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How Mercedes stole a march to dominate F1 season opener and why it may continue

about 10 hours ago
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As Formula One grapples with its new, controversial regulations, there is consensus at least that Mercedes are expected to be on top once more in the second race of the season on Sunday in Shanghai.The team have a fearsome car but most importantly in a formula dominated by the engine, appear to have also stolen a march in optimising the dark art of energy management.George Russell and Kimi Antonelli claimed a one-two at the opening round in Australia last weekend.In qualifying Russell was eight-tenths quicker than Mercedes’ nearest rival, the Red Bull of Isack Hadjar and in the grand prix itself finished 15 seconds in front of third-placed Charles Leclerc having eased up in the final third of the race.They were once more comfortably the two quickest drivers in qualifying for Saturday’s sprint race in China.

Performances which marked them out as the class of the field which was acknowledged by their rivals.To put it in context, last year’s world champion Lando Norris was nearly a second off in qualifying in Australia and finished fifth for McLaren, more than 50 seconds down on Russell.That is an absolute chasm but what was most striking about the differential was that McLaren are using the same Mercedes engine.The rules stipulate that customer engines (with which Mercedes units McLaren won the last two constructors’ championships) must be identical to the ones used by the works team.Yet even with a good car, given their pace, Mercedes are clearly extracting more from their engines and this is proving to be one of the major differentiators in the new season as they go into the China GP.

At its heart lies the absolutely vital role, love it or loathe it – and popular opinion leans heavily toward the latter – that energy management now plays in the sport.In an effort to entice new manufacturers, F1 opted for engines that would have an almost 50-50 split in the power delivered by internal combustion and electrical energy.With the amount of electrical energy limited, its deployment and recharging has become every bit as important, if not more than, how much grunt the internal combustion pushes out.Understanding and exploiting this is fundamental for speed.An unedifying differential that cannot be seen and profoundly unpopular among the drivers it may be, but it is nonetheless the reality of F1 in 2026.

Albert Park at Melbourne, a high-speed circuit with a paucity of braking areas, is therefore described in the new era as “energy-starved”, a phrase which will be used again this season.It meant the ability to recharge the battery was extremely limited and had to be carefully managed and that is where the Mercedes could sing.It was clear that Mercedes, having spent so long developing their own engine, unsurprisingly understand best how to exploit the software that manages the energy use, to an extent that customer teams, McLaren and Williams for example, do not.As the McLaren team principal, Andrea Stella, noted: “In a way, this is a new language and also a new way of thinking.”How the engine optimises a lap in terms of energy deployment and recharging is as vital now as any aerodynamic advantage under the last rule set.

The tiny details in where and how the energy is recharged, echo across a lap as a whole.Timing hitting the peak battery charge allows full deployment on a following straight and in turn not being forced to lift and coast slightly earlier.They are small percentages but add up as was perfectly demonstrated in Australia when Russell, freed from a scrap with Leclerc, could then drive to allow optimised energy use and promptly opened a significant lead.There is no suggestion Mercedes are withholding information from customers but rather that they have given over everything required by the rules and that their greater experience in working with the engine is something their rivals will have to learn.The new language, as Stella noted.

The same applies to Mercedes’s other main rivals Ferrari, who were closest to them in Australia, and Red Bull.As manufacturers they too should benefit from having developed their engines and if there are big gains to be found in the new formula it is here that they may begin to bridge the gap.The car, of course, remains a factor, with Mercedes having delivered an exemplary chassis, while Norris has admitted that the McLaren is far from where it needs to be aerodynamically, struggling through corners and with excessive front tyre wear.However what was also demonstrated in Melbourne was that with energy management so vital, the drivers must adapt with alacrity and Russell was sharp in this area from the off.As Norris has repeatedly observed there is now a vastly increased focus on how they “drove” the engine.

“You can still make a difference as a driver by driving the power unit in the correct way but not by necessarily driving the car in a much better way,” he said,This was something Russell displayed in his advantage over Antonelli in Australia, even in identical machinery, and it is now potentially the most important weapon in the armoury,“The difference you can make by optimising the power unit is an order of magnitude bigger than anything you can do with the setup of the car,” was McLaren’s Oscar Piastri’s blunt assessment,How all these factors play out in China on Sunday will be under intense scrutiny across the sport, not least given consideration to changing the rules regarding the prevalence of energy management are expected to take place in discussions after the race,Shanghai is also more representative of an average circuit than Albert Park.

