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Winners and losers of F1 Miami grand prix

Yahoo Sports

The fifth edition of the Miami Grand Prix gave Formula 1 another chaotic and competitive weekend around Hard Rock Stadium. The race started three hours earlier than planned because of weather concerns, but the change did not reduce the action on track. Kimi Antonelli turned pole position into another victory, even after losing the lead on the opening lap, while early incidents involving Pierre Gasly and Isack Hadjar reshuffled the field.

The result was a race that produced clear winners, painful losers, and another strong reminder that Miami has become one of the calendar’s most unpredictable stops. Antonelli’s win stood out because it was built on control rather than a perfect start. The Mercedes driver again struggled off the line, but he recovered with a strong strategy call and held off pressure from Lando Norris to win.

That made it his third straight Grand Prix victory from pole, a rare sequence in Formula 1 history. McLaren also left Miami with real momentum after Norris and Oscar Piastri both finished on the podium, while Williams, Alpine, and even the broader championship picture all found reasons to leave encouraged. On the other side, Ferrari, Red Bull’s second seat, Audi, Aston Martin, and George Russell all had weekends that exposed problems they still need to solve.

Miami was not just a race winner’s story. It was also a weekend that showed which teams are building form and which ones are still fighting for answers. MORE: How to live stream Jack Link’s 500: NASCAR, TV channel Winner of the Grand Prix Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes May 2, 2026; Miami Gardens, FL, USA; Mercedes driver Andrea Kimi Antonelli (12) celebrates after winning the pole during qualifying for the F1 Miami Grand Prix at Miami International Autodrome.

Mandatory Credit: Sam Navarro-Imagn Images Kimi Antonelli won the Miami Grand Prix and extended his championship lead to 20 points. He started from pole, lost the lead early, and still recovered to finish first by using a strong undercut and clean race management. The Mercedes driver became only the third racer to win his first three Grands Prix consecutively, joining Damon Hill and Mika Hakkinen.

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