
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve has become George Russell’s happy hunting ground. The problem? His Mercedes teammate has turned into an almighty force.
As Formula 1 moves towards Montreal for the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix, Russell faces a weekend that could define the trajectory of his season.
After watching Kimi Antonelli sweep to three consecutive victories and open a 20-point championship advantage, the 28-year-old Briton arrives at the one track on the calendar where he should, in theory, be untouchable.
Russell won here last year from pole position, whilst also setting the fastest lap. It followed another pole in 2024, when he edged out Max Verstappen on identical lap times by setting his first.
Back-to-back poles at a circuit that rewards precision over single-lap braking zones and chicanes cemented Montreal as Russell territory. Which is precisely why losing to Antonelli this weekend would be so damaging.
Sky Sports F1 commentator David Croft has warned that “if he doesn’t beat team-mate Kimi Antonelli in Canada, alarm bells will be ringing.”
It is a blunt assessment, but one that reflects the stakes. When a driver cannot win on his strongest circuit against a teammate in identical machinery, the excuses evaporate.
Russell versus Antonelli so far
The Italian teenager has been the story of the opening phase of 2026, a 19-year-old who was supposed to learn quietly whilst Russell carried Mercedes’ championship charge. Instead, Antonelli leads the drivers’ standings with 100 points to Russell’s 80.
His three-race winning streak, encompassing China, Japan and Miami, has not been fluky. In Miami, Antonelli out-qualified Russell by 0.399 seconds.
The qualifying head-to-head tells its own story. Antonelli holds a clear advantage in 2026, with a sustained run of poles cementing his reputation as the faster man over a single lap.
In races, the gap is narrower, Russell won the season-opener in Australia by 2.974 seconds over Antonelli, but the points tally reveals who has been more consistent since.
Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff insists Russell “won’t leave a stone unturned” and that the 20-point deficit “won’t deter him,” but those words only amplify the pressure on the next race. Canada is where Russell must respond.








