Two chaotic opening rounds — Melbourne and Shanghai — produced different winners and left Mercedes as the early benchmark. The first full break of the season has given teams time to assess those lessons, and Suzuka arrives with several clear storylines to follow.
Mercedes drivers jockeying for the edge
George Russell and Kimi Antonelli have already shared wins in the opening rounds: Russell took Australia and the Sprint in China, while Antonelli converted pole in Shanghai into his first F1 victory after Russell encountered qualifying trouble. Mercedes presently look the class of the field, and with development likely to shuffle order quickly, every early point matters. Antonelli’s rapid rise bolsters his confidence and title case, while Toto Wolff’s call for patience—highlighting their different maturity levels—still leaves room for momentum swings at Suzuka.
Hamilton’s renewed form at Ferrari
Shanghai showed how close Ferrari can be: Charles Leclerc won the Sprint, and Lewis Hamilton claimed his first Ferrari podium on Sunday. It suggests Hamilton has recovered both physically and mentally after a difficult 2025, and both Ferraris are capable of podiums and occasional challenges for victory. With Mercedes showing some PU vulnerabilities and McLaren hampered by issues, Suzuka could present windows of opportunity — the question is which Ferrari driver will seize them.
Honda’s home pressure
Aston Martin and Honda have endured a testing start, hampered by reliability that limited running and development. The longer gap before Suzuka should have allowed engineers in Silverstone and Sakura to address problems, and the Japanese race will bring intense scrutiny and vocal local support for Honda. Expect pressure on the factory to demonstrate visible progress at their first home weekend with Aston Martin.
Responses from McLaren and Red Bull
McLaren’s season has been disrupted: Oscar Piastri failed to start in Melbourne and both McLarens suffered separate electrical issues with the Mercedes power unit in China, leaving them short on race mileage and data. Yet McLaren still sit third in the Constructors’ table, narrowly ahead of Haas after Ollie Bearman’s strong start. Red Bull also trailed in Shanghai with RB22 handling issues. Both teams showed promise in testing and will see Suzuka as a vital chance to close the gap to the two leaders.
Fan energy and the circuit’s test
Suzuka remains one of the sport’s most beloved and demanding tracks: high-speed, flowing, figure-of-eight layout with tight, narrow sections that punish mistakes. Japanese fans are famously passionate and creative, filling grandstands early and adding atmosphere. The current cars’ different downforce and power traits will be exposed through Suzuka’s fast, grip-limited corners where errors are costly and overtaking is tricky. After two lively weekends, Suzuka should reveal whether the early trends hold or fresh narratives emerge.