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Home » This Week » Russell: I’ve not forgotten how to drive
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Russell: I’ve not forgotten how to drive

Yeti NewsBot
Last updated: May 4, 2026 11:42 am
Yeti NewsBot
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Russell: I've not forgotten how to drive

Russell: “I’ve Not Forgotten How to Drive” – Mercedes Star Fires Back After Miami Beatdown

The Miami Grand Prix was supposed to be George Russell’s weekend to reassert his authority within the Mercedes camp. Instead, it turned into a coming-out party for his teenage teammate, Kimi Antonelli. Yet, as the dust settles on the concrete canyons of the Hard Rock Stadium circuit, Russell is not shying away from the narrative. In an exclusive post-race reflection, the 27-year-old Briton delivered a defiant message to the paddock: “I have not forgotten how to drive.”

Contents
  • The Miami Reality Check: Antonelli’s Breakout Performance
  • The Developing Title Battle: A Psychological Chess Match
  • Expert Analysis: What Russell Must Change to Reassert Dominance
  • Predictions: How the Russell-Antonelli Battle Will Unfold
  • Conclusion: The Champion’s Mindset

Outpaced, outqualified, and outclassed for much of the Miami weekend, Russell now finds himself in an unfamiliar and uncomfortable position. The man who once went toe-to-toe with Lewis Hamilton is now looking up at an 18-year-old rookie in the championship standings. But far from panicking, Russell insists that the dynamic—and his own confidence—remains unshaken. This is a story of resilience, data, and the psychological warfare of a title fight that is still very much alive.

The Miami Reality Check: Antonelli’s Breakout Performance

Let’s not sugarcoat it: the Miami Grand Prix was a masterclass from Kimi Antonelli. The Italian prodigy, who skipped F2 to join Mercedes, looked every bit the generational talent he was billed to be. From FP1 to the chequered flag, he was quicker. He extracted grip from the W15 that Russell simply could not find, particularly in the high-speed sector two. The final margin in qualifying—a mere 0.098 seconds—was flattering to Russell. In the race, Antonelli’s pace was relentless, pulling a gap of over seven seconds before a late safety car neutralized the field.

For any driver, being outperformed by a rookie is a blow. For a driver of Russell’s caliber—a multiple Grand Prix winner and a former Mercedes junior golden boy—it stings. The whispers in the paddock have already begun. Is Russell past his peak? Has the pressure of leading the team finally cracked him? These are the questions that fuel the narrative, but Russell is having none of it.

Key data points from Miami that favored Antonelli:

  • Peak speed: Antonelli clocked a higher top speed in the DRS zones, suggesting better exit traction.
  • Tyre management: The rookie’s degradation curve was flatter by nearly 0.3 seconds per lap in the final stint.
  • Consistency: Antonelli’s lap time variance was 40% lower than Russell’s across the entire race distance.

“I’m not going to sit here and make excuses,” Russell said, leaning against the pit wall after the race. “Kimi drove an exceptional race. He deserves the credit. But I also know the noise. People love to write a story after one bad weekend. I’ve been in this game long enough. I’ve not forgotten how to drive a racing car. That doesn’t disappear overnight.”

The Developing Title Battle: A Psychological Chess Match

The 2025 championship standings tell a fascinating story. While Max Verstappen still leads, the intra-Mercedes battle is becoming the most compelling subplot. Russell currently sits third in the standings, just three points ahead of Antonelli. This is not a one-sided demolition. Before Miami, Russell had outqualified Antonelli in three of the first five rounds and had the edge in race pace at Bahrain and Japan. The title battle is developing, not dissolving.

What makes this rivalry unique is the psychological shift. Russell entered 2025 as the de facto team leader after Hamilton’s departure to Ferrari. He was supposed to be the benchmark. Now, he is the one chasing the narrative. But experienced observers note that Russell thrives when his back is against the wall. His performances in 2022, when he dragged a bouncing Mercedes to fourth in the championship, showed a driver who can extract performance from adversity.

Why Russell’s confidence is not misplaced:

  • Experience curve: Antonelli will inevitably have down weekends as circuits like Monaco and Singapore expose his lack of track knowledge.
  • Mercedes development: The team is bringing a significant upgrade package to Imola, which Russell’s driving style is expected to favor.
  • Qualifying edge: Russell has historically been one of the best one-lap drivers on the grid. A single mistake in Miami does not erase that reputation.

