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Why George Russell needs to be ruthless this season

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Jehran Naidoo|Published

Italian rookie Kimi Antonelli turned a slow start into a historic triumph, claiming his second win in three races and the championship lead at just 19 years old, leaving teammate George Russell under pressure.

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George Russell no longer has the advantage of being Mercedes starboy after Kimi Antonelli swooped in on the 2026 season with two straight victories. Head-to-head battles have long been a grey area in Russell’s otherwise polished Formula 1 résumé.

There’s no questioning his speed, consistency, or technical understanding—but when it comes to wheel-to-wheel combat with championship stakes attached, he has often come up just short of the edge required to dominate.

That edge is exactly what separates great drivers from world champions. The blueprint is already there. Lewis Hamilton built his success at Mercedes on a blend of precision and cold-blooded execution when it mattered most.

Max Verstappen, on the other hand, redefined ruthlessness during his rise and subsequent dominance from 2021. Elbows out, uncompromising, and mentally unshakeable.

Both drivers understood a simple truth: when the title is on the line, hesitation is defeat.

Same equipment, different results

Russell now finds himself at a crossroads. On paper, he has everything he needs. Mercedes has delivered arguably the strongest package on the grid, and as the more experienced driver in the team, he should be leading the charge.

Instead, it’s his teenage teammate who has seized the early momentum, not just with victories, but with authority. That should concern Russell.

Because this isn’t just about points, it’s about perception. Within a team chasing championships, status can shift quickly.

Lead driver title under threat

The “lead driver” label Russell once carried is now under threat, and Formula 1 is not a sport that waits patiently for drivers to figure things out. If Antonelli continues on this trajectory, the team dynamic could evolve in ways that don’t favour Russell.

Toto Wolff will be watching closely. Not just at results, but at Russell’s response. Does he push back? Does he assert himself in wheel-to-wheel moments? Does he take control of race weekends when it matters most?

Or does he allow the narrative to drift further away from him.

This is where ruthlessness comes in. Not recklessness, but intent. The willingness to take risks, to make decisive moves, and to prioritise his own championship ambitions when the margins are fine.

Russell doesn’t need to reinvent himself, he needs to sharpen what’s already there and add that final, uncompromising layer. If he can, then pretty soon we can forget about Papaya rules and start seeing Petronas rules. 

 

Jehran Naidoo is sports reporter for Independent Media and social media coordinator of the our YouTube channel The Clutch.