Kimi Antonelli left Silverstone with zero championship points, a penalty, and a bruised result sheet – but absolutely no dent in his confidence or belief.
The British Grand Prix had briefly looked like another statement drive from the Mercedes teenager who appeared firmly in the fight for victory before a mechanical misfortune unraveled his afternoon.
A late stop dropped him behind Charles Leclerc, and just as he began rebuilding momentum on fresh tyres, a critical front-left wheel shield failure turned his race into survival mode.
From there, it only got worse. Two additional visits to the pits followed, and although he eventually crossed the line in ninth on the road, a five-second penalty for repeated track limits breaches – suffered while wrestling a severely compromised car – ultimately demoted him to 15th in the race’s final standings.
What had looked like a potential sure win quickly became one of the most frustrating afternoons of his season.
“I lost I don't know how much downforce, the car wouldn't turn anymore,” he explained. “In some of the corners, the wheel was in the air, so there was something fundamental that was broken.
©Mercedes
“We only know now that the wheel shield broke, but we don't know if something else broke, because by the loss it feels like it was more than just a wheel shield, but then, of course, the team will have more time to analyse it.
“But it was a shame, because we had a shot for the win today. I think we were going for it.”
Even as the performance dropped away, Antonelli’s radio exchanges with race engineer Peter Bonnington revealed a driver refusing to concede.
Despite being given the option to retire, he pushed on – chasing even the smallest reward from a collapsing race. That mentality, he insisted, remains central to his approach.
“I just showed that I have the mindset that I try every time I go on track, I do my best, that I try to give everything,” he said. “And that even today, despite things that were already going against us, I saw there was the possibility to get one point.
“And I was just trying my best to achieve that, and I was going to achieve that. But then the safety car came. I just didn't really have the possibility to even try for that.”
When the stewards reviewed his race, they acknowledged the technical problems but still applied the penalty for leaving the track repeatedly – a decision Antonelli accepted, even if it stung.
“I mean, these are the rules, so I cannot do anything about it,” he said.
“Of course, I was trying my best to stay on track, but it was really undriveable. And of course, to get a penalty for that, it hurts, but these are the rules, and nothing I can do about it.”
The result came just two races after a late battery failure in Barcelona had already robbed him of points, adding to a growing sense of missed opportunities in a championship fight where every detail matters.
The swing has also allowed teammate George Russell to close the gap in the standings. Yet Antonelli’s response was not frustration alone – but sheer defiance.
“I think we lost a lot of points,” he said. “But the momentum is there because I think this weekend we showed the speed. And we showed, as well, what the potential can be, when I'm in a good place, when also we're in a good place with the team, with the car.
“We showed what we are capable of, so I think that the momentum is still there, and actually it makes the fire grow even more to go out there in Spa and try to do even better.”
For a driver whose race briefly unraveled in spectacular fashion, the message afterward was strikingly consistent: the setback may have hurt the scoreboard, but it did nothing to shake the trajectory he believes he’s on.
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