Albon was able to climb out of the car unharmed, but the incident immediately brought out a red flag so marshals could recover the damaged vehicle and clear the track.
The crash left the car with major structural damage, particularly along the left‑hand side where it hit the wall.
When the Williams mechanics inspected the car back in the garage, the damage proved more serious than initially expected. The team determined that key components had to be replaced, including:
Both components required changes after the impact, indicating significant mechanical stress from the crash.
Because these are complex assemblies that take time to replace and reassemble, the repairs quickly became a race against the clock.
The Canadian Grand Prix weekend used the sprint format, which means there was only one practice session before sprint qualifying on Friday.
After the groundhog crash, Williams initially tried to repair the FW48 in time. However, the scale of the damage—combined with the need to replace the gearbox and power unit—made it impossible to complete the rebuild before sprint qualifying began.
Albon’s crash was one of several interruptions in a chaotic FP1 session. His incident triggered a red flag roughly midway through practice while marshals recovered the stranded Williams and cleaned debris from the track.
Because multiple stoppages occurred during the session, race control extended practice time to compensate for the lost running.
Still, Albon had already lost the remainder of his only practice opportunity during the sprint weekend.
Wildlife encounters are a long‑running quirk of the Canadian Grand Prix. Circuit Gilles Villeneuve sits on Île Notre‑Dame inside Montreal’s Parc Jean‑Drapeau, a park environment where groundhogs naturally live.
Because the circuit is effectively a temporary facility built within that environment, animals sometimes find their way onto the track despite barriers and fencing.
These incidents have occurred repeatedly over the years. Drivers including Lewis Hamilton and others have reported striking or narrowly avoiding groundhogs during Montreal race weekends.
Authorities attempt to relocate animals from the circuit area before the event, but complete prevention is difficult due to the large local groundhog population.
In a sport where crashes are typically caused by driver error or mechanical failure, Albon’s FP1 accident stood out for its unusual cause. A split‑second wildlife encounter was enough to destroy the session for Williams’ lead driver and force major component changes before the competitive running even began.
For teams operating in Formula 1’s tightly scheduled sprint format, that kind of disruption can derail an entire weekend in minutes.
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