Kimi Antonelli, the prodigious Italian driver for Mercedes-AMG Petronas Formula One Team, has been lauded as a "generational talent" by former Formula 1 race engineer Rob Smedley, following a sensational start to the 2026 F1 season. The 19-year-old, in only his second year in the pinnacle of motorsport, currently commands the Drivers’ Championship standings with a commanding 43-point lead over his seasoned teammate, George Russell, after the opening five rounds of competition.
Smedley, a highly respected figure in the paddock with a distinguished career that includes stints at Williams and Ferrari, where he worked with multiple world champions, articulated his profound admiration for Antonelli’s abilities during an appearance on the widely followed High Performance Racing podcast. Speaking alongside renowned broadcaster Jake Humphrey and former Alpine and Aston Martin team principal Otmar Szafnauer, Smedley provided a granular analysis of Antonelli’s exceptional car control and race craft.
"I was watching him, and I walked down to Turns 1, 2 and 3 and then later on I walked down to the last chicane before the hairpin, where they go under the bridge, and I was watching him down there," Smedley recounted, detailing his trackside observations. "He is very good. He is very good for someone who’s done 1.3 seasons of Formula 1 or whatever he’s at now. Seeing that makes you realise he’s very good. You can see how much he’s got the car on the limit."
Smedley elaborated on the nuances of Antonelli’s driving style, highlighting the precise, almost surgical manner in which he navigates the complex machinery of a modern Formula 1 car. "It’s very fast when you watch it, but you can see like where he brakes, how he’s got the car on the limit, the way that the car moves, how precise he is, how consistent he is in that precision of line, constantly doing the same thing." This level of consistency and control, especially under the immense pressure of Grand Prix racing, is a hallmark of elite drivers, and Antonelli appears to have mastered it at an unusually young age.
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Drawing a comparison with his more experienced teammate, George Russell, who boasts six years of Formula 1 experience, Smedley concluded, "He’s very, very good for somebody who has so little experience in the car. So fast-forward to what you’ve
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- Jonas Leo is a passionate motorsport journalist and lifelong Formula 1 enthusiast. With a sharp eye for race strategy and driver performance, he brings readers closer to the world of Grand Prix racing through in-depth analysis, breaking news, and exclusive paddock insights. Jonas has covered everything from preseason testing to dramatic title deciders, capturing the emotion and precision that define modern F1. When he’s not tracking lap times or pit stop tactics, he enjoys exploring classic racing archives and writing about the evolution of F1 technology.
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