The Kimi Antonelli retirement at the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix has handed Lewis Hamilton a golden gift, with the championship leader cruelly denied a likely podium finish just four laps from the flag.
Kimi Antonelli Retirement Hands Hamilton Vital Ground in Title Race
Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s Mercedes ground to a halt on the exit of Turn 5 on Lap 62, a suspected power unit failure stranding the 19-year-old at the side of the circuit. The timing was brutal. Just one lap before his retirement, Antonelli had knifed past teammate George Russell at Turn 1 to claim second place — a move that suggested he was about to salvage strong points from a difficult afternoon.
Instead, Formula 1‘s current championship leader walked away with nothing. Lewis Hamilton, driving for Ferrari, took full advantage and crossed the line to win in Spain — his first victory for the Scuderia. That result cuts Antonelli’s lead in the drivers’ standings to 41 points. A gap that felt comfortable is now looking a little less cosy.
Mercedes Reliability Concerns Mount After Another Painful DNF
Furthermore, this is not an isolated incident. George Russell retired from the Canadian Grand Prix just two races ago with an ERS-related problem, and now Antonelli has fallen victim to another mechanical failure. Two retirements in three races for the Silver Arrows — that is a pattern Mercedes cannot afford to ignore.
Beyond the reliability headache, both Antonelli and Russell struggled for pace throughout the Spanish race, with Hamilton and Ferrari simply operating at a higher level on the day. BBC Sport noted Hamilton’s dominant display as he swept to victory unchallenged at the front.
Consequently, the title picture has shifted. Antonelli still holds a meaningful advantage, but Hamilton is now firmly in the conversation. If Mercedes cannot sort their reliability issues quickly, what looked like a procession could turn into a genuine fight.

























