©Mercedes
Mercedes boss Toto Wolff believes that Kimi Antonelli’s sensational rise to prominence in F1 is a case study in how youth, instinct, and a lack of baggage can become a competitive weapon in Formula 1, and particularly in Monaco, one of the sport’s most unforgiving arenas.
After a rookie season filled with extremes – early promise followed by a bruising mid-year slump – Antonelli has re-emerged in his second campaign as a driver operating with peak conviction.
Now the youngest championship leader in F1 history, holding a 43-point advantage over team-mate George Russell, the Italian’s performance in Monaco Grand Prix qualifying felt like another step in a rapidly accelerating trajectory.
For Wolff, Antonelli’s composure in moments like Saturday’s session is less about experience and more about freedom from expectation – a psychological advantage forged by inexperience rather than despite it.
“I think from that perspective, the young age is maybe easier,” Wolff told F1TV after qualifying. “You don’t think a lot about it. He has not a lot to lose – he never expected himself to be in this position, that he’s leading a championship.
“Like he said, 'I don’t know how it is, I’ve got nothing to lose’. I think it’s trusting his instinct, letting it fly, and the tough learnings from last year with the mistakes that happened, a spell of nine races without a point, and that all keeps building.”
That blend of instinct and scar tissue, Wolff suggests, is precisely what has turned raw speed into consistency.
Antonelli’s journey has not been without scrutiny. A difficult European stretch in his debut year prompted external questions over Mercedes’ decision to fast-track him into the sport. Internally, however, the team resisted the noise.
“I think when you need to learn to be resilient and go through the bad spells, alone with the support of your team and family, and you come out of it, it makes you much stronger,” Wolff explained.
“We had so many doubters last year after those bad races saying we shouldn’t have put him in the Mercedes. I think that some of our competitor teams would have taken him out and either put him in a junior team or in a satellite team.
“We kind of stuck to the project and said year one is going to have highlights, moments of brilliance and then moments where it’s going to be very difficult, but we stick to the plan.
“We gave him the necessary pressure but also a bit of an easiness about things, so maybe that’s the reason why we have this moment now.”
That “moment” in Monaco – pole position at one of F1’s most demanding circuits — now stands as validation of that long-term approach.
Wolff also highlighted how Antonelli’s qualifying performance was built steadily, rather than explosively, as confidence accumulated through each run.
In contrast, George Russell endured a more complicated Saturday, finishing sixth and openly acknowledging a lack of clarity over his current form. But Wolff resisted framing the situation as a psychological split between his drivers.
©Mercedes
“We tend to look a lot on the psychological side, but George is very robust and resilient. There were a few races that went against him because luck wasn’t on his side, or he wasn’t there at the right moment,” he said.
“Here, I don’t think it is so much on the psychological side – he just never had the confidence in the car. Qualifying started on the back foot – FP3 was still very okay. Once you start to run behind the performance and you lose the confidence, it’s super difficult to catch up again.
“I think if it had been one session more, he would have been there or thereabouts. He didn’t have any grip, and [in] Monaco no grip means you can’t push it.”
Looking ahead to Sunday, Wolff’s focus shifts from qualifying celebration to survival strategy – especially with Antonelli lining up alongside Max Verstappen on the front row.
“I hope we get it right with the clutch tomorrow, and Kimi needs to make himself wide like a tourist bus around Monaco!” the Austrian smiled. “Because if you lose the start or you’re not there, it’s going to be really difficult.”
In Monaco, where confidence can matter as much as car performance, Wolff believes Antonelli’s greatest asset might not be his pace – but the absence of fear that comes with having everything still to prove.
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