Toto Wolff says Mercedes must limit the growing demands on Kimi Antonelli’s time, with the team principal describing the Italian public’s attention as the “bigger problem” in managing the hype around his teenage driver. Wolff said: "The bigger problem is the Italian public. Now that they are not qualified for the football [the 2026 World Cup], it's all about [Jannik] Sinner and Antonelli and Antonelli and Sinner. And that is something which we need to contain. There are so many requests for his time, from the media, from sponsors, and it's on us to keep the handbrake on that."

Daniel Ricciardo says “never say never” on the prospect of returning to racing, as he prepares to attend the Indianapolis 500 alongside Conor Daly as part of a brand partnership. Ricciardo said: "Never say never. I'm really enjoying not competing where I currently sit, and just enjoying the small things in life, and not having to kind of be on a stage and all that. If I was to do something maybe one day, it would definitely be more from a fun aspect than, like, 'I'm chasing some championship' aspect. I just want to make sure if I was to ever do something again, it's just joyful, and I don't have to prove anything."




Ollie Bearman says his biggest adjustment during his rookie Formula 1 season with Haas was learning to speak up and understand how much the car’s development depends on driver feedback. Bearman said: "The developments we make on the car directly come as an influence of what we're saying as drivers. I think it's not necessarily a big weight. You need to understand that that's your role because I was not in that role ever before, and it's tough to assume it automatically. It takes a while. Now I'm someone who's more outgoing, less afraid to speak up and to give my opinion."

Lando Norris says the FIA’s latest tweak to the 2026 regulations is only a small improvement and that the formula is still “not to the level that Formula 1 should… be at”, as he called for the battery to be removed after the Miami Grand Prix. Lando Norris said: "It's a small step in the right direction, but it's not to the level that Formula 1 should still be at yet. You should never get penalised for that kind of thing and you still do. You just have to get rid of the battery."

Williams team principal James Vowles says the team has more performance coming for Montreal, with the upgrade pipeline for the Canadian Grand Prix still not fully confirmed but potentially “a nice sizeable amount”. Vowles said: "We have more performance coming from Montreal. Again, it's an odd situation where we've got these two weeks and we want to maximise these two weeks to the best of our ability, or three before the grand prix. And so, the pipeline is a little bit still up in the air as to what we can 100% deliver for that, but there could be a nice sizeable amount of performance."

Williams driver Carlos Sainz says the FIA’s latest tweaks to energy harvesting and deployment under Formula 1’s 2026 regulations still do not go far enough for qualifying, even though he plans to be less negative about it in public. Sainz said: "Not for qualifying. I think for quali there's still a long way to go. As I said, I'm not going to criticise it anymore. I'm just trying to be productive to keep insisting that this is not good enough for F1. But it seems like at least the racing was a bit better. We need to keep improving."

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella says Mercedes still has the faster car than McLaren despite the upgrade package the team brought to the Miami Grand Prix. Stella said: "I think there's a few indications of a different nature, but all quantitative, that tell a picture that Mercedes is a faster car. I think qualifying [on Saturday], we saw that Mercedes don't have any problem with deployment, like they had in sprint qualifying and, on average, if we see the behaviour of the cars in the corners, they are faster than us. The corners in which they are mainly faster than us are the high-speed corners."


Charles Leclerc says he is "a bit of an outsider" over criticism of Formula 1's 2026 engine regulations, with the Ferrari driver arguing the racing has not changed as much as some of his rivals suggest. "I've always disagreed a little bit with that," Leclerc said. "For at least the fights I've had with the guys in front, when you've got cars that have a system and use it in a similar way to yours, actually, the overtaking is really good. It's a bit more strategic than last year, but last year was also strategic with the DRS... so I don't think it has changed significantly."

Ford Racing boss Mark Rushbrook said the manufacturer would “love” to see Red Bull driver Max Verstappen race the Le Mans 24 Hours in a Ford hypercar, after confirming the two sides have held talks about a possible future entry. Rushbrook said: "We would love to see that. A lot of things need to align for that to happen, but that would of course be incredible for us, for the sport. Depending on the schedules, it could be during [his F1 career] or both [during and after his F1 career]. Discussions go back three-plus years. It’s just looking for the right opportunity with the right programs.”


