The 2026 Formula 1 season hasn’t even started, and already the paddock has endured its first stress test — not on track, but in transit.
More than 100 personnel from F1 teams such as McLaren, Mercedes and tyre supplier Pirelli were left stranded in Bahrain after a pre-season tyre test was abruptly cancelled due to the conflict taking place in the region. Flights through Doha and Dubai vanished as regional airspace closures rippled across the Gulf, forcing teams into late-night reroutes more suited to crisis management than race week prep.
Australian Grand Prix CEO Travis Auld moved swiftly to tame speculations that the Melbourne opener could be compromised.
“F1 are experts at moving people around the world. They’ve quickly rescheduled flights. I’m told everyone’s now locked in and arriving within the required timeframes,” he said. “So, there’ll be no impact on our race, but it’s certainly been a busy 48 hours.”
Sky Sports reporter Craig Slater confirmed that roughly 50 staff from each team, along with more than 20 from Pirelli, were affected. “They are still working on an exit strategy to get those people out,” he said, before stressing: “It is not going to jeopardise the first race of the season.” None of the headline drivers were in Bahrain.
The logistical scramble unfolded against a rapidly escalating geopolitical backdrop.
Over the weekend, Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed following a sweeping US–Israeli offensive dubbed “Operation Epic Fury.” US President Donald Trump said the objective was to “ensure that Iran does not obtain a nuclear weapon,” vowing to “destroy their missiles and raze their missile industry to the ground,” while warning Iranian forces to surrender or “face certain death.”
Iran responded with ballistic missiles and drone strikes targeting US assets and allies across Israel, Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Jordan. Airports shut down, airspace closed, and thousands of commercial flights were grounded.
Melbourne’s lights will still go out on schedule. But as Formula 1 rolls into Albert Park, it does so in a season opening shaped not just by speed, but by the sudden fragility of global movement.