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Formula 1 Japanese GP

F1 Japanese GP live commentary and updates: Race day

Follow along for updates from the 2026 F1 Japanese Grand Prix

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

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Stick with us here for post-race reax – like Gabrielle, we're Going Nowhere...

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Lars Baron / LAT Images via Getty Images

P20, meanwhile, was Alex Albon, who made six pitstops through the race – the latter five coming in a flurry during the final laps.

Arvid Lindblad in P14. That will be disappointing for him, one of several drivers to be screwed by pitting under green-flag conditions before that Safety Car.

"It's too early to talk about the championship," Antonelli says in parc ferme. 1996 world champion Damon Hill is on post-race interview duty here. He's now an ambassador for the Williams team.

Just turning up and needing a beautifully concise precis of what went down? Here's our Japanese GP report, fresh out of the oven.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Pierre Gasly, Alpine, Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Pierre Gasly, Alpine, Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Lars Baron / LAT Images via Getty Images

What have we learned from this race? Here's five quick takeaways from the Japanese GP.

Race start

Race start

Photo by: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP via Getty Images

"We were deploying more into 13, you were deploying more into 16," Antonelli tells Leclerc in the 'green room'. Saves the Ferrari engineers a job there.

Antonelli arrives on the podium and, crucially, is announced under the correct name this week.

Social media had some fun with Bob Constanduros having a little shunt in China and calling him Kimi Raikkonen.

As you might expect, Oliver Bearman has been excused post-race media 'pen' duties but team boss Ayao Komatsu will be speaking later. ICYMI, Bearman escaped a 50G impact with the barrier at the Spoon with a bruised knee.

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images

And a painful race outcome for Red Bull as it drops behind Alpine in the constructors' championship. That was a quietly brilliant race by Pierre Gasly – he was running strongly in the top 10 anyway, so pitting under the Safety Car merely helped him consolidate that.

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Pierre Gasly, Alpine

Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Pierre Gasly, Alpine

Photo by: Alastair Staley / LAT Images via Getty Images

Franco Colapinto has been speaking about that incident with Oliver Bearman.

"It was really strange to be honest, I was a little sitting duck," he said.

"I think the speed difference is so big and so large. It's almost like you're in an outlap and another guy is in a push.

"It's really odd. It's a corner that we are doing flat and he was like more than 50k quicker than me. So it's very strange.

"I think it gets really sketchy when the straights are not straight and he's turning because we are not on a straight lane, we are kind of turning. And once I look in the mirror he was spinning in the grass. Even spinning he overtook me, so imagine the speed difference.

"I think at some points it becomes really dangerous. I'm glad he's okay."

Colapinto confirmed "I never moved [on the racing line] or anything like that."

 

 

VOTE FOR YOUR DRIVER OF THE DAY

It's not too late to vote for the best driver in the Japanese GP on Motorsport.com.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Andy Hone/ LAT Images via Getty Images

CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS AFTER JAPAN

If, like Mr Gradgrind in Hard Times, you hunger for facts, feast your eyes on our championship round-up. Hard viewing for Red Bull...

Oscar Piastri, McLaren Team

Oscar Piastri, McLaren Team

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images

Max Verstappen has been asked to be less critical of the new regulations but he's still managed to squeeze in a dig. In the pen he's just said his mood is like the new F1 power units: "It starts okay in the morning and then it goes mehhhhhhh…"

Fernando Alonso has this to say on his first finish of the season:

"We get to Australia, you know, 100% sure that we could not finish the race. The following week in China, 95% convinced we could not finish the race.

"And now in race three, we finish the race. It's not the pace that we want. But, yeah, there is some progress and some work in the team to keep improving.

"So, yeah, hopefully the first step for everyone to motivate both factors is to keep improving."

Verstappen on the Bearman accident:

"That's what you get with these things. I mean one guy is completely stuck with no power basically and then the other one uses the mushroom mode and it can be 50, 60 kilometres difference. It's really, really big."

'Mushroom mode', for readers of a certain age, is a reference to the Mario Kart series of Nintendo games and one of the power boosts therein. Of the drivers, only Lewis Hamilton is old enough to remember F-Zero on the SNES. But I digress.

Anyhow, while you'll probably see this quote pop up on a lot of outlets, Max did say he hadn't actually seen the crash.

GASLY BUSINESS

Pierre Gasly has summed up his race thus:

"I think it's the perfect weekend, because seventh in quali was definitely the best position we could get, and in the race it was the same. The top 6 was out of reach, but at the same time we finished only 7 seconds behind Lewis, which for me is a very positive sign.

"And then 19 seconds in front of Liam, who was P9, so we were clearly more on the better train, in the better group. And then yeah, as we said, it was a pretty intense race. 

"We all know Max is never giving up, and for 28 laps he was just putting a lot of pressure. We were strong in different parts of the lap, so yeah, it just made my life not too easy.

"Every single lap coming into 16, making sure in Turn 1, taking the gaps after the first sector, Turn 11 he was pretty strong, so I had to play a bit smart with my battery whenever I could see it was getting close. I think overall we managed it very well, but it was definitely pretty intense."

So we've got a five-week break coming up owning to the disappearance of Bahrain and Saudi Arabia from the calendar (BTW, we should point out that stories claiming Bahrain will be squeezed in later in the year are bunk).

Carlos Sainz reckons F1 and the FIA should use that time to consider some changes on safety grounds, based on today's accident.

"I think this five-week break is very good for Formula 1 because of the accident we saw today with Bearman," he told DAZN TV. 

"We drivers had already been warning the FIA and FOM that it was only a matter of time before an accident like that happened. We’re doing 30, 40 or 50 km/h [more] using the boost, and this crash was only a matter of time. I think it was 50Gs [impact] at Suzuka with the run-off area.

"Now imagine we go to Las Vegas, we go to Baku, and the same problem Ollie had – where Franco caught him off guard – we’ll have it on another circuit at higher speeds, as we’ll have in Vegas or Baku, and without a run-off area.

"So I really hope that Formula 1 reconsiders and that the teams don’t get too defensive, because it’s clear that this regulation has loopholes and problems that need to be sorted out before we go to Miami and before we go to other types of circuits."

IT'S A WRAP

So on that note, we're shutting down operations in the Lord Hesletine Theatre for this weekend. Join us again for more fun and frolics in Miami!

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Sutton Images via Getty Images

By: Stuart Codling

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