Heavy braking zones and medium-speed corners, means it is “energy-rich” and recovery should not be an issue while its major deployment will centre on the long back straight to turn 14.A different but equally informative test to Melbourne.Mercedes have the whip hand, that much is clear, dominance in China will indicate quite how far up the road they really are.
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Miliband reveals plans that could mean nuclear power plants built near homes

Ed Miliband has unveiled plans that could make it easier to build nuclear power plants closer to homes and on sensitive nature sites, as he attempts to speed up the development of energy infrastructure.The energy secretary set out changes to nuclear regulation, to be carried out this year, which would mean a “win-win for building critical infrastructure while protecting nature and the environment”.However, ministers were quickly accused of “irresponsible deregulation” and putting nature at risk.The shake-up means the government will implement the recommendations of a review completed last year by the nuclear regulatory taskforce review, which was led by the former Office of Fair Trading boss John Fingleton.It said an overhaul of the “overly complex” and “bureaucratic” system which “favoured process over safe outcomes” was needed

about 14 hours ago
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Bailiffs board Ryanair plane after airline refuses to pay delayed flight compensation

Bailiffs have boarded a Ryanair aircraft after the airline refused to pay compensation to a passenger whose flight was delayed.Austrian officials took action after the budget carrier ignored a court order to pay the unnamed woman €890 (£742) in legal costs and compensation for a delayed flight two years ago.A bailiff entered the plane, which was bound for London, as it sat on the stand at Linz airport on Monday and fixed a seizure sticker to the cabin when crew were unable to settle the debt.The label, known as a “cuckoo sticker”, gives the court legal control over the aircraft, which was allowed to continue to operate under set conditions. The court can sell the Boeing 737 at public auction if the debt is not paid by a deadline

about 17 hours ago
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AI toys for young children must be more tightly regulated, say researchers

It was all going well. Charlotte, five, was chatting with an AI soft toy called Gabbo at a London play centre about her family, her drawing of a heart to represent them and what makes her happy. She even offered a couple of kisses to the £80 toy with a face like a computer screen.It was when she declared: “Gabbo, I love you”, that the fluent conversation came to an abrupt halt.“As a friendly reminder, please ensure interactions adhere to the guidelines provided,” said Gabbo, awkwardly crashing into its guardrails

about 19 hours ago
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‘IG is a drug’: jury to deliberate as US trial over social media addiction wraps up

The first-ever jury trial over the potential harms of social media wrapped up on Thursday. Lawyers for Meta and YouTube have argued their platforms are safe for the vast majority of young people, while lawyers for a young woman at the center of the case say the tech companies have designed their products to be addictive, leading to mental health issues in children and teens.“How did they become such behemoths?” Mark Lanier, a lawyer for the plaintiffs, said during closing arguments in Los Angeles superior court on Thursday, according to NBC. “It’s the attention economy. They’re making money off capturing your attention

1 day ago
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Cheltenham festival 2026: Gaelic Warrior storms to Gold Cup glory – as it happened

Time to sign off from Cheltenham for another year. I’ll leave you with Greg Wood’s report from trackside. Thanks for joining me, and enjoy your weekends.Just look at all the sport you can follow on the Guardian website this weekend. Look!So after a week of drama, controversy and strong words off the course, today felt a little more like business as usual – particularly with Mullins claiming three winners, including the Gold Cup, 24 hours after firing thinly-veiled threats at the racecourse

about 8 hours ago
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Gaelic Warrior routs Gold Cup field and carries Mullins into record books

A capacity crowd had squeezed into the grandstands on Friday hoping to see a football legend lift the festival’s biggest prize, but the greatest trainer in National Hunt history had other ideas. The Gold Cup was one of the last races at the meeting to elude Willie Mullins until his first win in 2019. Now he has five, joining Tom Dreaper, Arkle’s trainer, as the co-holder of the all-time record, after Gaelic Warrior’s relentless charge up the hill to an eight-length success.Paul Townend, meanwhile, is now out on his own as the only rider to win five Gold Cups, one more than Pat Taaffe, who steered Arkle to all three of his victories in the 1960s.Gaelic Warrior is a different brand of steeplechaser to Al Boum Photo and Galopin Des Champs, who both recorded a pair of victories for Mullins and Townend

about 8 hours ago
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Naples museum to allow visually impaired visitors to experience art through touch

1 day ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Pentagon splurging on doughnuts: ‘Is this My 600lb Defense Department?’

2 days ago
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Rapper Lil’ Kim to headline both Vivid Sydney and Melbourne’s 2026 Rising festival

3 days ago
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Stephen Colbert on US war in Iran: ‘We’re still no closer to learning what the goal is’

3 days ago
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Leap Year is patently ridiculous and widely panned. It’s also the perfect romcom

4 days ago
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Womadelaide 2026 review: Grace Jones embraces the compulsion for dancing in the dark times

4 days ago