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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
Kieran Jackson

F1 Canadian GP LIVE: Sprint qualifying start time and schedule with Antonelli favourite for pole

Formula 1 heads to Montreal next for the Canadian Grand Prix this weekend - and the third sprint race of the 2026 season.

Kimi Antonelli continued his impressive start to the campaign with his third consecutive victory last time out in Miami. The Italian 19-year-old now has a 20-point lead over Mercedes teammate George Russell, who is eyeing a return to form at a track he won at last year.

PREVIEW: How Hamilton can channel winning spirit of Arsenal in Montreal

McLaren took a big step in Miami, with reigning world champion Lando Norris finishing second and teammate Oscar Piastri in third, while Red Bull’s Max Verstappen qualified on the front row in an improved car.

It was a trickier weekend for Ferrari, with Charles Leclerc punished with post-race penalties and Lewis Hamilton only finishing sixth. Hamilton is a seven-time winner around the Montreal street circuit and won his first-ever F1 race here back in 2007.

Follow live updates with The Independent at the Canadian Grand Prix

F1 CANADIAN GRAND PRIX - LATEST UPDATES

  • Round five of the 2026 F1 season takes place in Canada
  • Montreal also hosts the third sprint weekend of the season
  • Sprint qualifying is at 9:30pm (BST)
  • Kimi Antonelli leads the world championship by 20 points
  • PREVIEW: How Lewis Hamilton can channel winning spirit of Arsenal

How Lewis Hamilton is seeking to evoke Arsenal’s success with Ferrari in Canada

21:11 , Kieran Jackson

For all the celebratory messages of jubilation emanating from the never-ending group of high-profile Arsenal supporters this week – from Sir Keir Starmer and Hugh Lawrie to Piers Morgan and Jess Glynne – Lewis Hamilton’s repost on Instagram was altogether more understated. “COYG,” the 41-year-old said, the common abbreviation for “Come on you Gunners.”

An Arsenal fan since he was five, Hamilton’s football fandom hit the realms of public discourse again four years ago, when he was part of a group of investors which, ultimately, failed to buy Chelsea. Many onlookers seemed stunned, not least Hamilton’s fierce rival Max Verstappen. “I am a PSV fan and I would never buy Ajax,” the Dutchman quipped, before adding: “I thought he was an Arsenal fan? And if you are an Arsenal fan going for Chelsea, that is quite interesting.”

Alas, it never materialised. Hamilton has also dipped his toes in the world of NFL, joining the Denver Broncos ownership group in 2022 after missing out on the Chelsea gig. And the Briton, seven times a champion of the world but only twice a grand prix race winner in the last four years and counting, would be wise to take a leaf out of as many sports as possible in his search for one final rebirth at the top of Formula 1.

Full piece below:

How Lewis Hamilton is seeking to evoke Arsenal’s success with Ferrari in Canada

Constructor standings ahead of Canadian GP

21:06 , Kieran Jackson

1. Mercedes - 180 points

2. Ferrari - 112 points

3. McLaren - 94 points

4. Red Bull - 30 points

5. Alpine - 21 points

6. Haas - 18 points

7. Racing Bulls - 14 points

8. Williams - 5 points

9. Audi - 2 points

10. Cadillac - 0 points

11. Aston Martin - 0 points

VIDEO: Lewis Hamilton on Arsenal

21:00 , Kieran Jackson

Four races in a row? Key details revealed as F1 eyes Bahrain or Saudi ‘reschedule’

20:45 , Kieran Jackson

Formula One is “continuously evaluating” the possibility of reinstating one – if not two – of the Middle Eastern races cancelled last month due to the conflict in the Gulf.

The Bahrain and Saudi Arabian GPs, scheduled for April, were taken off the 2026 calendar in mid-March, a fortnight after Donald Trump targeted missiles at Iranian military and government sites, provoking retaliatory strikes throughout the region.

However, recent noises from the sport’s American owners, Liberty Media, and the sport’s governing body, the FIA, suggest that solutions to rescheduling the cancelled races are on the table. In a conference call with investors last week, during which details of a 53 per cent year-on-year revenue rise were announced, Liberty Media CEO Derek Chang stated that executives were “continuously evaluating the calendar this year”.

Chang added: “As Stefano [Domenicali, F1 CEO] mentioned to Bloomberg News last week, it might be possible to reschedule one race toward the end of the season.” He did ensure that any decision would be made in a “timely fashion”.

But what are the options on the table? What is at stake? And could the end-of-season races in Qatar and Abu Dhabi also be at risk?

