Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s first Formula 1 season has been a proper rollercoaster. Brazil was the latest chapter, second place, his best finish yet, though it came with controversy after that tangle with Piastri and Leclerc. Still, the podium mattered.
The teenage Italian’s year been all over the place. Some weekends he looked like a veteran; others were harsh reminders that talent doesn’t shield you from rookie mistakes. But what’s never been in question is whether he deserves to be here. The kid’s got proper pace, even when the results don’t show it.
With Antonelli, fans are doing what they always do, looking past the raw results to see who’s genuinely got it. His chances aren’t just hype either; with bookmakers pricing him at 5.50 to take the championship in the future, he’s sitting in that sweet spot where talent, momentum, and market confidence lines up.
iGaming analyst James Briscoe, looking at American operators, notes that the strongest platforms win people over with clearer odds, smooth interfaces, and quick, reliable payouts rather than flashy gimmicks.

It’s the same idea with Antonelli: once you cut through the noise, the fundamentals matter most, and in his case, they’re already coming through.
Verstappen’s message: Stay steady and keep learning
Max Verstappen, who had his own baptism of fire early on, was pretty direct with his support. After the race, he said what Antonelli needs most right now is belief in himself. Your first F1 season is never straightforward.
Some days you’re flying, others you’re wondering what the hell happened, and the only way through is treating the disasters as lessons. For Verstappen, Antonelli’s speed was never the problem; it’s just about settling in, making the inevitable mistakes, and learning from them.
The truth is, a lot of Antonelli’s struggles weren’t even his fault. Mercedes spent half the season mucking about with a rear-suspension setup that never worked. The back end kept stepping out, knocking his confidence as much as his lap times.
Learning to cope with ups and downs
Canada was the outlier; the track masked the car’s issues, which ironically kept Mercedes on the wrong setup longer than necessary. Spa was rock bottom: two early Q1 exits and a visibly crushed driver showed what happens when inexperience meets a broken car.
Once Mercedes reverted to the old suspension, you could see the improvement building through Hungary, then it all clicked in Brazil. That restart incident wasn’t clear-cut either. Initial reports blamed a gear selection error, but the data showed all three struggling with cold tyres and brakes.

Piastri moved a fraction earlier, setting off the chaos. The stewards penalized Antonelli, though Leclerc later hinted he might not have seen the McLaren creeping up beside him.
Signs of a driver settling into the role
What really mattered in Brazil was the bigger picture, and Verstappen got that. He’s watched Antonelli through the junior ranks for years and sees the same things now: raw speed, good instincts, and the guts to push through rough patches.
The Interlagos podium wasn’t a fluke; it felt like confirmation that Kim is finally getting what he needs from the car. With Mercedes steadying the ship, he can focus on driving rather than constantly fighting the machinery.