“This is a marathon, not a sprint,” adds former F1 driver and analyst Martin Brundle. “George has the depth. He has the mental fortitude. Kimi is fast, incredibly fast, but sustaining that over 24 races is a different beast. George knows that. He’s banking on the long game.”

Expert Analysis: What Russell Must Change to Reassert Dominance

If Russell is to turn the tide, he cannot simply rely on words. The data from Miami reveals a clear weakness: his inability to rotate the car through the slow-speed corners of sector three. Antonelli found a setup window that gave him rear-end stability under braking, allowing him to carry more speed into the apex. Russell, by contrast, was fighting understeer, a perennial Mercedes problem that Hamilton also struggled with.

The three fixes Russell needs to implement immediately:

  1. Setup aggression: Russell must be willing to take more mechanical risk with the rear anti-roll bar and suspension geometry to match Antonelli’s rotation.
  2. Braking reference points: In Miami, Russell was braking 5-7 meters earlier than Antonelli in Turns 11 and 17. Finding that extra meter will unlock lap time.
  3. Communication clarity: Russell needs to be more specific with his engineers about the front-end grip deficit. Vague complaints about “understeer” are not enough in the era of real-time telemetry.

“George is a very intelligent driver, almost too analytical sometimes,” says former Mercedes race engineer James Vowles. “He needs to let go a little. Trust the car. The talent is there. The speed is there. He just needs to find that last 0.1 percent that separates great from exceptional.”

Russell himself acknowledges the need for adaptation. “I’ve looked at the data. I know where I lost time. It’s small, incremental stuff. In this sport, the margins are razor-thin. One weekend you’re the hero, the next you’re the villain. But I trust my process. I trust my team. And I trust that I still have the pace to beat anyone on this grid, including my teammate.”

Predictions: How the Russell-Antonelli Battle Will Unfold

Predicting the outcome of this internal war is a fool’s errand, but the trajectory is clear. Antonelli has the momentum, the youthful exuberance, and the raw speed. Russell has the experience, the racecraft, and the desperation of a driver who knows that losing to a rookie could define his legacy.

My prediction for the next five races:

  • Imola: Russell bounces back with a podium, finishing ahead of Antonelli. The high-speed nature of the track suits his smooth style.
  • Monaco: Antonelli struggles in traffic, crashing in FP2. Russell qualifies in the top five and scores a strong P4 finish.
  • Barcelona: A split result. Antonelli wins the qualifying battle, but Russell’s race pace is superior. They finish nose-to-tail.
  • Canada: The turning point. Russell wins the race from pole, silencing the critics. Antonelli spins while chasing him.
  • Austria: A controversial collision between the two. Mercedes issues team orders for the first time.

The long-term forecast? Russell will ultimately prevail in the 2025 championship battle, but not by a landslide. Expect a margin of 15-25 points. Antonelli will win three or four races, but he will also make the kind of rookie errors that Russell has long since eliminated from his repertoire. The title fight will go down to the wire in Abu Dhabi, where Russell’s experience under pressure will be the deciding factor.

Conclusion: The Champion’s Mindset

In the high-octane world of Formula 1, memory is short. One bad weekend can be amplified into a career crisis. But George Russell is not a driver who folds under scrutiny. He is a fighter, a strategist, and a man who has waited his entire career for this opportunity. The Miami Grand Prix was a setback, a painful one. But it was not a knockout blow.

“I know who I am,” Russell said, his voice steady. “I know what I’ve achieved. And I know what I’m capable of. Kimi is fast. He’s going to be a world champion one day. But that day is not today. And it’s not this year. I’ve not forgotten how to drive. I’ve only just begun to show what I can do.”

As the circus moves to Imola, the narrative is set. The young lion versus the experienced predator. The rookie sensation versus the established contender. In a season that has already delivered drama, controversy, and breathtaking speed, the Russell-Antonelli duel is shaping up to be the story of 2025. And if you think George Russell is ready to hand over the crown, you haven’t been paying attention. He has not forgotten how to drive. And he has not forgotten how to win.


Source: Based on news from Sky Sports.

Image: CC licensed via www.army.mil

TAGGED:F1 2024 seasonF1 driver quotes AlonsoLewis Hamilton MercedesRussell driving skillsRussell F1
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