Full piece below:

Four races in a row? Key details revealed as F1 eyes Bahrain or Saudi ‘reschedule’

James Vowles on Albon's crash in FP1:

20:31 , Kieran Jackson

"It's one of the risks of this circuit. I know that sounds strange," Williams team principal James Vowles told Sky Sports. "Unfortunately there's been a few of these.

"He [Albon] has hit a marmot [groundhog] and the damage is extensive from that point onwards.

"He needed this session. You get 60 minutes and that's it, and to lose over half of it is frustrating.

"Back in the garage he's more worried about his mum, who suspects he's going to have to pay to adopt a family of marmots because that's a consequence of that."

Jenson Button explains what Lewis Hamilton must do to secure Ferrari future

20:15 , Kieran Jackson

"Obviously, last year was not the easiest for Lewis. He spent so many years in a team (Mercedes) that he knew really well, and had a lot of support from that team. Then, you go to a different team that is based in Italy, and he doesn’t speak Italian. He doesn’t have that on his side, whereas his team-mate does."

The 2009 world champion added: "So, it does take a minute to get used to it, especially at 40 years old when learning is a lot more difficult than it is in your twenties. But it has been really good to see him competitive this year, and fighting with Charles."

Button emphasised the importance of current form, as he claimed, "as long as you’re competitive the (external) noise doesn’t really matter. If he is as quick as he thinks he should be, then it is fine, and it doesn’t matter what other people say from the outside. If he is doing a job that he thinks is good enough, then he will have that confidence and want to carry on if he is enjoying it."

 (AFP)
(AFP)

VIDEO: Ocon's crash in FP1

20:01 , Kieran Jackson

George Russell biggest F1 fight is with team-mate Kimi Antonelli – Lando Norris

19:45 , Kieran Jackson

Norris believes Russell has the mettle for the title scrap – one which Norris and McLaren would very much like to muscle their way into – but says having a dangerous challenger across the garage will make life much harder.

“I think any situation that he’s ever dealt with is different to fighting for a world championship,” Norris said.

“Forget everything that’s ever happened, I think as soon as you’re fighting for a world championship, and then you also have a strong team-mate, that’s a very different situation.

“The last few years, I’ve had a very strong team-mate that as soon as I wasn’t on my A game, I was way off. That always makes your life a lot, lot tougher.”

Kimi Antonelli has taken an early lead over George Russell (Bradley Collyer/PA) (PA Wire)
Kimi Antonelli has taken an early lead over George Russell (Bradley Collyer/PA) (PA Wire)

Reminder of start times this weekend in Canada:

19:27 , Kieran Jackson

All times BST

Friday 22 May

  • Sprint qualifying: 9:30pm

Saturday 23 May

  • Sprint race: 5pm
  • Qualifying: 9pm

Sunday 24 May

  • Race: 9pm

P11-22 in FP1

19:18 , Kieran Jackson

11. Gabriel Bortoleto (Audi)

12. Isack Hadjar (Red Bull)

13. Esteban Ocon (Haas)

14. Alex Albon (Williams)

15. Carlos Sainz (Williams)

16. Pierre Gasly (Alpine)

17. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)

18. Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)

19. Oliver Bearman (Haas)

20. Valtteri Bottas (Cadillac)

21. Sergio Perez (Cadillac)

22. Franco Colapinto (Alpine)

Top-10 in FP1

19:06 , Kieran Jackson

1. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) - 1:13.402

2. George Russell (Mercedes) +0.142

3. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) +0.774

4. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) +0.953

5. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) +0.964

6. Lando Norris (McLaren) +1.397

7. Oscar Piastri (McLaren) +1.561

8. Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls) +2.050

9. Nico Hulkenberg (Audi) +2.296

10. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) +2.461

Kimi Antonelli fastest in FP1

18:55 , Kieran Jackson

The cars are going back around the track briefly at the end of the session - but that is it in terms of timed laps!

Kimi Antonelli, with that late effort, is top of the tree again - a tenth faster than his Mercedes teammate George Russell.

Lewis Hamilton (+0.774) is a respectable third, with Charles Leclerc (+0.953) in fourth. Ferrari will be happy with that.

5-10: Verstappen, Norris, Piastri, Lindblad, Hulkenberg, Alonso

 (Getty)
(Getty)

Esteban Ocon crashes

18:45 , Kieran Jackson

Another crash, another red flag!

Ocon has hit the wall after a spin!

He drives his Haas car back to the pits without a nose.

That may well mark the end of the session in anger...

