Some driver verdicts on 2026 Formula 1 regulations following Australian Grand Prix

F1 News
Sunday, 08 March 2026 at 10:09
Race-Start-Melbourne-2026

With the first race of the 2026 Formula 1 season, the Australian Grand Prix, now behind us, here are some reactions from the drivers on the new regulations.

Race winner George Russell urged critics to give F1' sweeping new regulations time to prove themselves after the Mercedes driver won the season-opening Australian Grand Prix on ​Sunday.
Leading drivers, including four-time F1 World Champion Max Verstappen and defending Champion Lando Norris, ‌have been scathing of the new hybrid engines which place more emphasis on power management and regeneration.
Russell, who won from pole ahead of Kimi Antonelli in a Mercedes 1-2, said his rivals might feel differently had ​they crossed the line first at Albert Park.
"Everyone's very quick to criticise things. You ​need to give it a shot," he told the post-race press conference. "We’re 22 ⁠drivers. When we’ve had the best cars and we’ve been happiest, everyone moans the racing’s ​rubbish.
"Now drivers aren’t perfectly happy and everyone said it was an amazing race. So you can’t ​have it all."
Norris said the cars had gone from the "best to the worst" after qualifying on Saturday and renewed his criticism after finishing fifth in Sunday's race.

Norris: It's very artificial

Norris-Melbourne-4-2026
"It's a shame, it's very artificial, depending on what the ​power unit decides to do and randomly does at times," he said. "You just get overtaken by ​five cars or you can just do nothing about it sometimes.
"There's nothing we can change about it, so ‌there's ⁠no point in saying any more, but not for me," he lamented.
Verstappen, however, said he hoped Formula 1 and the governing FIA would listen to the complaints and make changes.
He said: "If it's drivers, fans, we just want the best for the sport. It's not that we are critical just to be ​critical.
"We are ​critical for a ⁠reason, we want it to be Formula 1 you know, proper Formula 1 on steroids. Today, of course, again, that was not the case."
Russell ​and third-placed Charles Leclerc of Ferrari fought a thrilling duel at the ​start of ⁠the race, swapping the lead seven times in the first nine laps.
While that was exciting for fans, Leclerc said the new engines had fundamentally changed drivers' approach to overtaking.
The Monegasque said: "Before it was more about ⁠who is ​the bravest at braking the latest. Now ​there’s a bit more of a strategic mind behind every move you make because every boost activation you know you’re ​going to pay the price after that." (Reporting by Ian Ransom)
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