
2026. 6. 22. · 10:24
Barcelona GP 2026 — Hamilton finally wins for Ferrari as Mercedes' title defence cracks
Lewis Hamilton delivered his 106th career win and first for Ferrari at the 2026 Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix, executing a three-stop strategy to beat George Russell by 19.561 seconds — the season's largest winning margin — while championship leader Kimi Antonelli retired four laps from the end, trimming his title lead over Russell from 66 to 50 points. Eight drivers failed to finish in a race that exposed Ferrari's upgraded SF-26 as the class leader in cornering and raised serious reliability questions at Mercedes.
Round 7 of the 2026 FIA Formula 1 World Championship finished on June 14 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, and Lewis Hamilton made history. His 106th career win, and his first for Scuderia Ferrari, came by a margin of 19.561 seconds — the largest winning gap of the season so far. 1 Behind him, George Russell (Mercedes) finished second, and Lando Norris (McLaren) inherited third — making it the first all-British F1 podium since the 1968 United States Grand Prix. 2 Championship leader Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) retired four laps from the end, his title lead over Russell trimmed from 66 to 50 points.
Eight drivers failed to finish. Only 15 of 22 starters were classified. It was, per Pirelli's performance chief Simone Berra, "one of the most interesting races since the start of the season." 3
Qualifying: Russell takes pole, Leclerc walls it in Q3

George Russell put the Mercedes W17 on pole with a lap that was 0.064 seconds clear of the field. 1 Hamilton qualified alongside him in P2, having recovered from a troubled FP3 to split the two Mercedes on the front row. Kimi Antonelli — sitting out FP1 to give rookie Fred Vesti track time — missed the front row for the first time this season, qualifying P3 around three tenths off Russell. 4
Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) crashed at the start of his first Q3 flying lap and fell to tenth. Edd Straw of The Race called it "an avoidable qualifying shunt — a major error," ranking Leclerc last among all 22 drivers for the weekend. 5 Oscar Piastri (McLaren) qualified P4, 0.089 seconds behind teammate Norris in P3, with Max Verstappen (Red Bull Racing) fifth. 4
Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) qualified last in P22 but started from the pit lane after his team replaced the ESME and MGU-K components, a Parc Ferme modification that forfeits grid position. 6
Race: three stops, a VSC, and 19 seconds

Russell led off the line on medium tyres. Hamilton, starting on softs, ran in P2 behind him while Antonelli on mediums sat third. On Lap 12, Ferrari blinked first: Hamilton pitted for hards, becoming the first of the frontrunners to stop. Russell covered him the next lap. Ferrari's plan, as it transpired, was not a two-stop but a three. 3
On Lap 23, Hamilton pitted again for mediums. The move was critical. Russell was still on his first set of hards — tyres that were degrading visibly. On fresher rubber, Hamilton was immediately 2.0 to 2.5 seconds per lap faster. 7 He closed the gap from behind, forcing Mercedes into reactive mode. "Lewis was the quickest afterwards," Toto Wolff (Mercedes team principal) said post-race. "So even if we would have come out in front of him, it would have been very tricky to hold him behind." 3
Lap 37: the VSC that settled the argument
Fernando Alonso's battery-failed Aston Martin coasted to a stop on Lap 37, triggering a Virtual Safety Car. Hamilton, who at that moment held a 17.963-second buffer over Russell, pitted under the VSC for a fresh set of hards — his third stop of the afternoon. He emerged from the pits with a 2.939-second lead over P2 and 24 laps of fresh rubber. 3 From there the race was over. In the laps 43 to 62, before Antonelli's retirement triggered a second VSC, Hamilton's average pace advantage was 0.849 seconds per lap, outpacing the expected 0.75-second tyre-offset benefit and confirming genuine car superiority. 3
The debate about whether Hamilton needed the VSC has a clear answer. Both Ferrari and Mercedes ran post-race simulations that reached the same conclusion: Hamilton would have won without it, taking the lead two to three laps from the end and winning by around one to two seconds instead of 19. 3 The VSC did not hand him the win; it made the win un-catchable. Pirelli's chief engineer Simone Berra offered the only meaningful counter-argument: "With the three stops, the risk is to finish in traffic... to overtake three drivers, and fast drivers like Norris, Antonelli and Russell, would have been a different story." 3
