
Antonelli Makes F1 History with Third Straight Win; Leclerc Hit with Penalty
Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli entered the F1 record books with a third straight win in Miami, while Ferrari's Charles Leclerc saw a podium stripped away by a post-race penalty after a last-lap crash. The dramatic race also featured a spin for Max Verstappen and a strategic defeat for Lando Norris, reshaping the early championship narrative.
Kimi Antonelli made Formula 1 history by winning his third consecutive grand prix from pole position, but the Miami race was overshadowed by a dramatic post-race penalty for Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. The Monegasque driver was handed a 20-second time drop after a late-race crash, demoting him from a podium finish to eighth place, while Max Verstappen also faced post-race scrutiny for a first-lap incident.
Why it matters:
Antonelli's unprecedented start signals a potential seismic shift in the competitive order, with Mercedes and its rookie phenom emerging as a dominant new force. Meanwhile, Leclerc's costly error and penalty represent a significant blow for Ferrari's championship aspirations, turning a potential podium into a points disaster in a tightly contested season.
The details:
- Historic Hat-Trick: Kimi Antonelli became the first driver in F1 history to win his first three grands prix from his first three pole positions, executing a strategic undercut on Lando Norris to claim victory.
- Leclerc's Late Disaster: On the final lap, Charles Leclerc spun and hit the wall at Turn 3. He continued to the finish line with severe damage but was later penalized 20 seconds for leaving the track and gaining an advantage, dropping from P3 to P8.
- Verstappen's Dramatic Spin: Starting second, Max Verstappen took the lead into Turn 1 but spun in a 360-degree rotation after contact with Leclerc at Turn 2, plummeting down the order and sparking a stewards' investigation.
- Norris's Near Miss: Lando Norris led the race after a Safety Car restart but lost the lead to Antonelli's undercut strategy, finishing a frustrated second and stating there were "no excuses" for the defeat.
- Hamilton's Ferrari Feedback: Lewis Hamilton, who qualified sixth, suggested Ferrari's simulator work may have led him astray before finding a much better setup for qualifying, indicating an ongoing adaptation process with his new team.
What's next:
The championship landscape is rapidly evolving with Antonelli's meteoric rise. Ferrari must regroup from a self-inflicted wound in Miami, while Red Bull and Verstappen look to recover from a chaotic race. Off-track, the FIA's confirmation of a planned return to V8 engines in the next decade begins a long-term technical discussion that will shape the future of the sport.
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