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Sunday, 7 June 2026 · Edition of 20:00 CET

Antonelli's Fifth Straight Win Seals Monaco Record Amid Chaos

Kimi Antonelli becomes youngest Monaco winner at 19, extending championship lead as track failure and crashes force red flag.

Sport53 outlets1 languages3 min readUpd. 03:15

Andrea Kimi Antonelli etched his name into Formula One history yesterday, becoming the youngest driver to win the Monaco Grand Prix at 19 years and nine months, his fifth consecutive victory this season. The Mercedes prodigy, starting from pole, led every lap of a race twice interrupted by crashes and ultimately halted for nearly three-quarters of an hour to repair a deteriorating track surface. His triumph in the principality, secured ahead of Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar, extends his championship lead to a commanding 66 points, evoking comparisons with Ayrton Senna’s mastery of the street circuit.

The afternoon was freighted with drama from the moment the lights went out. Max Verstappen’s Red Bull failed to move, its engine expiring before the first corner, while Lando Norris later joined the retirements with a power unit failure. The real chaos came in the closing stages: first Lance Stroll, then home favourite Charles Leclerc, crashed at the Rascasse corner after patches of asphalt broke loose. Race director Rui Marques was forced to throw a red flag, and track workers spent 37 minutes repairing the surface before a standing restart over eight laps. Leclerc’s exit, caused by what he described as a brake problem, robbed the tifosi of a podium celebration in Monaco.

When the race resumed, Antonelli fended off Hamilton with ice-cold composure, while a cascade of penalties reshuffled the order. Pierre Gasly had crossed the line third for Alpine, but a ten-second penalty for speeding in the pit lane dropped him to seventh, handing the final podium spot to Hadjar. George Russell, Antonelli’s team-mate and closest rival, was also punished for a pit-lane infringement and subsequently failed to serve a drive-through penalty correctly, ending his afternoon outside the points. Sergio Pérez, originally tenth for the new Cadillac team, was demoted to fifteenth after being deemed out of position at the final restart, costing the American outfit its first championship point.

The result has elicited strikingly different reactions across the sport’s global audience. Italian media hailed Antonelli as the heir to Senna and a national hero, with front pages celebrating Bologna’s “new king of the curve.” French outlets, meanwhile, focused on the bittersweet fortunes of Gasly and the luck of Hadjar, born in Paris but racing under the Red Bull banner. In Latin America, where much of this year’s narrative has centred on Franco Colapinto, the Argentine’s fifteenth-place finish and collision with Carlos Sainz — for which he immediately apologised — prompted searching questions about Alpine’s racecraft. British commentators, while praising Hamilton’s solid runner-up drive, could not conceal their unease at a Mercedes dominance that feels increasingly unassailable.

With six races now completed — the scheduled rounds in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia having been cancelled amid regional instability — the 2026 championship already bears the hallmarks of a procession. Antonelli’s raw pace and the apparent superiority of the Mercedes package suggest that only reliability or extreme tactical blunders can prevent the teenager from becoming the sport’s youngest world champion. Yet Monaco’s capricious streets delivered a reminder that even the most dominant campaigns are vulnerable to the unexpected. As the paddock prepares for Spain, the question is not whether Antonelli will be caught, but whether Formula One itself can engineer a competitive spectacle befitting its record-breaking prodigy.

How the same story is told elsewhere.

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Stampa sud-est asiaticaStampa europea continentale · mediterraneaStampa latinoamericana · mercato
Stampa sud-est asiaticatrionfodistacco

19-year-old Mercedes driver Andrea Kimi Antonelli dominated the Monaco Grand Prix, claiming his fifth straight victory and becoming the youngest winner ever in the Principality. The win extends his championship lead significantly.

Stampa europea continentale/ mediterraneatrionfoironia

Antonelli delivers another masterpiece in Monaco: the 19-year-old Mercedes driver tames a chaotic race, red-flagged and filled with high-profile retirements, to become the youngest ever winner there. As Leclerc crashes with brake failure, the Italian secures his fifth consecutive victory and extends his championship lead.

Stampa latinoamericana/ mercatoindignazionevittimismo

The Monaco race was a boring disaster for Latin American drivers. Franco Colapinto, visibly exasperated, finished 15th amid mistakes, penalties and a failed strategy, while Sergio Pérez had his first point of the season stripped by a penalty. Both drivers endured a weekend to forget.

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53 sources · 1 languages · 24h window

ExcelsiorJun 7, 18:01
MillenniuMJun 7, 18:01
Le FigaroJun 7, 18:02
La NaciónJun 7, 20:15
BildJun 7, 20:15
Affari ItalianiJun 7, 19:02
TN (Todo Noticias)Jun 7, 19:03
La StampaJun 7, 18:02