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MLS Power Rankings: Charlotte FC, Inter Miami CF Rise After Matchday 15

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MLS Power Rankings: Charlotte FC, Inter Miami CF Rise After Matchday 15


The busiest portion of the MLS regular season continued through Matchday 15, and several teams turned their fortunes with some standout performances. 

On Saturday, Lionel Messi’s Inter Miami CF overturned a late 3–1 deficit to grab a 3–3 draw against the Philadelphia Union, and Vancouver Whitecaps FC showed similar fight back as they clawed back from 2–0 to beat Real Salt Lake 3–2. 

Then on Sunday, Atlanta United pushed aside their poor start to the season to upset FC Cincinnati 4–2. 

All of that plays into some notable shifts in this week’s MLS Power Rankings. If you missed last week’s, check that out here too.

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30. D.C. United (Previous: 29)
29. LA Galaxy (Previous: 28)
28. CF Montréal (Previous: 30)
27. Real Salt Lake (Previous: 27)
26. St. Louis CITY SC (Previous: 22)
25. FC Dallas (Previous: 23)
24. Sporting Kansas City (Previous: 26)
23. Atlanta United (Previous: 24)
22. New York Red Bulls (Previous: 25)
21. Toronto FC (Previous: 20)
20. Houston Dynamo (Previous: 21)
19. New England Revolution (Previous: 18)
18. Chicago Fire FC (Previous: 15)
17. Portland Timbers (Previous: 17)
16. Austin FC (Previous: 16)

Wilfried Zah

Wilfried Zaha put up his first two MLS assists with Charlotte FC on Matchday 15. / Scott Kinser-Imagn Images

Charlotte FC snapped a five-game losing skid with a 3–2 win over Columbus Crew SC, and they looked good doing it. 

While The Crown didn’t hold much possession, they made the most of their counter-attacking opportunities, highlighted by a two-assist night from Wilfried Zaha. The former Premier League star stood out on several occasions, but none more so than his assist to U.S. men’s national team striker Patrick Agyemang, who scored the 2–1 goal. 

It wasn’t a great few weeks for Charlotte, but beating a strong Columbus team to return to the win column should lift some spirits in North Carolina. 

The Colorado Rapids did what they were supposed to do this weekend, grabbing three points off a dismal St. Louis CITY SC side. 

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Darren Yapi did well to turn in the box and fire home the game’s only goal, in what was an otherwise forgettable match that ended the way many expected it would. 

For Colorado, it was their second-straight 1–0 win after also beating Real Salt Lake by the same score in last week’s Rocky Mountain Cup matchup, and they will look to carry that stingy form into their next two winnable games against the Portland Timbers and Austin FC. 

The San Jose Earthquakes are a bit like Inter Miami, just without the world-class generational superstars. They can certainly score, but their defense hasn’t been as prominent in recent play. 

This week, it was a 3–3 draw with the Houston Dynamo, with neither team seeming to have much of a plan other than attacking. It was also the third time in the last five games that San Jose has conceded three goals, and highlighted the continued struggles of Earl Edwards Jr., who has made just four saves on 14 shots this season, between the sticks.

Is it fun to watch as a neutral? Sure, but head coach Bruce Arena won’t be happy with how things are going in San Jose. 

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Albert Rusnák

Albert Rusnák scored a late penalty to lead Seattle Sounders FC past FC Dallas on Saturday. / Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

It was a largely forgettable Saturday afternoon for the Seattle Sounders, but they can thank a late penalty and the recent form of Albert Rusnák for the 1–0 win over FC Dallas. 

Playing as the No. 9, Jesus Ferriera struggled to get into scoring positions, and the game shifted into Seattle’s favor late when MLS Next Pro standout Osaze De Rosario came into the match. 

Seattle have a big next few weeks with the FIFA Club World Cup approaching, and still don’t have a surefire goalscoring option, with Jordan Morris and Danny Musovski sidelined with injuries. 

New York City FC flexed their muscles at Yankee Stadium on Sunday, putting up a 3–1 win and taking advantage of a shorthanded Chicago Fire FC side that picked up two red cards by the end of the match. 

Alonso Martínez scored his eighth goal of the season to start the comeback after Chicago opened the scoring, before Monsef Bakrar and Hannes Wolf added the winning goal and insurance marker. 

