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Villeneuve on why Mercedes ‘should be worried now’

The silver dominance of Mercedes might look unshakable on paper after the first three races of the 2026 F1 season, but according to Jacques Villeneuve, the cracks in the Brackley armor are starting to show.

While Kimi Antonelli stood on the top step in Japan, the 1997 World Champion believes the celebration in the Mercedes garage should have been mitigated by a sense of impending dread.

Mercedes has swept the first three races of 2026, but Suzuka provided a reality check that the paddock’s resident firebrand pundit was quick to highlight.

Despite the win, the sight of Oscar Piastri’s McLaren leading George Russell on pure merit during the opening stint has shifted the narrative from "if" Mercedes can be caught to "when."

The illusion of safety

For the first two rounds of the season, Mercedes appeared to be operating in a different dimension. However, the high-speed, technical demands of Suzuka – a track that strips away aerodynamic pretenses – exposed a narrowing gap.

Villeneuve argues that the comfortable cushion Mercedes enjoyed in March has now deflated.

“We've seen McLaren being very good at responding last year,” Villeneuve told F1 TV, noting the Woking squad’s history of rapid development.

“But I would be worried if I were Mercedes now, because the first two races, [it was] easy. They felt safe, they don't feel safe after this race. The gap is not as big as they expected, mostly on a track that is very car-dependent.”

For a team that has set the gold standard for a decade, a "lucky" win via a well-timed Safety Car for Antonelli isn't enough to satisfy Villeneuve’s harsh criteria for success.

“This is a track where, if your car is good, you'll be in front, and a weekend for Mercedes where you don't finish first and second is not a good weekend. A normal weekend for Mercedes is first and second. [Japan] was a big off.”

A political shield for the Silver Arrows?

As the FIA prepares for a critical summit on April 9 to discuss potential emergency rule changes –triggered by Oliver Bearman’s terrifying 50G impact at Suzuka – the battle is moving from the asphalt to the boardroom.

While safety is the headline, the "political game" is the subtext.

©Mercedes

Jos Verstappen, never one to shy away from a jab at his son’s rivals, suggests that Toto Wolff will fight tooth and nail to keep the 2026 regulations exactly as they are to protect their current advantage.

“It is also a political game, changes are not always easy to achieve. Toto Wolff and Mercedes will want to stick to these regulations for as long as possible,” the elder Verstappen told De Telegraaf.

According to Jos, the advantage Mercedes currently holds isn't just about the car on track, but a massive disparity in R&D that they aren't keen to share.

“They have invested a lot of money and time in this and clearly have a head start, also in terms of knowledge compared to their own customer teams, for example. That is their right of course, they can now benefit from this,” he added.

Whether Mercedes can maintain that "right" to lead will depend on whether McLaren’s Suzuka surge was a one-off or the beginning of a silver eclipse.

If Villeneuve is right, the "easy" days for Brackley might officially be over.

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Michael Delaney

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