Fred Vasseur (Ferrari team principal) put it simply: "Our strategy was aggressive but that is what you can afford to do when you have the pace for the win." 6
Mercedes' race unravelled in stages
Behind Hamilton, the two Mercedes were fighting each other. For roughly six laps around half-distance, Russell and Antonelli battled nose-to-tail while Hamilton was reducing his gap from 18 seconds to 7.6 seconds. Wolff acknowledged the intra-team fight "cost us the win" and said the team "need to discuss with the drivers" how to handle such situations against a rival on a different strategy. 8 Russell pushed back: "It did cost us a little bit, but I think Lewis with the VSC was always destined to come out ahead." 8
Russell's final stint was also compromised by a mechanical error at his last pit stop: the front wing adjustor gun malfunctioned, adding more front wing than requested and shifting the car's balance from understeer to unexpected oversteer. 3 Andrew Shovlin (Mercedes trackside engineering director) was blunt: "We lacked the speed to control the race and that's what cost us the win." 6
Antonelli, who had been running consistently faster than Russell throughout the race, finally passed his teammate for P2 at Turn 1 on Lap 61. Two laps later, his Mercedes stopped on track with an electrical shutdown. 9 His first DNF of the 2026 season, in the race where Hamilton delivered Ferrari their first win in months. "I feel a bit empty to be fair right now," Antonelli said. "But it's what it is." 7 He was also handed a post-race 5-second penalty for four track-limits infringements at Turn 10 — the fourth violation having been flagged by McLaren to race control. Classified 16th, five laps down. 10
Full race classification
| Pos | Driver | Team | Gap | Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 1:32:28.105 | 25 |
| 2 | George Russell | Mercedes | +19.561s | 18 |
| 3 | Lando Norris | McLaren | +23.719s | 15 |
| 4 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull Racing | +40.497s | 12 |
| 5 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | +58.661s | 10 |
| 6 | Isack Hadjar | Red Bull Racing | +1 lap | 8 |
| 7 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine | +1 lap | 6 |
| 8 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls | +1 lap | 4 |
| 9 | Arvid Lindblad | Racing Bulls | +1 lap | 2 |
| 10 | Franco Colapinto | Alpine | +1 lap | 1 |
| DNF | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | Lap 62 (electrical) | — |
| DNF | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | Late race (hydraulic) | — |
| DNF | Oliver Bearman | Haas | Late race (reliability) | — |
| DNF | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin | Lap 37 (battery) | — |
| DNF | Nico Hulkenberg | Audi | ~Lap 28 (safety switch) | — |
| DNF | Valtteri Bottas | Cadillac | Early (precautionary) | — |
| DNF | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin | Lap 6 (gearbox) | — |
| NC | Alexander Albon | Williams | Technical issue / testing | — |
Fastest lap: Lewis Hamilton. Hadjar recovered from P14 on the grid to P6. Colapinto classified P10 after a post-race penalty dropped him from P8. 1
Eight DNFs: causes confirmed
The 8 retirements (plus Albon's non-classification) each had a distinct cause. 6
Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) — Lap 6, gearbox: First retirement of the day. "I couldn't get third or fourth gear for the last couple of laps," Stroll said. 6
Valtteri Bottas (Cadillac) — early, precautionary: Retired early as a precaution due to unspecified technical issues. 6
Nico Hulkenberg (Audi) — ~Lap 28, safety fire switch: Liam Lawson ran slightly wide at Turn 12, putting a wheel into the gravel, which kicked stones directly into Hulkenberg's car and struck the emergency safety fire switch — triggering an immediate full system shutdown. "Everything switched off instantly," Hulkenberg said. 11 Allan McNish (Audi Racing Director) called it "an automatic safety function designed to shut the car down in an emergency situation." 11
Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) — Lap 37, battery failure: The same retirement that triggered the race-defining VSC. Alonso had started from the pit lane after his team replaced the ESME and MGU-K. He pulled off onto the grass. "We had an issue with the battery and had to retire the car. We are struggling with our performance, and we know this is our situation until around the summer break," he said. 6 Alonso had said before the race weekend that it would "probably be my last race in Barcelona" and he would "make a decision after the summer" on his future. 12 That retirement — which inadvertently handed his old rival a free pit stop — produced what the r/formula1 community called "the absolute delicious cinema of Alonso causing a picture perfect VSC for his old friend."
