The Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix is next up on the Formula 1 calendar, and Kimi Antonelli arrives in Spain as the man everyone is chasing. The Mercedes youngster has just claimed a fifth consecutive race victory at Monaco, and the Italian teenager is rewriting the record books at a frightening pace.
Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix 2026: Antonelli’s Dominance Headlines a Thrilling Weekend
Antonelli now leads teammate George Russell by a commanding 68 points in the drivers’ championship. Furthermore, Russell endured yet another miserable Monaco weekend, finishing outside the points entirely. Meanwhile, Lewis Hamilton — now a Ferrari man — secured back-to-back second-place finishes and has leapfrogged Russell in the standings to sit directly behind Antonelli.
It is worth noting that Formula 1 returns to Spain later in 2026 for a Madrid Grand Prix, so this is not the only Spanish fixture on the calendar this season.
The race gets underway on **Sunday, 14th June at 2:00 p.m. BST**. Sky Sports holds exclusive live rights in the UK, with every session broadcast on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Main Event. Non-subscribers can catch highlights on Channel 4. In the United States, Apple TV streams every session via its dedicated F1 channel.
Circuit History, Recent Winners and What to Expect
The Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya is one of the most familiar venues on the grid. Teams used it for pre-season testing for years before Bahrain took over in 2021, and this year’s closed-doors shakedown here means drivers arrive with a thorough understanding of every corner. Its mix of long and medium-speed sections makes it an all-round test of a car’s true performance — and historically, that has suited Mercedes down to the ground.
The circuit hosted its first grand prix back in 1991 and runs to 66 laps of a 4.657km layout, covering 307km in total. Oscar Piastri holds the lap record, set in 2025 at 1:15.743. Michael Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton share the record for most wins with six apiece, while Verstappen has four wins and Fernando Alonso two from the current grid.
As for what to expect this weekend, the forecast looks ideal — sunny skies, light winds and highs of 27°C with absolutely zero chance of rain across Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
Last year, Piastri took pole by 0.209 seconds from Lando Norris and led from start to finish, with Charles Leclerc rounding out the podium for Ferrari. Max Verstappen collected a 10-second penalty for a collision with Russell and limped away with a single point.
This time around, Mercedes have won every race of the 2026 season so far, and Barcelona’s characteristics only amplify that threat. Nevertheless, Ferrari showed genuine pace in Monaco, Norris is desperate to bounce back from two consecutive retirements, and Verstappen — who qualified second last time out — can never be discounted. Whether anyone can stop Antonelli here remains the biggest question in Formula 1 right now.