Toto Wolff says Mercedes need to discuss with George Russell and Kimi Antonelli how they race each other, after their battle at the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix cost the team lap time as they fought Lewis Hamilton. Wolff said: "They raced each other quite hard before George's stop and I think we lost four, five, six seconds to Lewis, and then obviously with the VSC, it changed the order. We tried to race fair in the team game but maybe it cost us the win today and that's something we need to discuss with the drivers, how are we doing it if we're fighting somebody else for a race win."

Mercedes deputy team principal Bradley Lord said a problem during George Russell’s final pit stop left him with an oversteery car and “compromised” his pace in the closing stages of the Barcelona Grand Prix. Bradley Lord said: "It was great to see George, after a difficult run of results in the last few Grands Prix, back at his best, taking pole, and fighting for the race win. Doing that also, notwithstanding the fact that in our final pit stop we actually incorrectly adjusted the front wing, owing to a problem with the adjuster gun, and that meant he was driving with a very, very oversteery balance that certainly compromised his pace in the final stages."
Carlos Sainz says he is weighing up how long he is willing to wait to win again in Formula 1 as Williams struggles for results this season. Sainz said: "It's something I'm working on, also in my head, how long I'm willing to wait to win again in Formula 1. I want that time to be as short as possible."



Carlos Sainz says Williams need to “go back to the drawing board” after what he described as a “realisation” in Barcelona about how far off they are in medium- and high-speed corners. Sainz said: "Looking back at it, I think it was a bit of a shock how far [off] we are in medium and high-speed corners. Partly, it's due to weight, but even more importantly, it's downforce in the car. So I think it was a massive - I don't want to call it a shock, not even a wake-up call, because we knew it, but a realisation that we are really far from where we should be."

Haas driver Oliver Bearman says moving to Italy as a teenager to join the Ferrari Driver Academy, and the structure the team provided, helped him mature quickly. Bearman said: "But I had to mature and grow up very quickly. I was also surrounded by adults all the time: engineers, mechanics, sometimes other drivers, but mainly my trainer. So, I just had to mature to that level because those were the types of people I was spending my time with. It was very crazy, in a good way. That move and the structure that Ferrari gave me really disciplined me into the person I am today."






Mercedes says it has pinpointed a battery-related problem behind the recent race-ending failures that hit George Russell while leading the Canadian Grand Prix and Kimi Antonelli while running second in the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix, and is working on a permanent fix. Technical director James Allison said the issues “sort of originate in the same broad part of the battery” and that Mercedes hopes its fortunes will improve as it “phase[s] in the new modules into the racing season”, adding: “These DNFs are very, very painful.”


Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies said the team is not in “no man’s land” despite Max Verstappen being unable to fight for a podium at last weekend’s Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix. Mekies said: "I would not say we are in no man's land. You know, we are with the top four, fighting. Not every track layout we can fight for podium. We could fight for a podium, obviously, in Canada and in Monaco, but we could not fight for a podium here, that's fair. Nonetheless, I think before the last laps drama, we could beat one Ferrari and one McLaren today was the best we could have done."

McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said the team’s “mission is very clear” to focus on performance, but that it has to keep its reliability standards high after Mercedes power-unit issues. Stella said: "This is McLaren and this is also McLaren, our suppliers and our collaboration with HPP. We need to retain the standards. The mission is very clear. We only want to think about performance, an area of performance in which we also have quite a lot to improve."

Audi racing director Allan McNish says building Audi’s Formula 1 power unit “from the ground up” has been a “very complex situation”, as the manufacturer looks for ways to improve. McNish said: "Certainly, we knew that the first season of the power unit was always going to be difficult, building it from the ground up. It was a very complex situation, and it was never going to be easy to come out with the best power unit overall. Obviously, we're looking at how we can improve that, along with every other aspect of the car and the team as well."

Pierre Gasly said "all the stars seem to align" for Alpine this season as he has taken points from every Formula 1 weekend so far, a run matched on the grid only by Lewis Hamilton. Gasly said: "All the stars seem to align for us. At the minute, I think we are doing – in terms of reliability, everything has been perfect since the start of the year. Touch wood, it is going to continue like that, and we are kind of capitalising on the retirements of other cars."

