
Formula 1 teams have entered a five-week break after the cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi Arabia races due to ongoing conflict in the Middle East. While not a traditional summer shutdown, the pause offers a mix of opportunities and setbacks for the grid’s top competitors.
Who loses out – Mercedes
Mercedes, dominant in the opening rounds of the 2026 season, stands to lose the most from the enforced gap. The team would have had the chance to consolidate its lead in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.
Toto Wolff, Mercedes team principal, acknowledged the setback but remained focused:
“People have learned now how to optimise these systems to their benefit, and Miami is going to be a restart for me.”
Mercedes-powered customer teams are also catching up in exploiting the new power units, which could narrow the performance gap during the break.
Who benefits – McLaren and Williams
Teams chasing Mercedes, such as McLaren, view the pause as a welcome opportunity to complete key upgrades ahead of the Miami Grand Prix. McLaren’s early-season reliability issues—particularly battery problems—limited performance in the Chinese Grand Prix, but the team has shown improvement in Japan.
Williams, struggling with an overweight chassis and aero deficiencies, can also leverage the break to develop the FW47 and fine-tune its Mercedes power units. Team principal James Vowles described Japan as a “line in the sand” for ongoing upgrades, giving the team a focused development window.
Mixed impact – Aston Martin
Aston Martin faces a more nuanced picture. While the break allows Honda, its power unit supplier, to implement crucial reliability fixes, the race team loses valuable track time needed to understand and optimize the AMR26.
Trackside chief engineer Mike Krack stressed the challenges:
“We cannot produce miracles in five weeks… but we will try everything to reduce the gap.”
Looking ahead to Miami
The month-long pause provides all teams with a chance to reset, strategize, and prepare for the next stage of the 2026 season. While Mercedes will aim to maintain its edge, teams like McLaren and Williams hope to capitalize on the opportunity to close the performance gap.
Fans can expect an intensified development battle as the grid reconvenes in Miami, with upgrades and strategy adjustments shaping the fight for the championship.
