George Russell is the value pick for the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix, even with Kimi Antonelli arriving in Montreal as the championship leader and the market favorite. Mercedes have won every Grand Prix so far this season, Antonelli has taken three straight wins, and the team is bringing its first major upgrade package of the year.
But Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is not a straightforward momentum track. It is a braking, traction and confidence circuit, and that gives Russell a real chance to turn the title fight back toward him.

Championship Context
Antonelli arrives in Canada with the momentum. He has won the last three Grands Prix, leads Russell by 20 points in the championship, and has already changed the tone of the Mercedes title fight. What looked like Russell’s team after the opening race has quickly become a genuine intra-team battle, with Antonelli now trying to make it four wins in a row.
That is exactly why Montreal feels like such an important weekend for Russell. He won here last season from pole, understands how to build confidence through the braking zones, and should be encouraged by Mercedes bringing its first major upgrade of the season. The market has moved toward Antonelli for obvious reasons, but this is not a circuit where recent form should be the only input. Canada has a habit of rewarding drivers who can attack the curbs, manage restarts and stay precise when grip is low.
McLaren and Ferrari are close enough to make this uncomfortable for Mercedes if the upgrade does not land immediately. Lando Norris is the cleanest podium threat outside the front two, while Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton both carry obvious Montreal history. Still, on early-week numbers, this is a Mercedes race to lose.
The 2026 Technical Picture at Montreal
Stop-Start Efficiency Is The Key
Circuit Gilles Villeneuve is all about braking stability, traction and confidence over the curbs. It is not a flowing downforce track, and it does not give drivers much time to recover from a poor corner. A small lock-up into the hairpin or a messy exit from the final chicane can cost the entire lap.
That profile suits Mercedes. Their 2026 car has been the most complete package through the opening part of the season, and the Montreal layout should allow both Russell and Antonelli to lean on its braking performance. The question is whether the upgrade makes the car easier to drive immediately, or whether the sprint format creates a setup headache with limited practice time.
That is also why Russell is the race pick. Antonelli has been sensational, but Russell’s strength is precision. He tends to be at his best when the lap is built around braking confidence and clean traction rather than flowing high-speed balance. Montreal asks for exactly that.
Mercedes Upgrade Watch
Mercedes have not needed to chase the season so far, but Canada is the first real sign that they are preparing for the development fight. McLaren and Ferrari both made progress in Miami, and Red Bull remain dangerous whenever Verstappen can keep himself close enough to apply pressure through strategy or restarts.
The upgrade should, in theory, help Mercedes protect its advantage. But sprint weekends are unforgiving. Teams only get one practice session before the competitive sessions begin, and that makes correlation everything. If the new parts work straight away, Russell and Antonelli should control the weekend. If Mercedes need time to tune the balance, Norris becomes a much more serious threat.
Sprint Race Prediction
Antonelli is my sprint winner. That may look slightly awkward next to Russell as the Grand Prix winner pick, but the two calls are based on different race shapes. The sprint should reward clean launch performance, short-run pace and front-running rhythm. Antonelli has been excellent when controlling races from the front, and if he starts on the front row, he is the driver most likely to convert track position into a short-format win.
The projected sprint podium is Antonelli, Russell and Norris. Russell should be close enough to challenge, but the sprint does not give him as much time to use tire management, strategic patience or Safety Car timing. Norris is the leading non-Mercedes pick because McLaren’s short-run pace has improved, and Montreal’s traction zones should give him a chance to stay attached if Mercedes do not disappear early.
Verstappen is the obvious spoiler. If Red Bull qualify better than expected, he is too good around a braking-heavy circuit to ignore. But based on the early-week picture, Antonelli is the cleaner sprint call, while Russell is the better outright value for Sunday.
Qualifying Prediction
Russell on pole is the prediction. He took pole here last season, won the race, and has the exact skill set Montreal rewards. The lap is short, sharp and easy to overdrive. The final chicane is especially important because drivers have to attack the curb without getting greedy on exit. Russell’s ability to find that limit is the main reason he gets the nod over Antonelli.
Antonelli is still projected for the front row. His confidence is high, his one-lap form has been outstanding, and Mercedes should have enough car performance to put both drivers in the fight for pole. Norris is the best bet to split or chase the Mercedes pair, with McLaren looking increasingly capable of turning recent upgrades into real pace.
The Ferrari picture is more complicated. Leclerc has the higher one-lap ceiling, but Hamilton’s Montreal record makes him hard to dismiss completely. If Ferrari’s balance is there from the first session, either driver could end up on the second row. But a clean qualifying read still points to Russell, Antonelli and Norris as the top three.
Canadian Grand Prix Prediction
Russell is my Canadian Grand Prix pick. The value is not in pretending Antonelli is weak. He is not. He is the championship leader, the most in-form driver on the grid, and the rightful favorite based on the last three rounds. The value is in recognizing that Montreal gives Russell one of his best chances yet to answer back.
Canadian Grand Prix Prediction FAQ
George Russell is the early best bet to win the 2026 Canadian Grand Prix. Kimi Antonelli is the form driver and the rightful favorite, but Russell offers better value because Montreal rewards braking precision, curb confidence and clean traction, all areas that suit his driving style.
Kimi Antonelli is the sprint race prediction. The sprint format should reward short-run pace, clean air and early track position, which suits Antonelli given his recent form and ability to control races from the front.
The projected Canadian Grand Prix podium is George Russell first, Kimi Antonelli second and Lando Norris third. Mercedes are still expected to have the strongest overall package, while Norris is the leading non-Mercedes podium threat.
George Russell is the qualifying prediction for pole position, ahead of Kimi Antonelli and Lando Norris. Russell took pole in Montreal last year and the circuit’s short, braking-heavy layout suits his strengths over a single lap.
Russell is the pick because the race price looks stronger than Antonelli’s. Antonelli has the better recent form, but Montreal is a track where Russell’s braking confidence, tire management and experience in disrupted races could matter more over a full Grand Prix distance.
Lewis Hamilton is the long-shot podium pick. He has an outstanding record in Montreal and remains dangerous if Safety Cars, mixed weather or strategy bring Ferrari into the race.
Mercedes are expected to be the team to beat, but Canada may be closer than the early-season results suggest. The team is bringing a major upgrade, while McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull all have paths into the fight if setup, weather or Safety Cars disrupt the race.
Lando Norris is the most likely non-Mercedes threat. He is projected for the podium rather than the win, but if Mercedes struggle with their new upgrade package or lose track position, Norris has enough pace to take advantage.

