Mercedes aims to dominate again in China as F1

Mercedes aims to dominate again in China as F1

Formula 1 heads to China celebrating vast numbers of overtakes, even as drivers debate how meaningful they are.

Ahead of the Chinese Grand Prix and the first sprint race of the season Saturday, Max Verstappen said it’s “a jungle out there” as teams adapt to the new way of racing.

Instead of racking up hours on a state-of-the-art simulator, Verstappen joked his practice now focused on collecting Mario Kart’s speed-boosting mushrooms to adapt to F1’s new reliance on electrical power boosts.

Ferrari debuts ‘Macarena’

George Russell is the driver to beat in Shanghai after his dominant win in Australia last week, and Mercedes will be in contention for another 1-2 finish in China.

It was the same story at Friday’s opening practice with Russell clocking the fastest time in the one-hour session – 1 minute, 32.741 seconds – followed by teammate Kimi Antonelli (1:32.861). McLaren was next quickest headed by defending Formula 1 champion Lando Norris (1:33.296) and Oscar Piastri (1:33.472).

All eyes were on Ferrari in the first practice as it used a unique rear wing which rotates upside-down for more speed on the straights.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc had the fifth quickest time (1:33.599) followed by Lewis Hamilton (1:34.129). Hamilton struggled early in the session, touched tires with Norris on one lap, and also spun as he lost control on another lap.

Dubbed the “flip-flop” or “Macarena,” it was used briefly in testing, dropped for Australia, and is the sort of innovation which could help Leclerc and Hamilton take the fight to Mercedes. It could also disrupt the airflow and hinder cars following close behind.

Four-time Formula 1 champion Max Verstappen had the eighth quickest time (1:34.541) in his Red Bull, but was almost two seconds off Russell’s pace.

Changes on the way

F1’s governing body, the FIA, could take stock of how the racing is going and make changes, potentially even in time for the Japanese Grand Prix later this month.

One gripe so far has been the lack of control by drivers of when the electrical power kicks in and how much is used.

They can’t stop the power being deployed in typical straight-line driving and can only add an extra boost, which in Australia meant cars finishing the formation lwith an empty battery and lacking pace at the start. That’s “not a lot of fun and also quite dangerous,” Verstappen said Thursday.A related issue ended home hero Oscar Piastri’s race before it began in Australia, when the extra power kicked in unexpectedly and tipped him into the barriers before he even reached the grid.

If F1 can’t race next month in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia, which remain on the schedule for now despite the Iran war, it would leave a five-week gap in the calendar, which teams could use to refine any changes.

Zhou a boost for Cadillac

There hasn’t been a Chinese driver on the grid since Zhou Guanyu left Sauber at the end of 2024, but he’s still a big celebrity in his home country. As reserve driver for Cadillac, he could give the new team extra recognition in a key market after its solid but unspectacular debut in Australia.

  • Published On Mar 13, 2026 at 10:52 AM IST

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