F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Wolff reveals where Mercedes is beating its rivals in Shanghai

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff made no effort to hide his satisfaction after Sprint qualifying for the Chinese Grand Prix, where the Silver Arrows once again flexed their early-season strength.

After a dominant start to the 2026 campaign in Australia, George Russell and Kimi Antonelli delivered another statement performance in Shanghai by locking out the front row for Saturday’s sprint event.

Russell’s margin over the chasing pack – more than half a second ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris – left rivals searching for answers.

For Wolff, the performance is confirmation that Mercedes’ winter efforts are translating into real trackside advantage.

"I’m really satisfied, or we can be satisfied with how it went. There’s a healthy gap to the others. But for me, sprint qualifying and also the sprint race feel a bit like the small race of the weekend," Wolff told Sky.

"Tomorrow is the real qualifying and Sunday is the grand prix. If we could carry this performance forward there, that would of course be great."

Where Mercedes is making the difference

While the raw lap times were eye-catching, Wolff revealed the real secret behind Mercedes’ pace: the corners.

"I think our big advantage here is mainly in the corners. You can see it in certain cases: [Pierre] Gasly, for example, was the fastest on the straights, but our advantage comes in the corners,” the Austrian explained.

That strength has become increasingly evident in Shanghai’s technical sections. Data from the lap shows Mercedes sacrificing a little peak straight-line speed in order to carry higher minimum speeds through the bends – particularly through the sweeping Turn 6 and the tight Turn 11.

The result is earlier throttle application and stronger acceleration on exit, allowing Russell and Antonelli to claw back time even when rivals appear quicker on the straights.

It’s a finely tuned balance that appears to have placed Mercedes comfortably ahead of both McLaren and Scuderia Ferrari in sprint qualifying trim.

A long-term bet paying off

According to Wolff, the foundation for Mercedes’ current advantage may actually have been laid months ago.

While many teams pushed their 2025 projects deep into last season, Mercedes made the bold decision to shift focus to the 2026 regulations earlier – a move that now seems to be paying dividends.

"We've seen in the past teams that have said that we concentrate everything into the next year and then it failed,” he said.

“I remember the BMW days where they could have competed for a championship, and then came around with a double diffuser the following year and they left."

"We put a lot of effort into the into the '26 car, maybe a bit earlier than some of the others. But I'm really happy the integration of power unit and chassis works well."

Wolff also pointed to the advantages enjoyed by fully integrated manufacturers – something Mercedes shares with rivals Ferrari and Audi.

"You can see Ferrari, which is an integrated structure and Audi also as a works team that has certain advantages because you learn early. But then what I'm really pleased with is how the car drives."

"I mean, you see the onboard, the car is on rails, and most of the lap time gain that we have is in the corners."

For now, Mercedes’ rivals are left trying to decode a car that appears to glide through Shanghai’s corners – and a team that seems to have timed its technical gamble perfectly.

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Michael Delaney

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