
George Russell was all smiles after securing pole position for the Australian Grand Prix, hailing a “great day” for Mercedes as the squad delivered a commanding front-row lockout in Melbourne.
At Albert Park, Russell topped all three qualifying segments before sealing pole with a superb lap of 1m18.518s, placing him nearly three tenths clear of team-mate Kimi Antonelli.
The result confirmed Mercedes’ status as one of the early benchmarks of the 2026 season, something Russell admitted felt especially satisfying after months of anticipation.
“It was a great day,” the 28-year-old reflected after qualifying. “We knew there was a lot of potential in the car, but until you get to this first Saturday of the season you never know.
“It really came alive this afternoon, especially when the track temp cooled – we know we sort of tend to favour those conditions.
“I’m also really happy to have Kimi here next to me as well because it’s been such a hard job from all the team to deliver this car and they did an amazing job in the garage as well today, so all in all a really good day.”
Antonelli Bounces Back from Crash Drama
The front-row result was even more remarkable considering Antonelli’s dramatic start to Saturday. The young Italian had crashed heavily during final practice, leaving Mercedes mechanics in a frantic race against time to rebuild his car before qualifying.
Their efforts paid off in spectacular fashion as Antonelli recovered to claim second on the grid.

"Yeah, it's been a very, very stressful day," Antonelli explained after qualifying. "Unfortunately, in FP3, I went into the wall but the guys, the mechanics today were the heroes to put the car back on track.
"And we couldn't even set up the car, we just went out and just managed to put it on the front row. So I'm really happy with that.
"It was not easy. I had to dig deep. But yeah, I need to have a clean weekend next time because I definitely compromised a little bit qualifying. But we have a race tomorrow to look ahead and a good result is possible."
Eyes On an Unpredictable Race
Behind the Mercedes pair, Isack Hadjar secured an impressive third place for Red Bull Racing, with Charles Leclerc lining up fourth for Scuderia Ferrari.
Despite his dominant performance in qualifying, Russell warned that Sunday’s race could still produce plenty of surprises as drivers continue adapting to Formula 1’s new technical regulations.

“I’m excited for the race tomorrow and I think it can bring some quite exciting racing,” he explained.
“Also for you guys in the crowd that’s always amazing every time we come to Melbourne, so thank you so much for all of that support for all of us, and hopefully we can deliver a good race.
“I think a lot of the simple things in the past, like race starts and pit stops, are a hell of a lot more challenging with these new cars.
“I said it to the team in the garage at the beginning of Q3 there, let’s just have a clean session because who knows what’s going to happen tomorrow.
“Obviously we’ll all try and work hard tonight. [Today was] a really great day – we’re in the best place possible.”
For Mercedes, however, the mood is unmistakably optimistic. After a long winter of development, the Silver Arrows have arrived in Melbourne with a car capable of delivering – and a driver ready to lead the charge from pole.
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