselves that we have the capability to move significantly forward relative to the field. That's it."

George Russell said Toto Wolff’s mid-qualifying “just drive” radio message at the Austrian Grand Prix was intended to help him relax and refocus before his pole-winning lap. Russell explained Wolff told him: “Just enjoy it, just enjoy the drive,” and repeated ahead of Q3: “Just go out and enjoy it”. Russell joked it “probably” sounded like a command because of “the Austrian accent”, adding the messages reflect Wolff’s “100% faith and confidence” and help stop him “overdriving” under championship pressure.
Lewis Hamilton said it would be a “tall order” for Ferrari to beat Mercedes and win the Austrian Grand Prix, after qualifying third on the grid behind George Russell and team-mate Charles Leclerc. Hamilton said: "I think out of pure pace, no. The Mercedes have been very quick this weekend, yesterday [in practice] it was 0.6 seconds [between Mercedes and Ferrari on race pace]. So I think on pure pace it will be very, very hard to do. But maybe with strategy, maybe there's an opportunity. But a tall order to win tomorrow."



Isack Hadjar says Max Verstappen’s qualifying crash at the Austrian Grand Prix could have been caused by a problem with the straight line mode system as Verstappen approached Turn 9 on his final Q3 lap. Hadjar said: "I think he had an issue with his [straight mode]. It was not closing properly going into the last corner, so I think that is related to the upgrades."

Fred Vasseur said Ferrari will focus on the positives and trust race control’s decision-making after Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton qualified second and third for the Austrian Grand Prix behind pole-sitter George Russell, who set his time after lifting for a yellow flag caused by Max Verstappen’s crash. Vasseur said: "No. First I'm taking the positive that we are second and third, that we are in the fight with Mercedes in the Quali and able probably to have good pace for tomorrow. This is most important. We still have 15 races to go and the most important [thing] is the performance. Then we have to trust Race Control and I will do it."

Lando Norris said McLaren had “hoped for a little bit more” after qualifying sixth for the Austrian Grand Prix, with team-mate Oscar Piastri seventh behind Mercedes and Ferrari cars and Max Verstappen’s Red Bull. Norris said: "I think we maybe hoped for a little bit more – it was very close to some of the cars ahead, but there's no reason why we should be ahead of some of the cars ahead. I think we're happy with it, it just seems a bit further down the order than what we would have liked and where we've looked in FP3, FP2, FP1. But I think it's more just the others are always saving more for Qualifying and this is realistically where we are."

Lando Norris said McLaren are “where we deserve to be” after he qualified sixth for the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring, with team-mate Oscar Piastri seventh. Norris said: "That just wasn't the case today. So we are just where we deserve to be."

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said George Russell did “a good job” lifting under a single yellow flag in Q3 at the Austrian Grand Prix, doing enough to satisfy the FIA stewards while still securing pole position. Stella said: "For what I saw from the GPS overlays, I think Russell has done a good job of executing a lift... So I think it was a kind of a case on the edge, but no particular concern with the fact that this has been accepted by the stewards."

George Russell said single yellow flags were the right call on his Austrian Grand Prix pole lap and insisted he stayed in control, amid questions over whether he should have lifted after Max Verstappen crashed in qualifying at the Red Bull Ring. Russell said: "I think in that instance, a single yellow was correct, because a double yellow is immediate danger. You're never going to be lifting 100 meters before a corner or lifting off with a single yellow, you're never going to lose control of the car. So, you know, I think the single yellow was correct. I think I did everything right to be very much under control, and it's a very different story to a double."

Charles Leclerc said Ferrari’s sudden step forward at the Austrian Grand Prix was “very strange” after the team struggled on Friday, with the Monegasque qualifying second behind Mercedes’ George Russell. Leclerc said: "It's very strange because yesterday was a very tough day for the team. We were struggling a lot as a team and today we took a big step forward. We did not expect to be in front of the McLarens particularly and close to Mercedes, so that's a good surprise. We changed quite a lot, actually. Not big steps, but a little bit everywhere. It ended up being quite a big difference."


