Having said that, Mercedes’ struggles in its troubled ground-effect era to correlate upgrades have made its F1 chief Toto Wolff somewhat cautious.
“Yes, something is coming, or rather the bigger update will come in Canada,” he said. “Now we have to make sure it actually works. On paper it’s easy to say you’re three or four tenths faster. But it has to show on track and on the stopwatch.”
McLaren isn’t done yet either, having decided to split its upgrades across Miami and Montreal. It’s not quite an even split, as Motorsport.com understands the Woking squad deployed around 60% of its upgrades in Florida with another 40% coming this week, centred around a new front wing. Given the importance of a front wing on the entire aero performance, it could still be a powerful weapon as McLaren aims to improve its aerodynamic efficiency, which is particularly key on Montreal’s many straights.
McLaren’s general upwards form curve over the past four weekends, which is also down to cleaner race weekend execution and getting a handle on its complex customer engines, has been a cause for optimism, and the effectiveness of part one of its upgrade package has handed the papaya squad another boost.
| Australia | Russell P1 | Piastri P5 | +0.862s |
| China Sprint | Russell P1 | Norris P4 | +0.621s |
| China | Russell P1 | Piastri P5 | +0.486s |
| Japan | Antonelli P1 | Piastri P3 | +0.354s |
| Miami Sprint | Antonelli P2 | Norris P1 | -0.222s |
| Miami | Antonelli P1 | Norris P4 | +0.385s |
“We feel extremely satisfied with the weekend, very encouraged, not only because in a single weekend we scored more points than the three previous races, but also because of the trend that we have established,” McLaren team principal Andrea Stella said. “We know that we have some more upgrades coming, which are kind of coming from the same group, so we are optimistic that they may allow us to take some further steps forward.
“I think Mercedes still possess a couple of tenths advantage on anybody else. This was the most noticeable today in the race and [in grand prix qualifying]. I think in the first sprint section of the weekend, for some reason Mercedes didn’t express its full potential.
“So, I think Mercedes is still the best team, probably because we don’t have many high speed corners here it’s less noticeable than some other tracks. But I think they also did a good job of optimising what they had after having learned from the sprint qualifying and the sprint race.”
What last year’s Canadian Grand Prix tell us
Stella’s observation of Mercedes’ real strengths is an interesting one. As McLaren has largely gotten on par with the works team on power unit usage, and even did a better job in Miami sprint qualifying, it has become more and more obvious that the Mercedes W17 isn’t just a one-trick pony, but a well rounded car that performs well in high-speed corners as well as in a straight line.
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, George Russell, Mercedes
That would make the next two rounds, on outliers like stop-start Canada and low-speed Monaco, two difficult rounds to judge the real pecking order. As last year’s edition tells us, the season’s dominant car doesn’t always win in Montreal, with Russell taking one of two wins on a rare weekend where Mercedes was able to compete with McLaren and Red Bull in cooler conditions, and in the absence of high-speed corners.
With the race being brought forward several weeks this year, the prospect of cold weather is even more pertinent with temperatures as low as 14 degrees a possibility, as well as the likelihood of rain.
Add the complexity of another sprint weekend, and it may well be the case that the effectiveness of the upgrades from either side won’t fully come to light until mid-June’s Barcelona race.
That’s precisely the beauty of the first season under a new regulation cycle, though, as by the time F1 heads to the first of two races in Spain others will undoubtedly bring more parts too. Rather than the concept of a set pecking order, the field is already compact enough to where F1 2026’s relentless, rolling development cycle will cause the competitive picture to ebb and flow from circuit to circuit.
Whether or not Mercedes can really be caught remains anyone’s guess. But expect the month of June to yield more answers than Canada could possibly provide.
Read Also:
Mercedes is temporarily banning Kimi Antonelli from the Nurburgring, here’s why
Can George Russell take inspiration from Lando Norris in quest for F1 title?
Zak Brown takes FIA fight over Mercedes-Alpine F1 talks public
To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.