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George Russell Reveals Unexpected Austria Threat: ‘They Were Flying Fast’

Highlights
- George Russell warns McLaren is a threat at Austrian GP
- McLaren showed strong pace in FP2, on medium and soft tyres
- Kimi Antonelli topped both Friday practice sessions
- Russell finished second in FP1, sixth in FP2
- Red Bull and Ferrari faced technical issues impacting FP1 pace
- Austrian GP will test teams’ setups and race readiness
George Russell flags McLaren as Mercedes’ chief threat after Friday at the Red Bull Ring, citing FP2 speed that positioned the Woking team as the benchmark.
Kimi Antonelli tops both sessions, with Russell second in FP1 and sixth in FP2, underlining a productive yet imperfect start for Mercedes.
McLaren’s range impresses. Lando Norris leads on mediums, and Oscar Piastri runs the soft convincingly, ending just 0.237 seconds behind Antonelli’s reference.

Russell cautions that FP1 pace is flattered. “Lando only ran late, Lewis had problems, and Max had issues,” he notes, tempering early read-throughs.
The Red Bull Ring traditionally suits McLaren’s traits. Norris, last year’s winner, looks comfortable, sharpening Mercedes’ focus for qualifying and race execution, alongside Russell’s ongoing pursuit of redemption.
Mercedes’ baseline appears solid, yet McLaren’s single-lap and long-run profile looks robust. Kerb usage, traction phases, and tyre control could tilt the balance through qualifying’s critical windows.
Red Bull and Ferrari face disrupted FP1s. Limited mileage for Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton muddies comparisons, inflating headline gaps and masking outright potential.

Set-up trade-offs look delicate. The medium shows strong stability, while softs deliver peak grip. Parc fermé after qualifying will lock choices, increasing risk if conditions shift.
Internal dynamics remain in view after Russell’s recent remarks on team calls, adding context to Antonelli’s emergence and Mercedes’ coordination under pressure. See Russell’s comments on team orders.
Mercedes’ recent battery upgrade could matter here. Efficient deployment and harvesting through short straights may unlock marginal gains in qualifying and race trim.
The picture remains fluid. Mercedes must deliver a clean qualifying to suppress McLaren’s momentum, with Russell’s title momentum dependent on converting practice promise.
Visual Summary
Friday sessions
Red Bull
?
Ferrari
✨
(FP1 issues for Max & Lewis)
Can Mercedes respond to McLaren’s attack?

Daniel Miller reports on Formula 1 Grand Prix weekends with race-day analysis, team-radio highlights, and point-standings updates. He explains power-unit upgrades, aerodynamic developments, and driver rivalries in straightforward, SEO-friendly language for a global F1 audience.