Alexander Albon (Williams) — NC, technical issue: Retired mid-race with a technical/camera fault. The team used the remaining laps for data-collection testing runs. Albon finished 8 laps behind and was not classified. He described the exercise as "just sliding around learning nothing." 13
Oliver Bearman (Haas) — late race, reliability: Retired with an unspecified car issue. Had been running P13 and would likely have inherited P11. Haas team principal Ayao Komatsu said: "This weekend the car wasn't quick enough and I think operationally we weren't good enough." 6
Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) — Lap 62, electrical shutdown: Described above. First DNF of his 2026 season. 9
Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) — late race, hydraulic failure: Complete hydraulic failure — Leclerc lost brakes, power steering, and gear shifts simultaneously. The car went into the gravel at Turn 2 and crawled back to the pit lane. "It's not only power steering. In general I had no brakes, no power steering, no shifts — so I guess it's something with the hydraulic there," Leclerc said. 14 His second consecutive DNF following Monaco.
What Barcelona exposed about the cars
Barcelona — with its medium-speed corners, sustained high-speed sections, and reliably high track temperatures (exceeding 50°C before the formation lap) — has long served as a reliable development benchmark. 15

Ferrari arrived with a significant aero upgrade that Norris called the "class leader" in cornering performance. 15 The SF-26's tyre degradation advantage was central to the three-stop working at all — at 0.15 seconds of deg per lap, stopping an extra time built a genuine compound advantage. Ferrari still has a presumed engine deployment deficit: qualifying telemetry showed Russell sacrificing less energy into Turn 1 and running faster on all straights. 15
Mercedes completed its race with one car — Russell's — and left concerned. Antonelli's Barcelona failure was the second PU/electrical DNF in three races (Russell had the same in Canada). Russell specifically called reliability "a big concern." The W17 also showed pace limitations on the hard compound, with rear tyre overheating forcing Russell onto the back foot in his second and third stints. 15
McLaren had a difficult weekend by its recent standards. Norris conceded it was "tough to realise we're not at the same level," and Piastri finished 35 seconds behind his own teammate without being able to explain the deficit. The MCL40's tyre-management advantage — which won Miami — was not evident at Barcelona's higher-energy demands. Development priority is getting the tyres into the right operating range at varied circuits. 15
Red Bull Racing finished P4 and P6 via Verstappen and Hadjar. Verstappen, on a three-stop of his own, acknowledged the car is "not particularly great in high-speed corners" and "we're not going to solve it with just changing the set-up." He nonetheless ranked third in Edd Straw's driver ratings — described as slightly overachieving in the fourth-best car. 5
Aston Martin produced the weekend's lowest point. Both cars retired. Alonso described the package as "the worst car, married to the worst engine," and The Race's analysis found the team a full second slower than Cadillac — currently the second-slowest team. A major update package is expected around the summer break. 15
Championship implications
Antonelli's DNF, Hamilton's win, and Russell's P2 reshuffled the top three. Hamilton moved ahead of Russell into second in the Drivers' Championship; Russell closed the gap on Antonelli from 68 to 50 points. 13
Drivers' Championship — after Round 7:
| Pos | Driver | Team | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 156 |
| 2 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 115 |
| 3 | George Russell | Mercedes | 106 |
| 4 | Lando Norris | McLaren | 73 |
| 5 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 70 |
| 6 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull Racing | 55 |
Standings calculated from confirmed Round 6 totals (Antonelli 156, Hamilton 90, Russell 88) plus Barcelona points scored. Antonelli leads Hamilton by 41 points; Russell trails Antonelli by 50 — down from 66 after Monaco. 13
Antonelli still leads — comfortably, but the margin the field is chasing has closed. Going into Barcelona, Russell needed to take 4.25 points per race off Antonelli to catch him by season end. After the DNF and Russell's P2, that requirement has dropped to approximately 3.3 points per race. 13 The numbers are more favourable for Russell — but The Race's Valentin Khorounzhiy noted sharply that "you win a title brick by brick and you lose it in big chunks." Mercedes has now had Russell retire in Canada and Antonelli retire in Barcelona in consecutive races. 16
The community's reaction to Mercedes' denial of favouritism toward Antonelli — issued the following week — was almost uniformly sceptical. One highly-upvoted comment read: "We love all our drivers equally. Kimi, Lewis, and the third guy." 17
Mercedes and the Monaco review
