A dash of nostalgia lent itself to the Chinese Grand Prix over the weekend, what with the race exhibiting features Formula One (F1) used to sell itself on beforeA dash of nostalgia lent itself to the Chinese Grand Prix over the weekend, what with the race exhibiting features Formula One (F1) used to sell itself on before

F1 new rule

2026/03/17 18:15
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A dash of nostalgia lent itself to the Chinese Grand Prix over the weekend, what with the race exhibiting features Formula One (F1) used to sell itself on before aerodynamics, regulations, and strategy spreadsheets threatened to overwhelm the spectacle. For a number of laps in Shanghai, the old elements returned: two Ferrari drivers refusing to yield, a young prodigy seizing the moment, and the crowd hoping that the sport might still possess a capacity for drama. That the motorsport was likewise celebrated on Hollywood’s biggest stage only added to the intrigue.

At the center of the trackside theater was the duel between Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc. Ferrari team principal Frederic Vasseur made clear afterward that his drivers were free to race each other, a refreshing stance in an era when orders from the paddock often smother competition before it has a chance to manifest on the track. The result was a sequence of overtakes and near-contact that had the Prancing Horse honcho admitting he was “a bit scared,” even as it produced the type of racing fans crave. The seven-time champion eventually prevailed in his scrap for third against his teammate, claiming his first podium finish since joining the Scuderia-HP partnership.

To be sure, youth prevailed in the Jiading District. Nineteen-year-old Kimi Antonelli delivered a breakthrough victory for Mercedes-AMG Petronas, confirming why the sport’s power brokers have spoken of him with no small measure of optimism. The result was framed in some quarters as a feel-good development: the future arriving, the veteran rediscovering form, and the grand old scarlet pioneer rediscovering a surprising willingness to let drivers settle matters on track. That said, the sense of renewal came with a caveat; critics remain uneasy about the sport’s evolving regulations, particularly the heavy emphasis on energy deployment that drivers say dilutes the purity of racing.

If the track provided visceral proof that Formula One can still thrill, the weekend offered yet another reminder that the sport now exists in a wider cultural orbit. The big-budget film F1, produced in part by Hamilton, captured the Oscar Award for Best Sound. If nothing else, it was an ironic flourish for a sport whose audio feedback is among its defining traits. The driver’s absence at the ceremony notwithstanding, the implication remains: The world’s most technologically advanced racing series has inhabited another influential medium.

Whether the dual presence strengthens the sport or merely embellishes it remains an open question. Formula One has always thrived in the spaces between engineering and spectacle, and between laboratory and theater. The turn of events in Shanghai indicated that the balance may still be attainable. Perhaps the sport can stage genuine racing even as it courts a broader audience. The danger, as always, is that the show may begin to matter more than the substance.

For one Sunday, though, the illusion held. Ferrari’s drivers raced each other honestly, a teenager claimed the future, and the grandstand buzzed with the rare sensation produced by the often overproduced Formula One going off script. And in a season already shaped by new rules and new narratives, it may prove to be the most valuable offshoot of all.

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.

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