F1 Teams Push to Slash 2026 Rookie Practice Rules Amid Massive Calendar Chaos
The 2026 F1 season was supposed to usher in a massive new era of technical regulations, but right now, the paddock is entirely consumed by a massive geopolitical and logistical nightmare. With the race calendar suddenly shrinking and the future of several major Grand Prix weekends hanging in the balance, the grid is actively lobbying the FIA for an emergency rule change. According to an exclusive new report from GPblog, a majority of Formula 1 teams are actively pushing to temporarily relax the mandatory rookie free practice requirements for the 2026 campaign.
Under the heavily updated sporting regulations for this season, every single constructor on the grid is strictly mandated to surrender their highly coveted Free Practice 1 (FP1) sessions to a rookie driver four separate times over the course of the year. In practical terms, this means both regular race drivers within a team are required to hand over the keys to their multi-million dollar machinery twice per season.
The fundamental goal of the regulation was universally praised: force the notoriously closed-off F1 paddock to give emerging young talent vital seat time in current-spec cars during an official, high-pressure Grand Prix weekend. However, as the global situation continues to heavily impact the sport, the teams are arguing that fulfilling this specific four-session mandate is rapidly becoming an impossible logistical mountain to climb.
The Geopolitical Crisis Wrecking F1’s Rookie Pipeline
The sudden panic in the paddock all stems from the rapidly deteriorating racing calendar. Formula 1 has already been forced to indefinitely postpone the opening Grands Prix in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia due to the escalating war and severe geopolitical instability in the Middle East. Because of these massive regional disruptions, it is highly questionable whether those two specific races will ever be rescheduled later in the season.
More concerning for the teams is the massive dark cloud now hanging over the tail end of the 2026 championship. The traditional season-ending races in Qatar and Abu Dhabi are currently deeply uncertain. Historically, the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix serves as the ultimate rookie playground, with almost the entire grid opting to burn their mandatory FP1 rookie sessions at the Yas Marina Circuit, where the track data is less critical, and the risk of a high-speed crash is significantly lower.
If the Middle Eastern leg of the calendar is completely wiped out, the teams will suddenly be forced to run inexperienced teenagers at high-stakes, high-risk European or American circuits during the absolute climax of a tight championship battle.
Faced with this terrifying prospect, the constructors have collectively proposed a compromise to the FIA. Rather than entirely scrapping the rookie development program, the teams want to temporarily revert the rule back to the old standard, demanding that each constructor only fields a rookie twice per season instead of four times. This would require each full-time driver to sacrifice their cockpit just once.
The ball is now entirely in the FIA’s court. The governing body must quickly decide whether to hold the line and force teams to risk their vital championship track time, or fold to the paddock consensus and officially slash the 2026 rookie requirements.