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Mercedes may have won again but Miami upgrades have shaken up the F1 grid | Giles Richards
Deportes
05.05.2026

Mercedes may have won again but Miami upgrades have shaken up the F1 grid | Giles Richards

The improved form of McLaren and Red Bull and in Florida suggests the 2026 title race is likely to run and runThere is a long old way to go but after Formula One emerged from its enforced early season break with an entertaining romp around the Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, it indicated that there may yet be a decent tale to be told this season. One where Mercedes do not have it all their own way.Regulation changes dominated the buildup – of which more later because honestly paragraph two is too early to subject readers to the increasingly soul-destroying phrase “energy management” – but what really mattered in Miami was the sporting imperative of upgrades making a competitive difference. Continue reading...

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Guardian Sport
‘Get rid of the battery’: F1 under increasing pressure to make more changes to engine rules
Deportes
04.05.2026

‘Get rid of the battery’: F1 under increasing pressure to make more changes to engine rules

Norris and Piastri call for long-term changes to sportMercedes’ Wolff suggests battery needs to remainFormula One is under increasing pressure to consider immediate changes and the long-term future of its new engines, with the world champion Lando Norris reiterating after the Miami Grand Prix that the only answer to address sport-wide dissatisfaction was to “get rid of the battery”.At the meeting in Florida, which was won by Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli, with Norris second, F1 and the FIA had brought in fresh regulations to address unhappiness and safety concerns prompted by the pivotal role energy management plays under the new 2026 formula. Continue reading...

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Guardian Sport
Norris says Verstappen F1 departure would be 'a miss' for the sport
En desarrollo
Deportes·22.04.2026Resumen IA

Norris says Verstappen F1 departure would be 'a miss' for the sport

Lando Norris has expressed his belief that Max Verstappen will remain in Formula One despite the four-time world champion's dissatisfaction with new regulations focused on electrical energy management. Norris, the defending world champion, said it would be 'a miss' for the sport if Verstappen left, calling him 'one of the best drivers you'll see in Formula One ever'. The FIA announced changes to the regulations on Monday, due to take effect at the Miami Grand Prix on May 3, which both Norris and teammate Oscar Piastri welcomed cautiously.

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Guardian Sport
FIA Confirms Rule Changes to Address Energy Management Controversies in Formula One
En desarrollo
Deportes·20.04.2026Resumen IA

FIA Confirms Rule Changes to Address Energy Management Controversies in Formula One

The FIA has confirmed rule changes for the current Formula One season following driver dissatisfaction and safety concerns with new energy management regulations. The changes, agreed upon by the FIA, team principals, and F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali, include reducing the qualifying energy recharge limit from 8 to 7 megajoules and increasing the super clipping recharge limit from 250kW to 350kW. Max Verstappen has considered his future in F1 due to the energy management impact on racing, while Oliver Bearman's Suzuka accident highlighted safety concerns around differing closing speeds. The rules will be ratified before the Miami Grand Prix on May 3.

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Guardian Sport
F1 Introduces Hybrid Energy Rule Changes Starting at Miami Grand Prix
En desarrollo
Deportes·20.04.2026Resumen IA

F1 Introduces Hybrid Energy Rule Changes Starting at Miami Grand Prix

Formula 1 stakeholders have finalized changes to the sport's hybrid energy system, effective from the Miami Grand Prix (May 1-3). The modifications reduce maximum recharge from 8 MJ to 7 MJ in qualifying, increase harvesting capacity to 350 kW during super clipping, and implement tiered MGU-K deployment limits—full 350 kW in acceleration zones versus 250 kW elsewhere. The changes aim to address dangerous speed differentials up to 70 km/h and reduce the need for constant energy management, while also introducing safety tweaks for race starts and wet conditions.

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Ars Technica