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Formula 1’s championship leader Kimi Antonelli’s rise is happening so fast that even Toto Wolff is beginning to worry about the consequences.
Four races into the 2026 season, the teenage Mercedes sensation has already ripped up expectations, stormed to three consecutive victories from pole position, and opened a commanding advantage over George Russell in the championship standings.
At just 19 years old, Antonelli is no longer being discussed merely as the future of Formula 1 – he is beginning to look like its present.
But inside Mercedes, amid the celebrations and swelling hype, there is also unease. Because Wolff knows Formula 1 has a vicious habit of building young stars into untouchable heroes before brutally tearing them apart at the first sign of vulnerability.
Antonelli’s start to the season has bordered on surreal. Three straight wins. Ice-cold composure under pressure. A points lead over an established teammate. And perhaps most impressively, an aura that already makes rivals nervous when he starts from the front.
Wolff is fully aware of what Mercedes may have uncovered.
“Kimi is doing an exceptional job at the start of this season,” he told La Gazzetta dello Sport.
“It’s only his second year in F1, and he’s won three races in a row. He deserves all the recognition he’s receiving, but at the same time, we need to maintain a sense of proportion.
“F1 is based on consistency, not just on individual moments of success, and Kimi needs the space to grow and write his own story without too much pressure.”
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That last line may be the most important. Because while Antonelli has looked untouchable in clean air, Wolff knows Formula 1 history is littered with prodigies who were devoured by impossible expectations.
The Italian media frenzy is already intensifying. Every pole position feeds it. Every victory inflates it further. And Wolff can already see the danger ahead.
For now, Antonelli’s fairytale remains on track. But Wolff’s concern is not about whether mistakes will happen – it is about what happens when they do.
“That’s exactly what scares me,” Wolff explained.
“Kimi is young, he’s charismatic, a little big star… but after a great start, he could have some bad moments, and I don’t want the public to start saying, ‘Oh, what’s happening? We were wrong about him?’”
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That fear cuts to the heart of modern Formula 1. Young drivers are elevated at lightning speed, but patience disappears just as quickly. One poor weekend can suddenly trigger narratives of collapse, overhype, or exposure.
Wolff appears determined to shield Antonelli from that cycle before it begins.
“It will all be part of the growth process we, as a team, are ready for, but the response from the public, especially in Italy, scares us a little,” he added.
“We all want Kimi to become one of the greats of F1, but it’s only the beginning, and we have to treat him like a rough diamond. The media, the fans, and even us at the team have to make this effort.”
Next up is Montreal, a circuit that already holds happy memories for Antonelli after he claimed his maiden Formula 1 podium there last season, but it’s also a successful hunting ground for Russell.
But this time the atmosphere will be entirely different.
He arrives not as a promising rookie chasing another breakthrough result, but as the championship leader, the hottest driver in Formula 1, and the center of a rapidly growing phenomenon that even Mercedes fears could become too much, too soon.
Antonelli may currently look unstoppable. Wolff just hopes the world remembers he is still only getting started.
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