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With four wins, a loss and a draw in their last six games, could New York City FC be turning the corner from an O.K. team to a good one? They are probably still missing one more attacking piece, but the baseline is certainly there. 

LAFC won’t be happy after a 2–2 draw against a CF Montréal side that lost to Toronto FC 6–1 the week prior, but they will be happy with the offensive injection Cengiz Ünder and Olivier Giroud offered from the bench. 

Giroud scored, much to the delight of the many French supporters in Montréal; however, the breakdowns defensively to allow goals from Giacomo Vrioni and Prince Owusu will be worrying, especially considering the attacking test they will face next Saturday in the FIFA Club World Cup Playoff against Liga MX’s Club América. 

Sam Surridge

Sam Surridge scored twice as Nashville SC downed Toronto FC 2–1 at BMO Field. / Dan Hamilton-Imagn Images

Sam Surridge continued to play well for Nashville SC, bagging a brace in a 2–1 win over Toronto FC to bring his season total to eight goals. 

It was an overall dominant performance from Nashville, who had 17 shots and 2.02 xG, despite only winning by a single goal. Outside of Surridge’s performance, Hany Mukhtar created five chances and continued his resurgence. 

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Yet, the most important note from the night came from the bench as U.S. men’s national team center back Walker Zimmerman returned after missing the last six weeks due to a concussion. 

Sometimes a draw can feel like a win, and that’s what Inter Miami CF had in their comeback 3–3 effort against the Philadelphia Union. 

After weeks of disappointing and uninspiring play, the Herons linked 16 passes in the lead-up to Tadeo Allende’s opening goal, with Tómas Áviles making a deft dribble into space to open up the attacking opportunity. 

Lionel Messi’s free-kick and the eventual tying goal from Telasco Segovia certainly made the night more exciting, but the effort and fight from Miami will be something supporters hope for in their upcoming run of games as well. 

“I talked to them that we are in a situation that is s—. It is s—. We are in the s—…The only way to see the sun is to give everything,” Mascherano told reporters post-match about his speech to the players. “We showed character and personality; they showed they want to fight their way out of this situation.”

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Charlotte FC’s resurgence on Saturday picked Columbus Crew SC apart, and much of that came down to a performance that played to Charlotte’s strengths. 

While The Crown had recently become more pragmatic in possession, Columbus controlled 62 percent possession on Saturday, allowing Charlotte to return to their low-possession, high-octane counter-attack. 

Without much time on the ball, Charlotte quickly sent through balls to attackers mere moments after regaining possession, which allowed Wilfried Zaha to put up his first two assists in MLS. 

Columbus, under head coach Wilfried Nancy, will always want to be a team that controls possession and pace of play, but they face a tough challenge when taking on quick transitions, like Charlotte on their day. 

Orlando City SC had an off night, but a 39th-minute strike from Duncan McGuire proved enough for them to grab all three points, extending their unbeaten streak to 12 games against a Portland Timbers side that played flat and without much threat.

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Eduard Atuesta had a standout performance in his return after missing four games due to an undisclosed injury, providing the assist on McGuire’s goal and creating three chances. 

With McGuire off the mark with his first goal of the season and Atuesta already back thriving, Orlando find themselves as a real threat as the season nears its midmark. 

Kévin Denkey

Kévin Denkey wasn’t able to score for FC Cincinnati in their 4–2 loss to Atlanta United. / Brett Davis-Imagn Images

FC Cincinnati became just the third team this season to lose to Atlanta United on Sunday night. Their 4–2 loss actually flattered them too, considering the number of chances they gave up in the first half. 

Despite holding 63 percent of the ball, Cincinnati wasn’t able to get much involvement from Evander or Pavel Bucha and struggled to find spaces for Kévin Denkey to attack. Once it was clear they were being overwhelmed by Atlanta’s counter-attack, they also struggled to adapt, all while completing just 30 percent of their crosses. 

It was an off-night for Cincinnati. They’ve shown this season how good they can be, and they will hope to return to the win column when they take on their former superstar Luciano Acosta and FC Dallas on Wednesday. 

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Minnesota United met their match in Austin FC on the weekend, not in terms of a better team, but a clashing style that held them back.

While head coach Eric Ramsay’s team has thrived on little possession, sometimes less than 30 percent, Austin let them have 53 percent possession in their eventual 1–1 draw. Minnesota was unable to rely as much on quick breaks and counterattacks and instead had to rely on a set-piece goal from center back Michael Boxall to help them to a point.