Kimi Antonelli goes top

18:40 , Kieran Jackson

Bit of a statement from the championship leader at the end of FP1, as he goes 0.142 secs clear of Russell at the top.

Final laps coming in now...

Lewis Hamilton goes third fastest

18:35 , Kieran Jackson

Seven times a winner around here, Hamilton goes third on the leaderboard - however at nine-tenths off Russell in P1, that’s some margin.

Entering the final 15 minutes of FP1 now...

Mercedes one-two early on

18:23 , Kieran Jackson

George Russell is the one setting the early pace with a 1:45:560 - a tenth clear of Kimi Antonelli.

Oscar Piastri is third, four-tenths off, with Lando Norris in fourth.

5-10: Leclerc, Hamilton, Lindblad, Verstappen, Alonso, Hadjar

Half-an-hour to go in FP1.

 (Reuters)
(Reuters)

Green flag

18:15 , Kieran Jackson

Finally, we’re back on track.

They’ve extended the session again and there’s now 34 minutes left on the clock.

Again, right decision.

Albon crash

18:10 , Kieran Jackson

Afraid to say, replays from Albon’s on-board camera shows he actually ran over a groundhog, resulting in his crash.

Still no restart time announced.

Albon crash

18:06 , Kieran Jackson

Alex Albon crashes

17:59 , Kieran Jackson

Big old shunt here gives us the second red flag of the session!

Albon in the wall just before turn 8. He’s all OK. No replays yet...

FP1 back underway

17:48 , Kieran Jackson

A four-minute delay - and new info from the FIA that FP1 will be extended by four minutes as a result.

Sensible.

Liam Lawson stops

17:42 , Kieran Jackson

The New Zealander has stopped after the first chicane.

No steering. And he’s jumping out!

RED FLAG just 10 minutes into first practice.

 (Getty)
(Getty)

FP1 trial - FIA statement:

17:39 , Kieran Jackson

“During FP1 we'll be trialling a new rear lights system for MGUK power derating. This follows driver feedback from the first few events.

“The trial introduces a colour code system to differentiate between MGUK states: MGUK no longer at full power, MGUK fully cut, and superclip. Previously, these were all indicated by a flashing red pattern.

“We'll revert to the standard rear lights system for the rest of the weekend and assess next steps based on feedback from teams and drivers.”

Franco Colapinto:

17:34 , Kieran Jackson

“My throttle is not working.”

You might need that, Franco! Not an ideal start for the Alpine driver...

FP1 underway

17:31 , Kieran Jackson

A very important session, then, given the sprint weekend format.

Just one hour of practice around this popular street circuit...

‘Get used to it’ – Lewis Hamilton insists he is staying put in Formula One

17:24 , Kieran Jackson

The 41-year-old insists his future is clear in his mind.

“I am still under contract so everything is 100 per cent clear to me,” Hamilton said ahead of this weekend’s Canadian Grand Prix.

“I’m still focused, I’m still motivated and I still love what I do with all my heart.

“I’m going to be here for quite some time so get used to it. There are people that are trying to retire me and that is not even in my thoughts.

“I’m already thinking of what will be next and planning for the next five years but I still plan to be here for some time.”

Lewis Hamilton (Getty)
Lewis Hamilton (Getty)

Lando Norris on his helmet in Canada:

17:15 , Kieran Jackson

What are the start times this weekend?

17:01 , Kieran Jackson

All times BST

Friday 22 May

  • Free practice 1: 5:30pm
  • Sprint qualifying: 9:30pm

Saturday 23 May

  • Sprint race: 5pm
  • Qualifying: 9pm

Sunday 24 May

  • Race: 9pm

F1 Canadian Grand Prix

17:00 , Kieran Jackson

Formula 1 heads to Montreal next for the Canadian Grand Prix this weekend - and the third sprint race of the 2026 season.

Kimi Antonelli continued his impressive start to the campaign with his third consecutive victory last time out in Miami. The Italian 19-year-old now has a 20-point lead over Mercedes teammate George Russell, who is eyeing a return to form at a track he won at last year.

McLaren took a big step in Miami, with reigning world champion Lando Norris finishing second and teammate Oscar Piastri in third, while Red Bull’s Max Verstappen qualified on the front row in an improved car.

It was a trickier weekend for Ferrari, with Charles Leclerc punished with post-race penalties and Lewis Hamilton only finishing sixth. Hamilton is a seven-time winner around the Montreal street circuit and won his first-ever F1 race here back in 2007.

Lewis Hamilton (PA)
Lewis Hamilton (PA)
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