Lando Norris says George Russell’s “nothing to lose” approach may not be the answer to closing his points gap to Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli in the title race, because different drivers handle pressure in different ways. Norris said: "Everyone thinks differently. Whereas last year I went from not much confidence to, 'what have I got to lose now?' he's gone from feeling quite confident to maybe losing some of that confidence. Every driver has to find their own way of doing it - it's not one thing works for all. We will see if he says he's going around with no pressure now, then we'll see if that helps him or not."


Max Verstappen’s manager Raymond Vermeulen has suggested the Red Bull driver’s 2027 plans could be settled as early as before the summer break, despite Verstappen being under contract to the end of 2028. Speaking to Sport BILD, Vermeulen stressed: “Our contract runs until the end of 2028,” while acknowledging “contracts always contain exit clauses”. Vermeulen added: “We’d like to continue with Red Bull and see Max finish his career there, but he must always have the chance to compete for victories.”

Max Verstappen’s Nürburgring 24 Hours entry has been promoted to 36th in the final 2026 classification after the #84 Lamborghini was disqualified from second place a month after the race. The #84 car was found to have an excessive power output outside the Balance of Performance tolerance range and Red Bull Team Abt has decided not to appeal. The disqualification also reshuffles the podium, with the #34 Aston Martin promoted to second and the #99 BMW to third, behind the winning #80 Mercedes.



Former Formula 1 driver David Coulthard says Charles Leclerc is mature enough to handle the pressure of partnering Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari and will understand he cannot beat the seven-time champion every weekend. Coulthard said: "I think that he's mature enough in his career now to understand that racing against a seven-time world champion, you're certainly not going to beat him all the time. Even if the worst comes to the worst for him in that Lewis continually delivers, gets the wins, wins the championship, Lewis can surely only be around for another two years, three years. I can't imagine he's going to be around for the next five years."



David Coulthard says Carlos Sainz is “definitely eyeballing” where his next Formula 1 opportunity might come from after going from winning grands prix at Ferrari to fighting for points with Williams. Coulthard said: "So, I guess his [Alex Albon's] frustration level will be higher than Carlos, who, let's be frank, he's definitely eyeballing where his next opportunity lies because he's gone from Ferrari winning grands prix to Williams being happy scoring points. He wants to be back there again."

Carlos Sainz said Lewis Hamilton’s breakthrough at Ferrari, sealed by his first win for the team in Barcelona, may be down to the regulation change producing a car that suits Hamilton’s driving style better. Carlos Sainz said: "In the end, it shows that this sport has no secrets. I think we all have a very high level of talent, but with different driving characteristics. Some cars suit us, others don't. He's also benefited from the regulation change because if he'd been stuck with last year's car for another three years, maybe we wouldn't be seeing the Lewis we're seeing this season."

Ferrari is waiting for FIA approval to introduce an upgraded power unit as early as the Austrian Grand Prix, with a third version of its 067/6 engine due to be shipped to Spielberg under the ADUO development provisions. The update further pushes Ferrari’s steel-alloy cylinder-head concept and will run alongside a new Shell fuel developed specifically for that configuration, with the higher combustion temperatures expected to help reduce Ferrari’s internal combustion engine power deficit to Mercedes.

Aston Martin has confirmed Jak Crawford will replace Lance Stroll in FP1 at next weekend’s Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring, as part of F1’s requirement for teams to run rookies in four Friday practice sessions across the season. Crawford said: “It’s great to have another opportunity to drive the AMR26 during a race weekend,” while Aston Martin chief trackside officer Mike Krack added: “Jak continues to play an important role as third driver and this FP1 session is another valuable step in that process.”



Williams driver Carlos Sainz has been spotted commuting around Monaco in a customised Fiat Topolino beach car, swapping his usual supercar garage for the doorless, two-seat electric quadricycle. Footage shared on social media showed Sainz driving the 28mph Topolino with several bespoke touches, including a tartan roof, side ropes and matching tartan interior details, with headrests embroidered with initials.


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