Alexander Albon hit a groundhog during practice

Andrea Kimi Antonelli headed a disrupted opening practice session in Montreal which was extended after two red flags.

The longest disruption was caused after Alexander Albon crashed at the exit of turn seven. The Williams driver struck an unfortunate groundhog which was crossing the track.

The poor animal went underneath Albon’s front-left wheel, causing a loss of grip which sent him into the wall. He came to a rest with substantial damage to the left-hand side of his FW48. “I am so fucking unlucky,” lamented Albon before climbing out.

The session had already been stopped earlier when Liam Lawson came to a stop at turn four with a technical problem in his Racing Bulls. The marshals’ attempt to recover his car was delayed as its clutch disengagement system did not work, which led to him being reported to the stewards.

In order to make up for the time lost in the sole practice session of the weekend, race control allowed drivers an extra 19 minutes. That proved no help to Lawson or Albon, nor to Franco Colapinto, who spent the entire session in his garage due to a problem with his Alpine’s power unit.

Drivers favoured the hard compound tyre for much of the session. McLaren briefly led the way before the Mercedes drivers forged ahead by well over half a second. Andrea Kimi Antonelli led the times at this stage, a 1’14.392 putting him just four hundredths of a second ahead of his team mate.

George Russell was the first of the front-runners to switch to the soft tyres, producing a 1’13.850 which temporarily restored him to the top of the times. But moments later Antonelli took nearly half a second off his team mate’s mark with a 1’13.402, showing noticeably impressive commitment through the final chicane as the dusty track gave up more grip.

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Although Russell gained three-tenths of a second on a later run, he subsequently spun off at turn two. However Esteban Ocon did a more comprehensive job when he struck the barrier on the inside between turns four and five. The Haas driver took the nose off his car, causing the third red flag of the session.

This time the session was not extended. But it did restart with enough time left for drivers to join the track and perform practice starts, though Ocon was noted by race control for leaving the pit lane under a red light.

Behind the Mercedes drivers, Lewis Hamilton completed a lap on softs but was over three-quarters of a second slower in third place. Charles Leclerc in the other Ferrari took fourth, narrowly ahead of Max Verstappen, though several drivers encountered traffic or yellow flags on their soft tyre runs.

Oscar Piastri locked a tyre during his flying lap on soft tyres and ended up seventh behind his team mate. Fernando Alonso put his Aston Martin in the rare heights of 10th after completing his soft tyre run early.

2026 Canadian Grand Prix first practice result

P.#DriverTeamModelTimeGapLaps
112Andrea Kimi AntonelliMercedesW171’13.40233
263George RussellMercedesW171’13.5440.14235
344Lewis HamiltonFerrariSF-261’14.1760.77436
416Charles LeclercFerrariSF-261’14.3550.95336
53Max VerstappenRed Bull-Red Bull-FordRB221’14.3660.96431
61Lando NorrisMcLaren-MercedesMCL401’14.7991.39732
781Oscar PiastriMcLaren-MercedesMCL401’14.9631.56132
841Arvid LindbladRacing Bulls-Red Bull-Ford031’15.4522.05033
927Nico HulkenbergAudiR261’15.6982.29628
1014Fernando AlonsoAston Martin-HondaAMR261’15.8632.46131
115Gabriel BortoletoAudiR261’16.2142.81233
126Isack HadjarRed Bull-Red Bull-FordRB221’16.2532.85129
1331Esteban OconHaas-FerrariVF-261’16.4973.09532
1423Alexander AlbonWilliams-MercedesFW481’16.6423.24015
1555Carlos Sainz JnrWilliams-MercedesFW481’16.6603.25836
1610Pierre GaslyAlpine-MercedesA5261’16.8093.40729
1718Lance StrollAston Martin-HondaAMR261’16.9783.57630
1830Liam LawsonRacing Bulls-Red Bull-Ford031’17.4314.0295
1987Oliver BearmanHaas-FerrariVF-261’17.7704.36826
2077Valtteri BottasCadillac-FerrariMAC-261’17.8684.46628
2111Sergio PerezCadillac-FerrariMAC-261’17.9264.52428
2243Franco ColapintoAlpine-MercedesA526No time1

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2026 Canadian Grand Prix

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Keith Collantine

Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 – when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring journalist, Keith began running the site full-time in 2010, achieving a long-held ambition to dedicate his full attention to his passion for motor racing. View all posts by Keith Collantine