Miami Is Where the Season Gets Real.
Three races in, the story is clear: Mercedes wins everything, Antonelli leads the championship, and everybody else is chasing. Miami changes the format. A Sprint race on Saturday, a Grand Prix on Sunday, two results in 48 hours. It is the first time this season that one weekend can produce two data points on the same cars on the same track. The questions from the first three rounds do not go away in Miami. They get answered twice.
A street-track spectacular built around the Hard Rock Stadium complex in Miami Gardens. Nineteen corners, three DRS zones, and a flowing layout that rewards both car balance and aggressive racecraft. Turn 14-15 chicane is the signature overtaking point. The long back straight between Turns 10 and 11 is where the engine power gap between teams shows itself most clearly.
Source: F1.com official circuit guide + Jolpica F1 API race history
Source: F1.com official 2026 calendar + Jolpica F1 API schedule
DRIVERS
| Pos | Driver | Team | Pts | Wins | Podiums |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 72 | 2 | 3 |
| 2 | George Russell | Mercedes | 63 | 1 | 2 |
| 3 | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 49 | 0 | 2 |
| 4 | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 41 | 0 | 1 |
| 5 | Lando Norris | McLaren | 25 | 0 | 0 |
| 6 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 21 | 0 | 1 |
| 7 | Oliver Bearman | Haas | 17 | 0 | 0 |
| 8 | Pierre Gasly | Alpine | 15 | 0 | 0 |
| 9 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 12 | 0 | 0 |
| 10 | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls | 10 | 0 | 0 |
CONSTRUCTORS
| Pos | Constructor | Pts | Wins | Podiums |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mercedes | 135 | 3 | 5 |
| 2 | Ferrari | 90 | 0 | 3 |
| 3 | McLaren | 46 | 0 | 1 |
| 4 | Haas | 18 | 0 | 0 |
| 5 | Alpine | 16 | 0 | 0 |
| 6 | Red Bull | 16 | 0 | 0 |
Cadillac, Aston Martin: 0 pts after 3 rounds | Source: Jolpica F1 API
Kimi Antonelli leads the drivers' championship by nine points over George Russell. That gap swung 13 points in Antonelli's direction at Suzuka in a single afternoon. Russell leads on consistency: he has scored points in every race, finished on the podium twice, and won in Australia. Antonelli leads on pace: two wins, the fastest lap at Suzuka, and the pole position. At Miami, they share the same car and the same strategy room. One of them finishes ahead of the other every weekend. The question is which one, and whether the gap is beginning to matter to Mercedes in how they manage the race. Sprint weekends add eight available points before Sunday even begins. That is not a small variable when nine points separate them.
Japan was McLaren's first clean race weekend of 2026. Piastri second, Norris fifth. Twenty-eight points scored after three total from the first two rounds. The car was clearly quick enough at Suzuka. Prediction #012 made in Issue 006 calls McLaren to win Miami. Oscar Piastri won here in 2025. Lando Norris won here in 2024. The McLaren has won more Miami Grands Prix than any other car except Verstappen's Red Bull, and the car that beat those Red Bulls arrived in Japan looking recovered. Prediction #010 also still lives: McLaren must not fail to score points in either Round 4 or Round 5 to avoid proving us right. That prediction and Prediction #012 are now in direct tension.
Twelve points from three races. Q2 elimination at Suzuka. No race lead in 2026. Max Verstappen arrives at Miami having won here twice, in 2022 and 2023, and holds the circuit lap record of 1:29.708 set in that 2023 victory. But the car that produced those results no longer exists in the form that produced them. The RBPT Ford package has been unreliable and slow. Miami's three DRS zones and long back straight will test the engine again. Verstappen needs a result that tells the story differently. He is ninth in the championship, one point ahead of Liam Lawson. That is not a sentence anyone in Formula One expected to write in April.
