Motorsport photo
Sky Sports Formula 1 lead commentator David Croft believes that alarm bells will be ringing if George Russell does not beat his Mercedes team-mate Kimi Antonelli at the Canadian Grand Prix.
While the Briton won the season-opening Australian Grand Prix from pole position and the Chinese sprint race the week after, he has since been overtaken in the standings by his teenage team-mate.
After celebrating his maiden F1 win at the Chinese Grand Prix, Antonelli has secured two further grand prix wins in Japan and Miami and now leads the championship by 20 points over Russell.
Although it is not looking good for Russell on paper, he has had some bad luck in the opening rounds of the 2026 season with issues during qualifying for the Chinese Grand Prix, a poorly timed safety car in Japan and a track that does not suit his driving style in Miami.
During the Sky Sports F1 Show, Croft argued that the Canadian Grand Prix, which has previously been a strong race for the 28-year-old, can't come soon enough for Russell.
"I would want Montreal to come next weekend if I was George Russell. I wouldn't want to be waiting a couple of weeks dwelling on what happened in Miami and thinking about how big Canada is now becoming," Croft said.
"He won there last year. It's a track he's really strong at. I mean, Kimi finished on the podium; it was a very good weekend for Mercedes last year. But if George doesn't beat Kimi with Mercedes upgrades that are coming, and worth quite a bit from what we're led to believe, on a track that he regards as one of his best, and Toto Wolff says is one of his best, then the alarm bells really start to ring for me.
George Russell, Mercedes
"There's still a long way to go in the season, but this is a massive weekend for George Russell. He needs that commanding performance, but Kimi's on a roll. And I also think, I'm going to go back to Bono [Peter Bonnington], George is not just racing against Kimi. He's racing against what I think is a very good new partnership.
"Karun [Chandhok], you were listening at race control to Bono coaching Kimi lap-by-lap. We heard snippets on the world feed of it. The reassurance that comes from the pit wall, the guidance that comes from the pit wall. He's got an excellent comfort blanket, safety net, coach, advisor, guru, whatever you want to call it, in his corner.
"Bono has been there with championship-winning seasons and knows how to take the pressure of it. He is the perfect man for Kimi Antonelli and this new partnership. It's not just George against Kimi, it's George against a partnership there, and that's going to take some cracking."
To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.
See every story in Sports — including breaking news and analysis.