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2026 Austrian GP F1: Driver Ratings & Analysis – Russell Dominates, Verstappen Fights Back, Ferrari in the Shadows

2026 Austrian GP driver ratings: an impeccable Russell, a stunning Verstappen from 5th on the grid. Full analysis of every key performer at the Red Bull Ring.

Published
June 30, 2026
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5 min
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George Russell crosses the finish line at the 2026 Austrian GP at the Red Bull Ring ahead of Max Verstappen

George Russell crosses the finish line at the 2026 Austrian GP at the Red Bull Ring ahead of Max Verstappen

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2026 Austrian GP: The Verdict from the Red Bull Ring

The 2026 Austrian Grand Prix delivered a masterclass in motorsport at the Red Bull Ring, with standout performances spread right across the grid. From the front row to the tail-enders, the Austrian weekend was a vivid reminder of just how fiercely competitive this Formula 1 season has become. We break down the key performances driver by driver, drawing on the ratings from Edd Straw at The Race and reinterpreting them through the passionate and critical lens of Mondo Ferrari F1.

George Russell: Pole Position Makes All the Difference

Started: 1st – Finished: 1st

George Russell has well and truly confirmed himself as a world-class operator. The Mercedes driver built his Austrian victory in qualifying, producing a sublime final lap in Q3 to snatch pole position despite losing around a tenth and a half to a yellow flag. His reaction to the caution — right on the limit but perfectly within the parameters set by the FIA — was lightning-fast and ultimately decisive.

In the race, Russell managed his advantage with tactical intelligence, keeping both Max Verstappen and Kimi Antonelli at bay without ever looking truly troubled. Yes, his raw race pace was marginally inferior to those chasing him, but leading a grand prix demands conservative tyre management that inevitably flatters the numbers of those behind. The conclusion is straightforward: Russell's pole lap was the cornerstone of a near-perfect weekend.

Max Verstappen: The Champion Never Gives Up

Started: 5th – Finished: 2nd

If Russell won, Verstappen arguably impressed even more. The Dutchman transformed what could have been a disastrous weekend into something quite extraordinary. A rear wing failure caused a crash on his final Q3 run and left him starting from fifth, but from the very first corner the four-time world champion began his charge with his trademark ferocity, picking off positions in the opening laps.

In terms of outright pace, Verstappen was comfortably on par with the Mercedes cars, and in the closing stages he pushed right onto Russell's rear wing without quite being able to make the move stick. Red Bull, to their credit, took full responsibility for the technical failure that caused the qualifying shunt, completely exonerating their driver. A second place that tastes very much like a moral victory.

Bortoleto: The Revelation of the Weekend

Started: 12th – Finished: 11th

The name on everyone's lips after this weekend — at least for those paying close attention — is Gabriel Bortoleto. The young Brazilian produced arguably the most remarkable qualifying lap of the entire weekend, hauling an Audi that is not particularly well-suited to the Red Bull Ring all the way to 12th, with a three-tenth advantage over team-mate Nico Hülkenberg spread evenly throughout the lap. In the race, despite losing ground to Esteban Ocon in the early stages, he kept pushing and extracted everything a car still very much in development had to offer. This weekend should serve as a reminder: Bortoleto is a genuinely exceptional talent.

Isack Hadjar: The Best of the Midfield Bunch

Started: 9th – Finished: 9th

In the battle through the midfield, Isack Hadjar proved the sharpest of the lot in his Racing Bull. The Frenchman had the measure of team-mate Lindblad throughout the entire weekend, keeping his head even when Lindblad ignored team orders to pass him during an energy management phase. Hadjar's response was the best possible one: he simply kept driving cleanly and quickly. Ninth place is a faithful reflection of where the car genuinely stood in this context.

Oscar Piastri: McLaren's Steady Climb

Started: 7th – Finished: 4th

Fourth place for Oscar Piastri was probably the ceiling for a McLaren at this Austrian Grand Prix. The Australian showed stronger race pace than team-mate Lando Norris, reinforcing the impression that he has made significant strides in low-grip conditions — an area that had cost him dearly in the previous season. There were minor regrets in qualifying, where a scrappy final lap left him behind Norris when the true pace suggested it should have been the other way around. His path to fourth was also helped along by Ferrari's strategic difficulties — a detail that does not go unnoticed.

The Ferrari Chapter: Shadows Over the Red

And that, of course, is the chapter that cuts closest to home for every supporter and observer of the Scuderia. The 2026 Austrian Grand Prix was not a happy weekend for Ferrari. The strategic missteps that emerged during the race shaped the final result in ways that should not be acceptable at this level, handing an unexpected gift to their rivals. Piastri himself was a direct beneficiary of Ferrari's troubles in securing that fourth place.

The situation demands serious reflection. If Ferrari are to return to the front of the grid, they simply cannot afford to hand away precious points through questionable operational decisions. The car has genuine competitive potential — but that potential must be backed by flawless pit-wall management and a strategy that is both bold and clear-headed. One without the other is not enough.

What the Austrian GP Tells Us About the 2026 Championship

The Red Bull Ring has confirmed several trends that have been building throughout the season:

  • Mercedes are back as a dominant force, with Russell in magnificent form.
  • Red Bull and Verstappen remain desperately dangerous even when fortune turns against them.
  • Audi are growing race by race, and Bortoleto is proving a far greater asset than many anticipated.
  • McLaren are banking solid points but do not yet look capable of consistently challenging Mercedes and Red Bull.
  • Ferrari must rediscover consistency and cohesion, both on the track and over the pit wall.

Conclusions: A Championship Wide Open, A Ferrari That Must React

The 2026 Austrian GP will be remembered as a weekend of high technical and sporting quality, with Russell the undisputed star and Verstappen once again conjuring applause from the most unpromising of starting points. For Ferrari, however, this is a weekend to be filed away quickly — but not before being dissected thoroughly, with every lesson extracted and acted upon before the next race on the calendar.

The championship still has a long way to go, and nothing is decided. But the Scuderia must rediscover the solidity and competitive edge that have always defined their DNA. The fans are waiting. And the track, as ever, shows no mercy.

Source: The Race

Source: The Race

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