George Russell Exclusive Interview: The AMG Mercedes Petronas F1 Star on the Art of Driving Fast
The 2026 F1 season begins this weekend, and we caught up with the potential title contender to pick his brain about performance driving, simulators, and more.

The 2026 Formula 1 season that kicks off this weekend in Melbourne, Australia, looks like one of the most wide-open campaigns in decades. That is, at least going by the entirely unclear results of preseason testing of cars built to massively revised technical regulations representing one of the biggest season-to-season changes in F1 history. Nothing but questions hang over which team will be strongest out of the gate, but plenty of paddock observers think there’s more than a fair chance the Mercedes-AMG Petronas F1 squad will be at the sharp end of the grid. Season speculation aside, we caught up with its lead driver, 28-year-old Briton George Russell, to see what advice the five-time grand prix winner has for driving enthusiasts everywhere.
0:00 / 0:00

MotorTrend: Let’s not do this with the same questions you and all the F1 drivers get week after week during grand prix weekends. In fact, oddly, it doesn’t seem like you guys are asked too often about the actual art and skill of driving, so let’s chat about that.
George Russell: OK, all right, let’s hear it!
MT: If you were to write the George Russell manual on high-performance driving for amateurs and enthusiasts and even aspiring racers, what are some of the keys to what you do in the cockpit? We often hear vision is at the top of the list; a lot of people, and you see this occur on the street, don’t understand that where you look hugely impacts how well you can drive the car.
GR: Yeah. It’s interesting you say the vision because from my side, it’s something I spent some time thinking about, where I look and then analyzing where I look. It made me slower when I started thinking [too much] about this.
MT: I didn’t expect that response. But of course, drivers need to work on keeping their eyes up in general ...
GR: Yeah. There’s lots of different views and theories and X, Y, Z. For me, for an amateur driver, I would say the No. 1 thing is to give smooth inputs to the car. Smooth on the wheel, smooth on the gas pedal. Not overly aggressive on the brakes.
If you do that, you’ll be in control of the car, and that’s where you can build up. This is from an amateur level, where if you’re 10 seconds off the pace and you want to get to five seconds off the pace, then that is going to be the first step of taking that five-second jump—making smooth inputs. Once you’re talking from a second off the pace to half a second off the pace, that’s obviously your next step.
The second point I would say is just maximizing the racetrack. Using all of the available racetrack to brake on the outside of the corner, make sure you’re apexing on a nice line, and then use all the track on the exit. I think if you’re doing those main points, you’ll very quickly get to within seven seconds of a pro on a given racetrack. But then obviously, the closer you get into that peak performance, that’s where the intricacies come in.