Charles Leclerc says Lewis Hamilton’s approach to preparation is the foundation of his record-breaking success after studying “every single thing” his Ferrari team-mate does. Leclerc said: "Since the day Lewis arrived in the team, for me, it was a huge opportunity to learn from him. I analysed every single thing he does as a preparation, all the way to when he jumps into the car. But I think the approach is what made him have all the success that he's had in the past."
Sergio Perez says Cadillac are “in a massive hurry to find performance” in their debut Formula 1 season after battling Aston Martin at the Miami Grand Prix, because he expects their rivals to improve and does not want Cadillac to be left behind. Perez said: "Still a long season, but obviously we are in a massive hurry to find performance because we know Aston is going to be improving and we don't want to be left behind."



Laurent Mekies says Red Bull will “happily” recruit from rival teams if it needs specific skills or experience, while still aiming to promote internally as it plans for Gianpiero Lambiase leaving to join McLaren. Mekies said: "If and when we need to go and get a specific set of skills or experience from some of our dear competitors around the pit lane, we will do it. We go and give the best chance to our talents and if we need to go elsewhere to inject, we will do it happily."

Mercedes third driver Fred Vesti said he completed close to 1,000 laps on the simulator during the five-week break between the Japanese and Miami Grands Prix. Vesti said: "Closer to a thousand, I think, before Miami. And also, after. I flew straight back here to Brackley, straight back into the sim."

Carlos Sainz says Formula 1 and FIA bosses need to address “DRS train” style racing created by the new active aero system in 2026, after he felt overtaking was effectively impossible when the car ahead was in “straight mode” in Miami. Sainz said: "I think we just need to find a solution to when the car in front is in [straight] mode, as overtaking is impossible. It is very similar to the DRS train, and maybe we could find something, but the racing has never really been the problem of these regulations."



Lewis Hamilton says Pirelli should use tyre blankets on full wet tyres, after asking for them to be fitted during a “painful” wet-weather tyre test at Ferrari’s Fiorano track. Lewis Hamilton said: "Fiorano was painful because it was 300 laps over two days. They've made a change to the blankets for the intermediates, and that's something I suggested and pushed for it and it was amazing. It was great to see them take a step, and I've also said that they have to put the blankets back on the extreme [wet] tyres when it is the slipperiest of conditions."

Laurent Mekies says Red Bull have made a “definitive step forward”, pointing to a much smaller gap to pole position in qualifying at the Miami Grand Prix compared with Japan and China. Mekies said: "Yes, there is a definitive step forward. We left Japan 1.2 seconds away from pole, China 1.0 seconds away from pole. So to see us this weekend qualifying six tenths away from pole on Friday and less than two tenths away from pole on Saturday is a big indication of the size of our progress. What number is the correct one? We don't know, but compared to where we were, it's something much better than anything we have been able to show this year."

Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies said the team’s stronger pace in Miami was helped by work during the five-week break to give Max Verstappen and Isack Hadjar a more consistent car they could push with confidence, alongside its usual development upgrades. Mekies said: "After Suzuka on Sunday night, we said, look, regardless of our performance deficit overall in terms of development, compared to where we were late last year, regardless of that, we do not give, at the moment, a consistent car to our drivers, a car they can push with confidence, lap to lap, corner to corner. That was most of the work that has been done in these five weeks' break, in addition to the normal development."
Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff says Kimi Antonelli’s Miami Grand Prix victory was the Italian’s best race so far and reminded him of his junior-category success, with a “faultless” performance. Wolff said: "I know track limits are on the mistakes. It's easier to calm someone down that is wild, because you won't be able to accelerate a donkey. So for me, that was his best race so far, and it reminds me of his karting days or Formula 4. There were no mistakes."



Fernando Alonso says Aston Martin are right to hold off on bringing small upgrades during their struggling 2026 campaign because marginal gains would not change their position until the team can unlock a much bigger step with its Honda-powered AMR26. Alonso said: "I'm at peace because I understand the situation. The team explained to me that if we bring one or two tenths every race, it doesn't change our position, we are P20 or P19 and the next car is one second in front. So, even if we bring two tenths every race, it doesn't change our position and it's a huge stress in the system, in the budget cap and things like that. Until we don't have one second and a half or two second improvement, it's better not to press the button in production because we waste money."

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