Ferrari left the 2026 Australian Grand Prix with a podium and a narrative of a solid start. The same was true in 2022: Charles Leclerc won two of the first three races, and the team led both championships. By the end of that season, Ferrari had dropped off alarmingly due to reliability failures, strategy blunders, and operational mistakes. The pattern is worth remembering. Last time Ferrari started strong, the season unraveled; the reasons – reliability, pit wall decisions, and the inability to sustain early form – are the same factors that will determine whether 2026 follows the same script.
Ferrari’s Strong Start in 2022 Unraveled Because of Reliability and Strategy
In 2022, Ferrari won in Bahrain and Australia (Leclerc taking the second round at Jeddah and the team competitive in Melbourne). They held the lead in both championships and had the fastest car on raw pace at several circuits. According to The Race and PlanetF1, the team’s form then dropped off alarmingly. Reliability failures cost Leclerc and the team points; strategy errors – wrong tyre calls, slow pit stops, and indecision under pressure – became a recurring theme. By the end of the year, Ferrari had finished second in both standings, with Red Bull and Max Verstappen running away with the titles. The strong start in Australia and the early races did not hold; the season unraveled because Ferrari could not match Red Bull’s reliability and strategic consistency.
In 2023, under new team principal Fred Vasseur, Ferrari arrived as contenders but suffered a dramatic reversal. Leclerc retired from the Bahrain season opener with a power unit failure; Reuters and ESPN reported that Ferrari put reliability at the top of their to-do list. Sky Sports and The Race analysed a tough start: reliability, an aerodynamic concept that required major mid-season changes, and tyre degradation that forced suboptimal strategies. The pattern was consistent: strong expectations, then early setbacks that exposed deeper problems. Ferrari’s 2026 Australian result – a podium and a “solid start” – echoes that history. They led early, then lost the race on strategy when they did not pit under the first VSC. The question is whether 2026 will repeat the unraveling or break the pattern.
Current regulations and team dynamics add another layer. The 2026 season introduces a new 50:50 power-unit split and chassis rules; Ferrari have invested in the new cycle. Vasseur has had more time to shape the team than in 2023, when he had only 47 days before pre-season testing. But the 2026 Australian Grand Prix already showed a familiar weakness: when the pit wall had one decisive call to make, Mercedes made it and Ferrari did not. If that pattern continues – strategic hesitation or misjudgement under pressure – the 2026 season could mirror 2022: a strong start in Australia, then a gradual unraveling as reliability, strategy, or both let the lead slip away. Ferrari’s own race report from the 2026 Australian weekend, like the 2022 and 2023 post-race narratives, emphasises the positive: podium, points, competitive pace. It does not lead with the single pit call that cost the win. That editorial choice is consistent with how the team has historically presented strong starts; the unraveling, when it has come, has often been visible first in the gap between the narrative and the results. In 2026, the first result is already in: third and fourth, behind a Mercedes 1-2 decided by one VSC call.
What This Actually Means
Last time Ferrari started strong, the season unraveled because reliability and strategy could not sustain the early promise. 2022 and 2023 are the evidence. In 2026, Ferrari have again started strong in Australia in the sense of pace and position early in the race; they have already lost the first race on a strategic call. Whether the season unravels again depends on whether they fix the pit wall and the car for the long run. The pattern is clear; the outcome is not yet written.
Why Has Ferrari’s Strong Start Often Unraveled?
Ferrari’s strong starts have often unraveled for three reasons: reliability, strategy, and the inability to sustain development. In 2022, early wins gave way to engine and component failures and strategy errors that cost wins and podiums. In 2023, the season began with a Leclerc retirement in Bahrain and a car that needed major aerodynamic changes by mid-year. The common thread is that early promise was not backed by consistent execution. In 2026, Ferrari have the same challenge: they showed pace in Australia but lost the race on one pit wall decision. To avoid another unraveling, they need reliability to hold and the strategy team to match Mercedes when the next decisive call arrives. The 2026 Australian Grand Prix was only the first race; one strategic error does not doom a season. But the pattern is established: Ferrari had the pace to lead, lost the race on a pit wall decision, and left Melbourne with a narrative of a solid start that papers over that loss. Last time Ferrari started strong in Australia and in the early season, the campaign unraveled. The reasons were reliability and strategy. In 2026, the first race has already highlighted strategy. Whether the season unravels again will depend on whether Ferrari can make the right call the next time the pit wall has one number that says pit or stay out.