Minnesota is the best transition team in MLS, but their attacking crew of Joaquin Pereyra, Will Trapp, Tani Oluwaseyi, Robin Lod and Kelvin Yeboah struggles when they’re given more time on the ball. 

Every week on these MLS Power Rankings, we ask if things can get any better for San Diego FC, and each week, they prove that they can. 

Hirving “Chucky” Lozano scored the late winning goal after a cross from Anders Dreyer on Saturday, with his goal and Luca de la Torre’s helping San Diego to a 2–1 win over the struggling LA Galaxy, who had a point ripped from their hands in the final moments.

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San Diego has proven every week that they can compete with any team in the Western Conference, and the partnership of Lozano and Dreyer has no limits after 14 matches. 

Tai Baribo, Quinn Sullivan

Tai Baribo (left) and Quinn Sullivan scored Philadelphia Union’s goals against Inter Miami CF. / Philadelphia Union

The Philadelphia Union looked like they had Inter Miami all sealed up. Leading 2–0 and 3–1 with another brace from MLS Golden Boot leader Tai Baribo, the Union were firing on all cylinders until late. 

The collapse and allowing a Lionel Messi free-kick will sting, but head coach Bradley Carnell’s team continued to prove that they are among the best in MLS. Outside of Baribo’s brace,  it was a strong night for midfielders Danley Jean-Jacques and Quinn Sullivan, who continued to showcase their top form in 2025. 

Vancouver Whitecaps FC didn’t plan on going down 2–0 within the first four minutes, but they stormed back against Real Salt Lake with a brace from Brian White and a winner from Pedro Vite to return to the win column after back-to-back draws. 

Head coach Jesper Sørensen played all his first-choice players outside of the suspended Andres Cubas, so getting a win a week out from its first-ever Concacaf Champions Cup Final was critical, and they did so in inspiring fashion.

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White’s brace also brought him to 70 goals in MLS play, and kept him in the MLS Golden Boot conversation. 

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Winners and losers from F1’s eventful Miami Grand Prix

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Winners and losers from F1’s eventful Miami Grand Prix


F1’s decision to bring the Miami start time forward by three hours ultimately made no difference, as the expected thunderstorms hit the track in the early hours of Sunday morning but then swerved Miami Garden in the afternoon.

As it was, Miami didn’t need the weather gods to serve up an absorbing display. And while it is too early to judge the recent round of energy management tweaks, on the surface Miami provided an entertaining mix of management tactics and driver-centred wheel-to-wheel skills.

Winner: Kimi Antonelli

With every passing week, young Kimi Antonelli is convincing more and more sceptics about whether he is really ready to take the title fight all the way in what is only his sophomore F1 season as a teenager.

There is no doubt that Antonelli is still a raw diamond rather than a polished product. But he has paired his obvious talent and speed with more maturity this year and has not flinched when the pressure is on, as evidenced by the various wheel-to-wheel battles for the lead in Miami.

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Antonelli has spent the April break working on some of those chinks in his armour, like his start difficulties, though a lot of the burden is on Mercedes to simplify its procedures too, with Toto Wolff calling the team’s struggles across both cars “unacceptable” as the competition closes in on Mercedes.

But having won his last three grands prix from pole, it’s hard to argue with Antonelli being every bit the title contender that team-mate George Russell is.

Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: Clive Mason / Getty Images

It’s too early to be talking about Red Bull’s second seat curse, not after Hadjar’s impressive start to his Red Bull tenure in Melbourne, but on a weekend Max Verstappen was firing on all cylinders Hadjar has found it much harder to keep up with the mercurial Dutchman.

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Hadjar was of course desperately unlucky for his car’s floor to just be outside legal parameters in qualifying, relegating him to the back of the grid. But he was a second off Verstappen in sprint qualifying and eight tenths on Saturday, looking much more like a 2019-2025 spec second Red Bull driver that the team is hoping to have solved. His clumsy crash in the early stages of the race was entirely avoidable, too.

Has the improved Red Bull simply allowed Verstappen to push much harder and bring out the best in him, leaving Hadjar in the dust? Or does Hadjar need more time to get on top of the heavily revised RB22? Red Bull will be hoping it is the latter, with team boss Laurent Mekies playing down any concerns.