Lewis Hamilton says Ferrari’s best chance of beating Mercedes at the Austrian Grand Prix is to work with team-mate Charles Leclerc to apply strategic pressure, after admitting Mercedes have been quicker for much of the weekend. Hamilton said: "It's going to be very tough to challenge them tomorrow, but with a long run down to Turn 3, hopefully together we can. It's great having Charles here as well, because we can hopefully work together on a strategy and try to apply pressure to them."



Toto Wolff said George Russell used “all his experience” to secure pole for the Austrian Grand Prix after yellow flags came out in Q3 following Max Verstappen’s crash. Wolff said: "Yeah, of course I was in doubt, because what I saw is a yellow. I saw Kimi aborting, and that was pretty much the session done, and I was super angry about it. Then, George on pole. This is all his experience. His lap was incredible. He lifted at the right time, the necessary amount, and that's the pole position."

Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli said the yellow-flag response after Max Verstappen’s late crash in Austrian Grand Prix qualifying should be reviewed, arguing it should have been double yellows at a high-speed corner. Antonelli said: "I think double yellows would have been enough, because you just need to abort the lap, but for sure it is something that needs to be reviewed. Especially when it happens in a high-speed corner. If it's a slow speed, still single yellow can be okay, but fast corner, it should be double yellow straightaway."
George Russell said he was glad “common sense prevailed” after the stewards allowed his Austrian Grand Prix pole lap to stand despite a single yellow flag in the final sector for Max Verstappen’s crash. Russell said: "It's a corner where you can see quite a lot, and I made this huge lift [off the throttle], and I was going to assess the situation as soon as I got to the corner, if the car was there, but as it was a single yellow and I was pretty confident there was no danger. As soon as I turned into the corner, I already saw the green flag up ahead... I was glad common sense prevailed there."



Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar has been given an FIA stewards’ warning for driving “unnecessarily slowly” during Q1 qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix. The stewards said they reviewed data and onboard footage and concluded Hadjar “completed the relevant lap without overtaking or being overtaken by any other cars and therefore drove unnecessarily slowly.”
Max Verstappen admitted he cannot explain what caused his late crash in Q3 for the Austrian Grand Prix, which left the Red Bull driver fifth on the grid after losing control at Turn 9 at the Red Bull Ring. Verstappen said: "On that final lap, I can't really explain why it felt like that. Already in Turn 6 it was the same thing, on the long, combined entry. I had a big snap, a big moment, which was a bit odd, because that corner normally always understeers. I went into Turn 9 and the same happened... As soon as I turned the wheel it just completely snapped."

Max Verstappen said he believes he could have qualified third for the Austrian Grand Prix before crashing at Turn 9 on his final lap at the Red Bull Ring, leaving him fifth on the grid. Verstappen said: "I think realistically we could have been P3, it's a little bit better than P5. But realistically, I think even if we would have been P3, coming off the line is hard for us, so you probably drop back to P5, but that's what it is at the moment."

Lando Norris said it would have taken a "pretty insane" lap to qualify higher than sixth for the Austrian Grand Prix, after McLaren fell short of its expectations in qualifying at the Red Bull Ring. Norris said: "I think my lap felt pretty good. Similar to what Oscar said, it takes a pretty insane lap on a day like today to maybe get you a couple more positions, but they don't come around very often, and it's tricky to get that out of the car we have at the minute. So we are just where we deserve to be."

Andrea Kimi Antonelli said Ferrari were “sandbagging” on Friday after their improvement in qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix. Antonelli said: "For sure, yesterday they were sandbagging definitely, so I mean for sure their pace is going to be much better and we saw how strong they were in Barcelona, so let's see. It's going to be, again, another race where you need to manage tyres and trying to extract the maximum out of it."

Max Verstappen said it was “quite crazy” that only single yellow flags were shown after his crash at the end of Q3 in Austria, with George Russell able to continue and keep pole position after satisfying the FIA that he lifted. Verstappen said: "I only heard about that now. That's quite crazy, yeah."


Get the full feed, faster alerts, and the stories worth following on your phone.