Three races. Three consecutive P3-P4 or P3-P6 double hauls for Ferrari. Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton are consistent, disciplined, and accumulating points. Leclerc is third in the championship on 49 points, Hamilton fourth on 41. The gap between Ferrari and Mercedes in the constructors' championship is 45 points after three rounds. They have not challenged for a win. They have not missed a podium. The question going into Miami is whether their consistency at slower circuits translates to a street-track-style layout where DRS deployment and straight-line speed are more exposed. If Ferrari can produce a pole time or race lead here, the ceiling conversation changes. If they repeat another P3-P6, the pattern calcifies.
The 11th team on the F1 grid has zero constructor points through three rounds. Miami is, as close as F1 gets, a home race for an American team. Sergio Perez finished seventeenth in Japan. Valtteri Bottas was classified nineteenth, one lap down. The Hard Rock Stadium crowd in Miami Gardens will include the loudest Cadillac fan base on the planet. The gap from P10 to P11 in the constructors' championship is not a points gap. It is an unbridgeable distance. Miami will not change that in one weekend. But it is the circuit where the pressure to show something is highest. Every lap matters here for a team that has yet to show it belongs on the scoresheet.
Kimi Antonelli is already the 2026 World Champion. Three races. Two wins. Championship lead. The fastest car in the fastest team. His only real competition is his own teammate, who drives the same car and has been slightly slower. Ferrari is consistent but not fast enough. McLaren showed pace in Japan but has completed just three of a possible six driver-races this season. Verstappen cannot make Q3. The only scenario where Antonelli does not win this championship involves a catastrophic string of technical failures, and the Mercedes has been flawless across 159 race laps in 2026. He is 19 years old, has won two of three Grands Prix on merit, and currently leads the most experienced racing driver on the grid by nine points. We are not predicting Antonelli wins the championship. We are observing that nothing we have seen in three race weekends gives any evidence he does not.
| Pick | Call | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Sprint Pole | Kimi Antonelli | Pole in Japan, fastest in testing. Sprint qualifying rewards single-lap pace above all else. Mercedes have had the best one-lap package in every session of 2026. |
| Sprint Winner | Lando Norris | Norris won Miami in 2024. Sprint races compress strategy into raw pace and aggression. He has the speed and the track record. He needs a result to stay relevant in the championship conversation. |
| Race Pole | Kimi Antonelli | Has taken pole or front row in every race in 2026. Miami's three DRS zones do not change the qualifying hierarchy. |
| Race Winner | Oscar Piastri | Defending Miami winner. McLaren found its race pace in Japan. Piastri led 16 of 53 laps at Suzuka and should have won without the pit cycle call. Miami is the circuit where McLaren have won two of the last two Grands Prix. Prediction #012 tracks here. |
| Podium Lock | George Russell | Has finished on the podium in two of three races. The Mercedes has pace enough to be on every podium. Russell rarely loses a position he does not have to. |
| Value Pick | Pierre Gasly | P7 in Japan was Alpine's season best. The Miami layout, with its multiple DRS zones, has historically produced closer midfield battles than Suzuka. Gasly is the best driver in the current midfield tier. |
Verstappen does not finish inside the top six in the Miami Grand Prix. He has twelve points from three races. He could not make Q3 at a track he owns. Miami's three DRS zones expose engine power, and the RBPT Ford power deficit becomes most visible on long straights. Starting outside the top ten again would mean passing through a midfield that has grown more competitive since Japan. The car does not have the pace to recover positions at this circuit the way it once did. This is not about Verstappen's talent. It is about the car underneath him. The car is not top six material right now.
Practice 1 and Sprint Qualifying at the Miami International Autodrome. Sprint Qualifying sets the grid for Saturday's 18-lap Sprint race. First read on where the cars sit in 2026 spec on a North American street layout.
Sprint Race (12:00 PM ET) followed by Grand Prix Qualifying (4:00 PM ET). Saturday produces the Sprint result and locks in the Sunday grid in a single afternoon. Eight Sprint points available, twenty-five on Sunday.
Miami Grand Prix, Round 4. Prediction #012 resolves. Prediction #013 resolves. Verstappen's championship position gets a critical data point. McLaren either confirms the Japan resurrection or doesn't. 4:00 PM ET start.
Monday Race Review: Miami debrief. Sprint verdict, race verdict, championship standings updated, predictions ledger reviewed. Round 5 Canada on the horizon.