
Mercedes rookie etched his name in Formula 1’s history books on Sunday at Suzuka by becoming the youngest driver in the sport’s history to lead a Grand Prix.
The young Italian, who also set a new record for the youngest driver to set the fastest lap, undercut by just four days the previous age milestone achieved by Max Verstappen at the 2016 Spanish Grand Prix at 18 years, 224 days.
Starting sixth on the grid, Antonelli capitalized on a daring strategy to cross the chequered flag in the same position, hot on the heels of his Mercedes teammate George Russell.
It was lap 22 when the stars aligned for Antonelli. As the frontrunners – Verstappen, Norris, Piastri, and Leclerc – peeled into the pits, the Italian stayed out, stretching his medium tyres to lap 32.
Thanks to this advantage, he seized the lead, his Mercedes slicing through Suzuka’s sweeping corners and holding the top spot for eight glorious laps.
"It was a nice feeling to lead the race for a few laps and become the youngest driver in F1 history to have done so," commented Antonelli, a quiet pride lacing his words.
"The next goal is to do that on the only lap that matters: the final one."
Antonelli’s stint wasn’t just about breaking records – it was a showcase of raw speed and nerve.
Clocking the fastest lap at 1:30.965, he also became the youngest driver to achieve that milestone, leaving race engineer Peter Bonnington beaming over the radio.
Charging hard, he closed in on Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in fourth and teammate George Russell in fifth, finishing just 1.3 seconds shy of the latter.
Mercedes’ chief communication officer Bradley Lord praised the teenager’s progress and growth.
“He has built his confidence over the weekend at a demanding track and achieved a solid result,” said the Briton. “His development is encouraging to see and it’s a third consecutive strong race performance from him.”
Eyes on Bahrain and Beyond
For Antonelli, every lap is a lesson, every race a steppingstone.
“Every time I get in the car, I am building my learning and feeling more comfortable,” he said, reflecting on his whirlwind start to 2025.
Read also:
With points in all three races – P4 in Australia, P6 in China, and now P6 in Japan – he’s adapting fast to F1’s brutal demands while contributing to his team’s tally.
“Hopefully we can keep improving and begin to fight for some of the positions further forward than we managed today,” he added, his focus shifting to the Bahrain Grand Prix.
At Suzuka, under the cherry blossoms, a teenager dared to dream big – and the F1 world once again took notice.
Keep up to date with all the F1 news via X and Facebook