“I don’t think we are worried,” he said. “In terms of driving and in terms of rhythm, he still hasn’t got into the right rhythm. I think he would have been strong in the race, and it was strong for the little he could have shown.”

Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Zak Brown, McLaren

A 1-2 in the sprint and a 2-3 in the grand prix? McLaren would have bitten your hand off for a double podium berth after unsuccessfully chasing Mercedes over the first three rounds of the 2026 campaign.

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But a first tranche of upgrades to the MCL40, at its historically happy hunting ground around the Hard Rock Stadium, has dramatically changed the outlook of the 2026 season. Both Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri were legitimate contenders this weekend, even if they were helped by Mercedes getting its deployment strategy wrong over the sprint event, rowing it back to a more normal set-up for qualifying and the race.

The end result is that on pure speed McLaren reckons Mercedes still has the slight edge, and the Silver Arrows are introducing their first batch of upgrades in Canada. But McLaren isn’t done upgrading either, with sources suggesting its own Montreal package amounts to around 40 percent of its total car overhaul across both rounds. Watch this space.

There was little enjoyment to be derived from Sunday’s race for Lewis Hamilton, as he was in the wrong place at the wrong time when Verstappen spun ahead of him at the start and then suffered aero damage after a glancing blow from Franco Colapinto.

Hamilton estimated the time loss at half a second and it dropped him into no man’s land for the remainder of the afternoon while his team-mate Charles Leclerc was having all the fun ahead of him, mixing it up with Russell and Piastri.

Leclerc also suffered a disappointing end to his afternoon courtesy of his last-lap spin, which cost him a certain podium, and he did exceedingly well not to suffer a huge accident that would have cost him a lot more than that. But with a car that refused to turn right any longer, Leclerc decided to redraw some of Miami’s chicanes, which cost him a deserved 20-second penalty.

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Winner: Franco Colapinto

Colapinto has come in for quite a bit of flak since replacing Jack Doohan at Alpine exactly 12 months ago, not in the least from his own boss Flavio Briatore. But armed with Alpine’s latest aero upgrades and a slightly lighter chassis, Colapinto appears to cut a more confident figure aboard the A526 and that has translated into getting the better of experienced team-mate Pierre Gasly over Miami’s two qualifying sessions, something which hasn’t happened too often.

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Colapinto delayed his only pitstop until past the halfway point, propelling up as high as fourth at one point, and Leclerc’s post-race penalty eventually netted him a best-ever points finish in seventh.

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Fresh from his Buenos Aires demo run that was attended by an estimated 600,000 Argentinians, it has been a pretty good fortnight for Lionel Messi’s favourite F1 driver. Messi’s children were all sporting Mercedes gear, so perhaps they are harder to convince.

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Photo by: Kym Illman / Getty Images

Audi has made a commendable start as a works team from a performance point of view, even if the German manufacturer’s first F1 power unit needs a bit more juice. But its endless list of reliability issues is seriously hurting any chance of keeping up in the midfield, with Nico Hulkenberg completing a grand total of seven laps across both Miami races and Gabriel Bortoleto’s weekend derailed in qualifying.

Audi has always said it is playing the long game, so we won’t judge it too harshly after four race weekends, but the team needs to be able to nail down cleaner weekends if it wants to make progress on the performance side of things and build up some semblance of momentum.

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“It was a proper character building weekend,” Hulkenberg said afterwards. “We’ve had some promising signs and the pace in the car is not bad, but obviously we need to be able to finish sessions and get the cars out there. Yeah, just a lot of headwind this weekend, kind of need to regroup, reset now, take it on the chin.

Alexander Albon, Williams

Photo by: Alastair Staley / LAT Images via Getty Images

Williams had been one of the more disappointing stories of the 2026 season thus far, but rebounded with a first pass of upgrades by taking a double points finish with Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon. Finishing a pitstop behind Colapinto’s Alpine is not a result that merits a victory parade around Grove’s high street, but it’s a first step as the team fights to both add aero performance and sheds weight off its cars, something which will take time and which can’t be done at once in a cost cap world.

Sainz summed it up best afterwards: “It’s not where we want to be, even if it feels for everyone a bit of a relief. Getting two cars in the points on merit is definitely a good step, but we need to keep pushing because it’s still not where we expected to be at the end of last year.”