On June 18, four days after the Barcelona race, Mercedes formally withdrew its petition for a Right of Review over Russell's Monaco Grand Prix penalties. The petition — which had been filed during the Barcelona race weekend — was abandoned after collaborative discussions with the FIA and Formula 1 management. Mercedes stated both bodies showed "determination to review the unique circumstances" of Monaco. McLaren and Red Bull continue pursuing the matter at the FIA International Court of Appeal. 18
Hamilton, Ferrari, and what win 106 means
"I've been hoping and praying for this moment and working towards it really hard with the team and just such great dedication from everybody," Hamilton said on the podium radio. 7 "This is an incredibly special moment. Winning my first race with Ferrari is something I've dreamt about since I was a child." 6
Much of the post-race discussion centred on Hamilton's relationship with race engineer Carlo Santi — his replacement for Peter Bonnington (Bono), who stayed at Mercedes with Antonelli. In a post-race interview, Hamilton described the partnership with unusual candour:
"It's great to be able to connect with an engineer other than what I used to have. Bono is now doing it with Kimmy, and it's really great to be able to share that experience with Carlo on that stage. He's very, very quiet; you could tell it's hard for him to express his emotions. He's just smiley. And I like to think that this has probably reignited the love that he has for being an engineer, as it has done for me as a driver." 19
Seven analysts on The Race's post-race panel agreed that the win was earned rather than gifted. Gary Anderson wrote: "For Hamilton, winning a grand prix for Ferrari is probably even better than any of his other 105 wins." Scott Mitchell-Malm added that Hamilton's Ferrari move "cannot go down as a failure." 16 Josh Suttill declared: "The retirement questions should be silenced." 16
On r/formula1, the victory announcement post reached 52,139 upvotes — the highest engagement for any race post this season. 20 A photo of Verstappen congratulating Hamilton backstage drew 27,263 upvotes and the community description: "Classy Verstappen." 21 Russell posted on Instagram: "Huge congrats to Lewis! First 1-2-3 British podium for almost 60 years which is pretty cool." 22
Norris's reaction to Antonelli's retirement was characteristically unvarnished: "Yeah, unfortunate for Kimi. That's life in 2026, I'm afraid." 23 It divided the community — some saw it as cold, others as an honest read of a season in which DNFs have hit almost every driver.
The winning margin of 19.561 seconds is the largest of the 2026 season, surpassing Antonelli's 13.722-second victory in Japan. For context: the 2026 season margins in order have been 2.974s (Australia), 5.515s (China), 13.722s (Japan), 3.264s (Miami), 10.768s (Canada), 6.271s (Monaco), 19.561s (Barcelona). 3
콘텐츠 카드를 불러오는 중…
The Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring takes place June 27–29, two weeks after Barcelona. Mercedes will need to resolve its power unit reliability before then — questions about whether the team is pushing the W17's PU too hard grew louder after back-to-back electrical failures in cool Montreal and hot Barcelona. 24 Ferrari, meanwhile, will arrive in Austria with more information about whether the Barcelona upgrade package is a one-circuit advantage or a step-change that holds at the Red Bull Ring's medium-downforce demands.
Hamilton's trajectory entering the summer break has changed. Vasseur's post-race comment was measured but revealing: "We were not nowhere two weeks ago and we are not world champions today." 6 That kind of careful framing, from a team principal whose car just won by nearly 20 seconds, tells you something about where Ferrari expects to be for the rest of the season.
Cover image: Ferrari celebration at the 2026 Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix. AI-generated illustration.
참고 출처
- 1Hamilton claims stellar maiden Grand Prix victory for Ferrari
- 2The 2026 Barcelona GP marks the first time since the 1968 US GP
- 3Hamilton's real Barcelona pace advantage explained
- 4Barcelona lowdown: all the key moments
- 5Edd Straw's 2026 F1 Barcelona Grand Prix driver rankings
- 6What the teams said – Race day in Barcelona-Catalunya
- 7Jolyon Palmer's Analysis: Hamilton's first win for Ferrari
- 8Wolff hints Mercedes might've won Barcelona GP with team orders
- 9Mercedes reveal cause of title-damaging Kimi Antonelli retirement
- 10Antonelli's post-race Barcelona penalty and McLaren's role in it
- 11The unusual and unfortunate reason why Hulkenberg's race ended
- 12Fernando Alonso: "This will probably be my last race in Barcelona."
- 13Winners and losers from F1's 2026 Barcelona Grand Prix
- 14Leclerc laments tough Barcelona-Catalunya GP weekend
- 15What Barcelona exposed about every F1 team's car
- 16What Hamilton's first Ferrari win means for F1 — our verdict
- 17Mercedes shoots down favouritism speculation
- 18Mercedes backs out of bid to get Monaco result reviewed
- 19Lewis had very kind words on his relationship with Carlo Santi
- 20Lewis Hamilton wins the 2026 Barcelona Grand Prix — r/formula1
- 21Max congratulating Lewis on the win — r/formula1
- 22George Russell Instagram — r/formula1
- 23Lando Norris reaction to Antonelli retirement — r/formula1
- 24AutoRacer: Does Mercedes have to slow down? — r/formula1
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