Formula 1 2026 energy management solutions: what’s at stake

Formula 1’s 2026 energy management reforms have a tight deadline – and the clock is ticking. Three races. Two canceled Grands Prix. One driver is threatening to walk away from the sport he has dominated for half a decade. The big new era is not going according to plan.

The FIA ​​confirmed last week what most of the paddock already knew – the 2026 rules need to be worked on. Following the first round of meetings on 9 April, the governing body issued a statement acknowledging what it diplomatically called “a commitment to make changes to certain aspects of the rules in the field of energy management”. Two further meetings are scheduled on 15 and 16 April, before a high-stakes vote on 20 April, where team principals, FIA officials and Formula 1 management will determine what, if anything, changes will be made ahead of the Miami Grand Prix on 3 May.

What happens in that room matters a lot.

Problem in layman’s terms

mclaren formula 1 f1

Start with the basics. The 2026 power unit regulations shifted the power balance in these cars to approximately 50-50 between internal combustion engines and battery-electric power. The old MGU-H – the component that used exhaust energy and kept the battery running at high speeds – is gone. It has been replaced by a much more powerful electric motor and much more complex maneuvering.

Since teams cannot produce energy as before, drivers must now create their own opportunities to recharge the batteries. On straight lines, in the braking zone, wherever they can get a moment. The problem is that cars that do this look to anyone looking at them as if they are randomly losing speed for no reason. Super clipping, when the energy management system draws power while the driver still has the throttle pinned, is as strange as it sounds.

Charles Leclerc called it “Mario Kart”. Max Verstappen went further, calling it “Formula E on steroids”. Lewis Hamilton, whose credits stand out, says the racing is the best he has experienced in the last 20 years. Hamilton isn’t wrong about Sunday’s race. He is not entirely correct about the qualifying.

Qualification has been the most visible casualty. To manage the battery reserve the cars have to be lifted and parked. They cannot move around high-speed turns like they did before. Drivers are openly dissatisfied with the amount of energy-saving and energy-harvesting tactics required in qualifying the new cars – lifting and coasting, downshifting on the straights, super clipping. An unintended consequence is that they no longer push in high-speed corners. For anyone who grew up watching Schumacher and Senna pass Suzuka’s 130R, watching an F1 car slow down before a corner that it used to take without lifting is truly disturbing.

Bearman’s accident made it a safety issue

Bearman Crash F1 Suzuka
Photo: Robbie Hoad/Every Second Media

In Suzuka the abstract became very concrete.

Oliver Bearman’s Haas was perfectly positioned when Franco Colapinto’s Alpine, ahead of him, went into crop mode in mid-corner. When Colapinto’s Alpine touched that limit midway through the corner, Bearman faced a car that had effectively dropped anchor on the racing line. “It was a huge overspeed, 50km/h, which is real, you know, it’s a part of these new rules and I think we have to get used to it,” Bearman said.

He left with a badly injured knee. The impact was 50G. it could be worse.

Verstappen did not say anything about the reason.

“Basically, one guy is stuck completely without power, and then the other one uses mushroom mode. It could be a difference of 50-60 kilometers. Really big.”

GPDA President Alex Wurz called for immediate software-level intervention.

“From a safety point of view, we should simply prevent sudden increases in power output at top speed,” he said. “This will require software that is the same for all teams.”

McLaren’s Andrea Stella had been warning for weeks before Bearman hit the wall that this exact scenario was coming. Haas boss Ayao Komatsu said immediately after the accident: “We can’t ignore it.” They won’t be able to.

What F1 rule changes are really on the table

Formula One: Australian Grand Prix
Credit: Mark Peterson/Reuters via Imagine Images

The April meetings are Formula 1’s best attempt to push for meaningful energy management reforms for 2026 before the season goes away entirely.

The most straightforward solution: Increase how much power can be produced during super clipping. Right now, drivers are limited to 250kW when doing this, with 350kW available from lift and coast. If super clipping were increased to the same 350kW limit as Lift and Coast, it would become the preferred route, at least reducing the prevalence of Lift and Coast.

There is also a specific solution to qualify the under discussion, even if it seems counterintuitive. Strict recharge limits are also on the table. Qualifying currently allows nine megajoules of energy recovery per lap. Suzuka was dialed back to 8MJ at the last minute. Some discussions have centered on reducing it to 6 MJ, which would cost lap times but eliminate the frantic energy management scramble that is turning qualifying into a math problem.

Active aero zones are also under discussion. Adjusting where and when Straight Mode can be activated will reduce the speed difference that makes Suzuka dangerous.

What may not be coming yet is any change to the basic 50-50 power split. This is a hardware conversation that engine manufacturers (notably Audi and Honda) who have built their power units around the current regulations will aggressively oppose. Any change in that range is discussion for 2027 at the earliest.

verstappen variable

max verstappen formula 1
Credit: F1

None of this happens in a vacuum. There is no negligible chance that Max Verstappen will leave Formula 1 in the near future – and Red Bull’s collapse is not the main reason. The four-time world champion has been one of the most vocal critics of F1’s new rules, particularly energy management, and he has made it clear he is not having fun right now.

We’ve written about this before – there is real merit in the criticism, even if Verstappen is the wrong messenger for it, and the contract clause that could have let him leave Red Bull altogether has not gone away. The April 20 vote is as much a technicality as it is a Verstappen retention decision, whether Formula 1 wants to frame it that way or not.

