Suzuka Or Bust.
The Setup
Two races down. Two Mercedes one-twos. The 2026 season has settled into an alarmingly comfortable rhythm for the Silver Arrows — and an increasingly uncomfortable one for everyone else.
But here's the thing about Suzuka: it doesn't care who dominated the last two rounds. The legendary figure-of-eight circuit demands aerodynamic balance, mechanical precision, and the kind of driver confidence that either exists or it doesn't. It's the great equaliser — or at least, that's what the other nine teams are desperately hoping.
And there's extra spice this weekend. With Bahrain and Saudi Arabia cancelled due to ongoing conflict in the Middle East, Japan is the last race until May. Whatever happens at Suzuka echoes for five whole weeks. No second chances. No quick fixes. Just five weeks of sitting with the consequences.
Weekend Schedule
Suzuka Fast Facts
5 Storylines To Watch
Max's Unbeaten Suzuka Streak 👑
Verstappen has won every Japanese GP since F1 returned post-COVID — four in a row. His qualifying record here is equally untouchable. The car is a mess in 2026, but at a track that rewards driver feel over raw horsepower? Never write off the man who owns this place.
Can Mercedes Be Stopped? 🥈
Suzuka's high-speed flowing sections are a very different test to Melbourne or Shanghai. Ferrari's upgrades are coming — and overtaking here is notoriously difficult, which could actually play into their hands if they can qualify near the front.
McLaren Just Need To Start 🙏
Australia: Norris 51 seconds behind the winner. China: both cars didn't even make the grid. The first objective at Suzuka has been stated bluntly by McLaren themselves — get both cars to the formation lap. That's it. That's the mission.
Ferrari's Macarena Wing Returns 💃
After being asked to remove it mid-weekend in China, Ferrari are reportedly bringing a revised version of their rotating Halo winglet to Suzuka. Whether the FIA approves it this time is another question entirely. The drama never ends in Maranello.
Antonelli vs Russell: The Gloves Come Off? 🥊
Russell leads by just 4 points over his 19-year-old teammate. Toto Wolff insists they're "at different stages of maturity" — but Antonelli has already won a Grand Prix and taken the youngest pole position in F1 history. The teammate war is brewing, and Suzuka is a perfect arena.
Championship Going Into Japan
| POS | DRIVER | TEAM | PTS | TREND |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | George Russell | Mercedes | 51 | ▲ |
| 2 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 47 | ▲▲ |
| 3 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 34 | — |
| 4 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 27 | ▲ |
| 5 | Ollie Bearman | Haas | 18 | ▲ Surprise! |
| 6 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 12 | ▼▼ |
| — | Lando Norris | McLaren | 10 | ▼ DNS |
| — | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 0 | ▼ 0 laps in 2026 |
Four consecutive wins. Four consecutive poles. Max Verstappen has been utterly dominant at Suzuka since F1 returned. The car is nowhere near where it needs to be in 2026 — but on this specific track, with this specific driver? Don't count him out.
McLaren's Suzuka Mission Briefing
✅ McLaren To-Do List: Japan 2026
- ☐ Get both cars to the formation lap (non-negotiable)
- ☐ Actually start the race (see above)
- ☐ Score points with at least one car
- ☐ Remind the world they dominated 2025
- ☐ Give Piastri his first racing lap of 2026
- ☐ Don't let Zak Brown make another rallying cry video
Team Heat Check Heading In
LOcO Prediction
Suzuka is the most beautiful, brutal circuit on the calendar. It doesn't forgive bad cars, bad setups, or bad days. That's great news for the fans and terrible news for half the grid.
If Mercedes win again, the 2026 season might already be over — in spirit, if not mathematically. Ferrari need a result. Red Bull need a miracle. McLaren need a functioning power unit. And Aston Martin need a doctor for Fernando Alonso's hands.
Whatever happens, it echoes for five weeks. No pressure.
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