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Photos from Miami GP – Sunday

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Rain at the Hard Rock Stadium


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Frederic Vasseur, Ferrari


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Franco Colapinto, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Nico Hülkenberg, Audi F1 Team


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Carlos Sainz, Williams


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Rafael Nadal and Jon Rahm visit the Aston Martin F1 Team garage.


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Cam'ron with the Audi F1 Team R26 on the grid.


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Isack Hadjar, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Pierre Gasly, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Pierre Gasly, Alpine


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Pierre Gasly, Alpine


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Franco Colapinto, Alpine


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Esteban Ocon, Haas F1 Team


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, George Russell, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Rafael Nadal waves the chequered flag for Race winner Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli celebrates after winning


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Lando Norris, McLaren; Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Lando Norris, McLaren, Oscar Piastri, McLaren


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Oscar Piastri, McLaren, Lando Norris, McLaren


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes, Toto Wolff, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes


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Miami GP – Sunday, in photos


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F1: How to Watch the 2026 Miami Grand Prix

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F1: How to Watch the 2026 Miami Grand Prix


See at Sky

Streaming the Miami GP in the UK

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Sky Sports and Now TV

Mercedes star Kimi Antonelli will be looking to make it a hat-trick of wins as the Formula One season resumes on Sunday with the Miami Grand Prix.

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Antonelli is nine points ahead of his second-placed teammate George Russell, following back-to-back wins at the Chinese and Japanese GPs.

Sunday’s race marks the fifth Miami GP after being added to the F1 calendar back in 2022, and comes at a crucial time for the sport. Last month’s scheduled Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix were canceled due to the war in Iran. 

The Miami Grand Prix takes place at the Hard Rock Stadium complex in Miami Gardens, Florida, on Sunday, May 3, at 4 p.m. ET. That makes it a 1 p.m. PT start, while for viewers in the UK it’s 9 p.m. BST. Meanwhile, Australian F1 fans are looking at a 6 a.m. AEST start on Monday morning. 

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Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli is the youngest ever driver to lead the F1 Drivers’ Championship at the age of 19. 

Peter Fox/Getty Images

Livestream the Miami Grand Prix in the US 

F1 racing has a new home on Apple TV, with the 2026 season launching its five-year broadcast run for US viewers. There are ways to stream the events with a paid subscription or for free.

It’s worth noting that if you’ve recently bought a new Apple device and haven’t previously subscribed to the streaming platform, you can take advantage of a three-month free trial within 90 days of purchase. 

If you’re not lucky enough to have bought a new Apple gadget during that time frame, there are two other free options for those new to Apple TV. The platform also offers a seven-day free trial to new subscribers through its dedicated app and the Apple TV channel on Prime Video. Finally, Apple’s subscription bundle, Apple One, will also get you a 30-day free trial of its TV streaming service.

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Apple/Zooey Liao/CNET

Apple TV Plus currently costs $13 per month in the US for the standalone, ad-free streaming service. It’s also available as part of the Apple One bundle, which starts at $20 per month and includes Apple Music, Apple Arcade and iCloud Plus. 

How to livestream the Miami Grand Prix in the UK 

The Miami GP is available in the UK on Sky Sports. Sky Sports will include the practice rounds and qualifying. If you already have Sky Sports as part of your TV package, you can stream the race via its app. Cord-cutters can watch Sky TV with unlimited Sky Sports on a Now TV membership. 

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Sky Sports

Sky subsidiary Now offers streaming access to Sky Sports channels with a Now Sports membership.

You can get a day of access for £15, or sign up to a monthly plan from £35 a month right now.

Livestream the Miami Grand Prix in Canada

F1 fans can watch the Miami GP on TSN and its streaming service, TSN Plus. Existing TSN cable subscribers can also watch at no extra charge using their TV provider’s account login details.

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TSN

TSN Plus is a streaming service that costs CA$8 a month and also offers coverage of PGA Tour Live golf, NFL games, F1, NASCAR and the four Grand Slam tennis tournaments.

Livestream the Miami Grand Prix in Australia

The Miami Grand Prix can be watched Down Under on Fox Sports via Foxtel. If you’re not a Fox subscriber, your best option is to sign up for the streaming service Kayo Sports. 

Kayo Sports
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A Kayo Sports subscription starts at AU$25 a month and lets you stream on one screen, while its Premium tier costs AU$35 a month for simultaneous viewing on up to three devices.

