Miami Mayhem.
Three In A Row.
Norris broke the Mercedes streak in the Sprint. Antonelli answered with pole AND the win on Sunday. Verstappen spun. Leclerc got penalised. And a hot McLaren upgrade just made the championship interesting.
The Story
For five weeks we waited. For five weeks the factories worked overtime. McLaren brought their "big, big upgrade." Ferrari shook down their Macarena wing v2 at Monza. Red Bull went into panic mode. And the storm? The forecast lied. The rain that was supposed to flip the season never showed up. Sunday in Miami was hot, dry, and exactly what F1 needed.
What we got instead was Norris winning the Sprint, Antonelli winning the GP, and roughly seventeen plot twists per session. Verstappen spun. Leclerc binned a podium with a track-limits penalty. Hamilton damaged his car on lap one. McLaren are back. The pecking order has reshuffled. And Antonelli has now won three Grands Prix in a row from his first three pole positions — a record only matched by Juan Manuel Fangio and Stirling Moss.
Welcome to the new championship. Here's everything that happened.
The Race Podium
Alex Zanardi — 1966-2026
The motorsport and Paralympic legend passed away on Friday night during the Miami weekend. The paddock came together on Saturday morning with a moment of silence and tributes ahead of the Sprint. Two-time CART champion. F1 driver. Paralympic gold medallist. A man who taught the world what resilience looked like.
Ciao, campione.
The Weekend, Session By Session
The first non-Mercedes pole of 2026.
The five-week break did exactly what McLaren hoped. Lando Norris slammed in a 1:27.869 in SQ3 — the only driver under 1:28 — and McLaren's "big, big upgrade" announced itself with a bang. Antonelli was 0.222s behind in P2. Piastri made it a McLaren-bracketed front row in P3.
The shock wasn't that McLaren were quick. It was that Mercedes weren't dominant. Russell ended sixth. The dynasty cracked.
First non-Mercedes win of 2026. About time.
Norris converted pole, never looked back, and won the 19-lap dash by 3.8 seconds from team-mate Piastri. The first non-Mercedes win of the season. Leclerc completed the podium. Verstappen and Hamilton banged wheels twice (Max ordered to give the place back, then took it again at Turn 17 — classic Max). Antonelli crossed P4 on the road but got a 5-second penalty for four track-limits violations, dropping him to P6.
Russell beat his team-mate, picking up valuable championship points and trimming Antonelli's lead to seven points. The teenager learning the hard way that 2026 is not going to be a coronation tour.
Three races. Three poles. Same kid.
Just hours after his Sprint nightmare, Antonelli silenced everyone with a 1:27.798 to take his third pole position from his first three quali sessions of 2026. The order behind him was extraordinary: Verstappen P2 (yes, that Verstappen!), Leclerc P3, Norris dropped to P4, Russell P5, Hamilton P6, Piastri P7.
The McLarens that had dominated Friday were suddenly mid-grid. The Red Bull that was a "fundamentally broken" car was on the front row. F1 in 2026 has officially become unpredictable.
The race that had everything.
Lights out and the chaos started immediately. Verstappen and Antonelli both locked up into Turn 1 chasing Leclerc, then Max spun trying to recover. Hamilton clattered into Colapinto on lap 2 and lost bodywork. Hadjar binned it at Turn 14 (and slammed his steering wheel in fury). Gasly also crashed out. Two safety cars in the opening laps.
The race was decided at the pit stops. Mercedes pulled the trigger on lap 26 with a "massive undercut", brought Antonelli in a lap before Norris, and a faster stop plus a perfect out-lap put the Italian directly alongside Norris at pit exit. Antonelli used his deployment boost and edged ahead. From there, he held the McLaren at arm's length to take a 3.264-second win.
Behind: Piastri snatched P3 from Leclerc on the final two laps. Then Leclerc spun, kept going, repeatedly cut the track to defend — and copped a 20-second penalty post-race, dropping him from P6 to P8. Russell passed Verstappen and Leclerc late on for P4. Hamilton inherited P6 from his team-mate's penalty.
The 6 Moments That Defined Miami
What They Said
"The pace was strong. The team did a great strategy — we did a massive undercut and managed to bring it home, even though it was not easy."
"It feels like everyone's saying the same thing but ours have really helped this weekend. A massive job for the team in bringing the upgrades. Nice to be back on the top step."
"Kimi is so bad on wheel-to-wheel. He moved under braking. It's unbelievable."
"Max overtook me going off the track."
"This is just the beginning. The road is still long. We are working super hard."
Final Race Classification
🏆 Miami Grand Prix — Final Result (Post-Penalties)
The Championship Picture
📊 Standings After Round 4
Drivers' Championship
Constructors' Championship
Three races into the 2026 season, we thought we knew everything. Mercedes were unbeatable. Antonelli was unstoppable. Red Bull was finished. Ferrari was lost. McLaren was a disappointment. Then Miami happened, and every single one of those narratives got nuanced.
McLaren are back — the upgrade package was as good as the simulator promised. Norris won the Sprint and pushed Antonelli to the limit on Sunday. Verstappen put a Red Bull on the front row in qualifying, which nobody saw coming. Leclerc's pace is real but his discipline isn't. Russell is now properly in the title fight. And Antonelli — with three wins from three poles — just joined a record only Fangio and Moss can lay claim to.
Toto Wolff said before Miami the season was a "restart." He was right. Now we go to Canada in three weeks for round five — with a real championship fight, a third title-contending team, and a 19-year-old kid leading by 20 points who keeps proving he belongs.
F1 came back. F1 is good again.
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