Sports

George Russell Apologizes After Canadian GP Punishment as Red Bull Piles On

George Russell has apologized to the marshals and the FIA after throwing his headrest onto the track following his retirement from the 2026 Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix. The Mercedes driver took to social media on Monday to address the incident publicly, writing: "Apologies to the marshals & FIA for making their job harder than it needed to be. Lots of emotions in the moment."

The apology came after the FIA stewards handed Russell a €5,000 fine, suspended for 12 months, for what they classified as an unsafe act. The suspension means the fine will only be enforced if a similar incident occurs within the next year.

 Sprint winner George Russell in the Drivers' Press Conference ahead of the 2026 F1 Grand Prix of Canada. Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images
Sprint winner George Russell in the Drivers' Press Conference ahead of the 2026 F1 Grand Prix of Canada. Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images Photo by Bryn Lennon/Getty Images

What Happened at the Canadian GP

The British driver had been locked in a fierce battle with Mercedes teammate Kimi Antonelli through the first half of the race at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, the two trading the lead on multiple occasions. Then, on lap 30, Russell's power unit suddenly cut out at turn 8/9, leaving him with no electronics and no brakes as he straightlined the corner and parked his car on the side of the track.

In his frustration, the 28-year-old driver threw his headrest out of the car as he climbed out, and it landed on the track. He then threw his gloves as well. The stewards launched an investigation after the race.

 Kimi Antonelli cuts the grass as he battles for the lead with George Russell during the 2026 F1 Canadian GP Sprint. Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1 via Getty Images
Kimi Antonelli cuts the grass as he battles for the lead with George Russell during the 2026 F1 Canadian GP Sprint. Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1 via Getty Images Photo by Mark Sutton - Formula 1 via Getty Images

During the FIA hearing, Russell did not attempt to downplay what happened. According to the official stewards' document, he explained that he was extremely frustrated at failing to finish the race and expressed embarrassment at what followed. He apologized directly to the stewards, acknowledged that his behavior did not set a good example, and offered to apologize publicly, which he followed through on the next day.

The stewards accepted his apology and acknowledged the circumstances before settling on the suspended fine as the appropriate outcome.

Red Bull Rubs Salt in George Russell's Fresh Wounds

The Silver Arrows' star was not allowed to move on quietly. Red Bull's official social media account replied to a fan post showing the headrest incident with a simple: "Borderline something something." The post racked up 2.7 million views and over 70,000 likes, widely interpreted as a reference to the well-documented rivalry between Russell and Max Verstappen from the 2024 season.

Additionally, the retirement could not have come at a worse time for the British driver in the championship. While he sat on the side of the road in Montreal, Antonelli drove on to claim his fourth consecutive victory, extending his lead in the Drivers' Championship to 43 points over his teammate. Russell's only win of the 2026 season so far came at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix.

The Canadian GP result was also notable for another reason. Antonelli became the first driver in Formula 1 history to win his first four victories in consecutive races, with triumphs in China, Japan, Miami, and now Canada - a record that will sting Russell even more, given he was leading when his car gave out. With Monaco next on the calendar, he will need to regroup fast.

Copyright 2026 Athlon Sports. All rights reserved.

This story was originally published May 27, 2026 at 6:16 AM.

Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER