MPH: The final battleground of F1's current ground-effect cars
In the final year of these F1 regulations, the differences in car quality is playing out in a very distinct way. As understanding has increased, the demands have changed and…
In the final year of these F1 regulations, the differences in car quality is playing out in a very distinct way. As understanding has increased, the demands have changed and…
Red Bull has reshuffled its drivers and changed development direction but its car is still too slow and months behind the progress of F1 rivals, writes Mark Hughes. Max Verstappen's uncertain future makes the way forward even murkier
Like Michael Schumacher before him, Max Verstappen has led his team to develop a car that other drivers can't handle. It might seem premature for Red Bull to drop Liam Lawson, writes Mark Hughes, but returning to a 'normal' car could revitalise the 23-year-old
Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris worked together ahead of the 2025 Chinese GP, finding the pace that delivered a 1-2 finish, while Norris also prepared to attack his team-mate during the race. Brake issues denied him, says Mark Hughes but the F1 title duel is coming
An error and poor timing hampered McLaren's front-row bid in sprint qualifying at the Chinese GP. But the earlier practice session revealed its pace advantage, says Mark Hughes, who has an idea of where the car's superiority comes from
2025 could boil down to a title fight between Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri – will the McLaren mates keep it cordial?
McLaren had the fastest car at the 2025 Australian GP and found the elusive perfect tyre balance, says Mark Hughes. But Lando Norris still had his work cut out to win — and warned that the car will struggle later this season
A reflective Lewis Hamilton recalled the first days of his F1 career as he sat next to Kimi Antonelli, about to start his debut season with a similar level of hype. It would be too much, writes Mark Hughes, to expect the 18-year-old to hit the heights of Hamilton's stellar rookie year
Years after Melbourne lost its opening slot, it's back as the first F1 race of the 2025 season. It gives this year's F1 rookies the chance to follow in the footsteps of F1 winners who shone on their debut amid the formidable challenge of Albert Park
F1 drivers shivered at a cold and windy Sakhir circuit during 2025 F1 preseason testing, writes Mark Hughes. The weather conditions put paid to anyone's hope of a suntan — or of establishing a competitive order
F1's frontrunners were so closely matched last year that minor gains could give one team an advantage in 2025, says Mark Hughes. Where might that leave Ferrari which believes it's significant advances after an extensive rethink?
Lando Norris and Max Verstappen look set go head-to-head in the F1 drivers' title. But, as Mark Hughes asks, should he draw an aggressive line in the sand or play the long game?