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can Oscar Piastri break Australia’s F1 drought?

  • Written by Dan van den Hoek, Senior Lecturer, Clinical Exercise Physiology, University of the Sunshine Coast

The Australian Grand Prix[1] launches the 2026 Formula 1 (F1) season at Melbourne’s Albert Park on Sunday.

While the US strikes on Iran[2] forced many teams to change their travel plans, organisers are confident[3] the event will go ahead without a hitch.

There is plenty to look out for as the F1 world turns its attention towards Melbourne: the season-opening race is the first of a new era, with changes to technical regulations[4], while Australian Oscar Piastri is ready to challenge for the drivers’ championship[5] as the crowd watches to see if he can break a lengthy drought on home soil.

Key changes to technical regulations

While the cars will look similar to last season’s, they will be vastly different.

The core aim of the new regulations is to make racing more competitive and increase passing.

Compared with 2025[6], this year’s cars are smaller, more agile and use more electric power.

The Drag Reduction System (DRS) – an adjustable rear wing device to promote overtaking – has been phased out after being introduced in 2011.

Active aero[7] is now part of the regulations – not just a grey area that teams have tried to exploit[8].

Active aero allows drivers to change the position of the front and rear wing to produce high drag for cornering (increasing downforce, grip and braking performance), or low drag to deliver more speed on straights.

The biggest regulation changes apply to the power units. The cars will keep their 1.6 litre, turbocharged V6 engines, but the hybrid system will be rebalanced[9], resulting in a roughly equal split between combustion and electric power.

With almost three times greater electrical power (an increase from 120 kilowatts to 350kW) available, drivers will need to manage the battery charge and deployment.

The cars are smaller and lighter than last season, with the wheelbase reduced by 200 millimetres (to a maximum of 3,400mm), total width reduced by 100mm (1,900mm max), and minimum vehicle weight by 30 kilograms, down to 768kg.

These changes are designed to increase agility and encourage more overtaking opportunities.

Why F1 made these changes

Technical resets are part of the competitive lifecycle[10] in F1.

F1 teams build and unveil a new car[11] every season because technical regulations are updated, and because the pace of development means last year’s design is unlikely to be fast enough to be competitive.

Major technical regulation resets happen every few years and 2026 is one of those bigger shifts.

Changes to technical regulations can improve racing, increase opportunities for previously struggling teams, and ensure innovation stays at the forefront.

Each revision challenges engineers to interpret the regulations with limited data, enabling early innovators to gain a competitive advantage[12].

This unpredictability can reinvigorate fans’ appeal as new contenders emerge.

The 2026 changes are also aimed at supporting sustainability ambitions[13].

F1 has committed to net zero carbon emissions by 2030[14], and the use of sustainable fuels reflects this. These commitments could help inform the development of new technologies that find their way into road cars, too.

What will the racing look like?

The lighter, smaller cars may produce more dynamic racing, particularly on narrower street circuits where the smaller cars are more manoeuvrable.

The introduction of active aero should also add a tactical layer, as drivers adjust their wing settings to balance cornering grip and straight line speed.

The increased electrical output of the power units though have raised concerns from some, including four-time world champion Max Verstappen[15], that F1 racing might resemble Formula E.

Formula E cars run exclusively on battery electrical systems, making energy management central to race strategy: drivers must balance speed with battery conservation, often lifting off the throttle early to regenerate energy through braking.

With battery management, electrical regeneration and deployment all becoming more strategic than before, we will have to wait and see.

Piastri’s weight of expectation

After coming agonisingly close[16] to winning the World Drivers’ Championship last season, the hopes of a nation hang with Piastri.

Australia has produced F1 world champions[17] (Jack Brabham and Alan Jones) but has never produced a winner of the Australian Grand Prix.

Since its move from Adelaide (1985–95)[18] to Albert Park in 1996, the Australian race has opened the F1 season on 23 occasions[19], meaning it has been the debut race[20] for many drivers.

While many drivers have been successful in their home races – including German Michael Schumacher (four victories at Hockenheim), UK driver Lewis Hamilton (eight wins at Silverstone) and Verstappen from the Netherlands (three victories at Zandvoort) – none of these have coincided with the first race of a season and the implementation of new technical regulations.

Piastri will have to manage the weight of expectation combined with the demands of driving a new car under new regulations, adding a substantial psychological load[21] in his pursuit of a home race win.

His calm and analytical approach[22] to racing should position him well to find early performance in the new car.

Read more: What happens to F1 drivers’ bodies, and what sort of training do they do?[23]

But it’s not just about the driver – team performance and competitors’ adaptation will all play a role in whether Piastri is crowned champion at the end of the season.

The stage is set

So, the stage is set in Melbourne for the next chapter of F1, with Piastri Australia’s best title chance in recent times.

Changes to technical regulations rarely produce a predictable outcome. Drivers and teams go through periods of learning and experimenting to find performance.

The Australian Grand Prix is more than the start of a new season. It is the beginning of a new competitive landscape, where local fans will wait with bated breath to see whether Piastri can finally break the Australian GP hoodoo.

References

  1. ^ Australian Grand Prix (www.formula1.com)
  2. ^ US strikes on Iran (theconversation.com)
  3. ^ organisers are confident (www.abc.net.au)
  4. ^ technical regulations (www.fia.com)
  5. ^ challenge for the drivers’ championship (www.planetf1.com)
  6. ^ Compared with 2025 (www.youtube.com)
  7. ^ Active aero (www.motorsportmagazine.com)
  8. ^ teams have tried to exploit (www.motorsportmagazine.com)
  9. ^ rebalanced (www.facebook.com)
  10. ^ competitive lifecycle (www.formula1.com)
  11. ^ a new car (www.formula1.com)
  12. ^ competitive advantage (ideas.repec.org)
  13. ^ sustainability ambitions (corp.formula1.com)
  14. ^ net zero carbon emissions by 2030 (www.formula1.com)
  15. ^ four-time world champion Max Verstappen (www.espn.com.au)
  16. ^ agonisingly close (www.abc.net.au)
  17. ^ F1 world champions (racingnews365.com)
  18. ^ Adelaide (1985–95) (gpracingstats.com)
  19. ^ 23 occasions (www.f1-fansite.com)
  20. ^ debut race (racingnews365.com)
  21. ^ substantial psychological load (doi.org)
  22. ^ calm and analytical approach (www.proquest.com)
  23. ^ What happens to F1 drivers’ bodies, and what sort of training do they do? (theconversation.com)

Authors: Dan van den Hoek, Senior Lecturer, Clinical Exercise Physiology, University of the Sunshine Coast

Read more https://theconversation.com/new-rules-and-high-expectations-can-oscar-piastri-break-australias-f1-drought-276624

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