The service gives you access to a wide range of sports, including F1, NRL, NFL, NHL and MLB, and there are no lock-in contracts.

Better still, if you’re a new customer, you can take advantage of a one-week Kayo Sports free trial.

Formula One 2026 full schedule

You can visit the Formula One website for additional details on the schedule, but here’s a current snapshot of when each main race takes place this season. Practice rounds are excluded.

F1 race day schedule

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Date Grand Prix Start time (ET)
May 3 Miami Grand Prix 4 p.m.
May 24 Canadian Grand Prix 4 p.m.
June 7 Monaco Grand Prix 9 a.m.
June 14 Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix 9 a.m.
June 28 Austrian Grand Prix 9 a.m.
July 5 British Grand Prix 10 a.m.
July 19 Belgian Grand Prix 9 a.m.
July 26 Hungarian Grand Prix 9 a.m.
Aug. 23 Dutch Grand Prix 9 a.m.
Sept. 6 Italian Grand Prix 9 a.m.
Sept. 13 Spanish Grand Prix 9 a.m.
Sept. 26 Azerbaijan Grand Prix 7 a.m.
Oct. 11 Singapore Grand Prix 8 a.m.
Oct. 25 United States Grand Prix 4 p.m.
Nov. 1 Mexican Grand Prix 3 p.m.
Nov. 8 Brazilian Grand Prix 12 p.m.
Nov. 21 Las Vegas Grand Prix 11 p.m.
Nov. 29 Qatar Grand Prix 11 a.m.
Dec. 6 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix 8 a.m.





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Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli continues strong form with Miami Grand Prix Pole

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Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli continues strong form with Miami Grand Prix Pole


Formula 1 is back after an unexpected one-month hiatus because of the war in the Middle East, and somehow the series has reconvened in Miami, right where we were and not where we were, if that makes sense.

It may not, but I’ll explain.

Through the first three races, there were two clear-cut top teams: Mercedes and Ferrari. Mercedes’ driver Kimi Antonelli had also won two straight Grand Prix coming into Miami, and is the current championship leader.

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Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli comes into the Miami Grand Prix as the championship leader. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

However, teams brought a considerable number of upgrades — plus the FIA and F1 have tuned the regulations a little after some team feedback — and suddenly, we’ve got more teams battling toward the front.

CADILLAC UNVEILS ONE-OFF STARS-AND-STRIPES LIVERY AHEAD OF THE TEAM’S FIRST-EVER RACE ON U.S. SOIL

This was noticeable in Saturday morning’s Sprint, which featured a McLaren 1-2, led by reigning world champion Lando Norris.

But the bigger shakeup came in qualifying.

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While the Silver Arrows’ 19-year-old superstar took pole by around a tenth and a half, what was surprising was that he was battling Red Bull’s Max Verstappen.

Red Bull had massive struggles through the first three rounds of the season and, even to Verstappen’s surprise during his post-session interview, was battling for pole.

Even wilder, there are four different teams represented on the first two rows of the grid: Mercedes with Antonelli on pole, Red Bull with Verstappen in P2, Ferrari with Charles Leclerc in P3 and McLaren with Norris in P4.

Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli (centre) with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (left) and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc after Miami Grand Prix qualifying. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

Now, all eyes are going to be on the start of what is expected to be a wet race.

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Starts have been the Achilles’ heel for Mercedes, and especially Antonelli this season, something that was seen on Saturday morning during the Sprint.

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Fortunately for him, Verstappen’s starts haven’t been much better, but unfortunately, starting right behind Antonelli is Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari, and the Scuderia’s cars have been absolute missiles off the line all season long (really since preseason testing).

So even with the short run into Turn 1 at the Miami International Autodrome, which is just under 200 meters, I think we’re going to see Leclerc jump at least one, maybe both, of the cars on the front row.

Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli celebrates taking pole for the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix. (Sam Navarro-Imagn Images)

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Maybe the wet weather can reduce that Ferrari advantage when the lights go out, but even if it does, Antonelli has Verstappen — a wet-weather fiend — alongside him.

Antonelli’s best chance of his third-straight Grand Prix will be best if he can get off the line cleanly and keep the lead out of Turn 1, but no matter what, this is shaping up to be the biggest challenge of his championship campaign so far.



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