Helmut Marko, who is now a Red Bull Ring ambassador rather than the man running Red Bull’s driver program, put it clearly this week. “The current rules are overly focused on energy management – ​​this only works in conjunction with software engineers. The driver has been deprived of his key role.”

Hamilton admitted that he did not expect much from these meetings, as drivers often feel that they are not heard enough in regulatory discussions. “I hope they make big changes. We drivers don’t have a say and we don’t have any power.”

That quote from the seven-time world champion – the one who praised racing more eloquently than anyone – is one the Formula 1 leadership should consider ahead of April 20.

Good news (yes, there is some)

2026 japanese grand prix formula 1
Credit: Formula 1

Formula 1 is not in freefall. Sunday’s racing has been really entertaining. There were 149 officially recorded overtaking moves in the first three Grand Prix races – significantly more than the 63 passes in the previous year’s Melbourne, Shanghai and Suzuka competitions. The race day action is real. The problem is that qualifying — the part that determines what fans watch on Sunday, the part that decides who starts where, the part that used to be appointment television — has become a chore.

Determine eligibility. Eliminate the closing-motion threat that put Bearman in the medical center. Let Sunday’s race breathe. This is the work.

The last date is the meeting of 20th April. The test is on May 3 in Miami. Formula 1 has faced difficult tasks in a short period of time. But the game will need the best rooms in that room, not the most cautious rooms.

Drivers telling you what’s broken. Suzuka’s data tells you what’s dangerous. the window is open.

use it.

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Scott Gulbransen, a quintessential expert in the field of sports journalism, serves as an editor, nfl , mlb , Formula 1 … More about Scott Gulbransen


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5 Tom Brady landing spots if he sold Raiders stake for NFL return, including Colts

Earlier this week, future Hall of Famer and New England Patriots icon Tom Brady revealed in an interview with CNBC that he had recently seriously considered returning to the field. However, the 15-time Pro Bowler also revealed that the NFL “didn’t like the idea very much.”

It wasn’t because they didn’t want to see the 48-year-old make a spectacular return to the NFL. This was because he wanted to do so and retain his minority ownership in the Las Vegas Raiders. Which is a big no-no. Still, he clearly has a desire to play, and that’s probably why he was the driving force behind creating the Fanatics Flag Football Classic this year.

But for a man who ruined his marriage just to play one more season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, it may not be enough. Pro Football Talk’s Mike Florio added to that thought on Sunday. He wrote, “Still got the itch. He can still play. He’ll be better right now than some of the players who are going to be starters in 2026.”

“Will the itch go away? Possibly. If not, selling his stake back to Mark Davis could be an easier path out of a situation in which his role doesn’t match the franchise’s expectations.”

On the outside chance that Tom Brady surprisingly gives up his stake in the Raiders for another season in the league, let’s take a look at five teams he would be willing to play for.

las vegas raiders

raiders
Mark J. rebilas-imagen images

Obviously, the most likely option would be to suit up for the team he was signed to. Las Vegas was rumored to be a landing spot when he left New England several years ago, and he clearly has a bond with majority owner Mark Davis. While the Raiders are no closer to a title contender, Brady would have unheard of power as their starting QB.

This would be a dream scenario for the franchise. They’ll be getting a year from, arguably, the greatest QB ever, and they’re projected to have No. 1 pick Fernando Mendoza learn from him for a season.

pittsburgh steelers

steelers
Barry Rieger-Imagen Images

The Pittsburgh Steelers are playoff contenders, but they haven’t had a true Pro Bowl-level QB since the days of Ben Roethlisberger. That’s why they’ve learned about Russell Wilson and Aaron Rodgers over the last two years. There is a real possibility that Brady could perform worse than the two future Hall of Famers. Or, he could be better, and it could be enough to lead Pittsburgh to the AFC Championship.

indianapolis colts

colts
Denny Medley-Images Images

The Indianapolis Colts have a mixup at the QB1 spot. Daniel Jones was great for most of the 2025 season before he broke a bone in his foot and then tore his Achilles. They are now forced to hope that he can return sooner than expected because they could not find a better player in free agency or the draft. However, Brady could have if he was available.

The Colts looked like a Super Bowl contender before Jones got injured. And Philip Rivers walked off the street at 44 and looked good at times because of the weapons he had. At 48 years old, Brady can help Indy reach the playoffs and advance.

carolina panthers

panthers
Stephen Lew-Imagen Images

The Carolina Panthers also have a very tough situation at the QB1 spot as this is a make or break year for former No. 1 overall pick Bryce Young. However, if Tom Brady were available, Carolina would take advantage of the opportunity and make every impact he can if it helps them win some games in the playoffs next year.

atlanta falcons

Falcon
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Despite having a messy QB situation in 2025, the Atlanta Falcons are still 8-9. Same record as the division champion Panthers. With weapons like Bijan Robinson and Drake London, adding Brady to the mix could be enough to get them to 10 wins and homefield in a playoff game. Plus, whenever Michael Penix Jr. returns, he can also learn a thing or two by sitting down with the NFL legend.

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After earning a journalism degree in 2017, Jason Burgos worked as a contributor to several sites, including MMA Sacca… More about Jason Burgos

#Tom #Brady #landing #spots #sold #Raiders #stake #NFL #return #including #Colts