30/07/2025 10:10
Mercedes technical director James Allison has launched a strong
defence of Kimi Antonelli's recent performances, believing it is
the team's fault the Italian is struggling. After a bright start to
his F1 career, including fourth on debut at a tricky wet Australian
GP, and a sprint pole in Miami, Antonelli's form has dropped during
the European leg of the summer. Antonelli is yet to score a point
in Europe, having retired from four of the six races, and finishing
18th in Monaco and 16th in Belgium as he struggles with the W16
challenger. Since Miami, Antonelli has only scored points once, in
earning a first F1 podium with third place in Canada, but has
suffered mechanical failures at Imola and in Spain, before Isack
Hadjar crashed into him in the rain at Silverstone. During the
recent Belgian GP weekend, Antonelli explained that he was lacking
confidence in the car, and looked emotional after qualifying 18th
fastest after suffering a high-speed spin in sprint qualifying
earlier in the weekend. However, it is not just Antonelli's strong
start which has dipped, with team-mate George Russell only scoring
one podium in eight races, the win in Canada. After looking like a
strong contender to finish runner-up to McLaren in the standings,
Mercedes has now been overhauled by Ferrari, and is 28 points
behind the Scuderia and 28 points ahead of Red Bull in fourth. But
Allison believes Antonelli's dip in form must be seen within the
context of the performance of the car. "I think he's, like the rest
of us, massively fed up with a string of results that are well
below what we were collectively achieving earlier in the year,"
Allison explained of Antonelli. "I hope he takes some solace from
the fact that we tell him, and it's demonstrably a fact, that we
have taken the wrong steps with the car, making our team less
competitive, and that he is paying the price for that, as is
George. "If the car isn't where it needs to be, then it will be a
struggle getting through the qualifying stages in your rookie
season in F1. "It's utterly clear to all of us that the thing we
need to do is make the car better, and then Kimi's fortunes will
reverse with that. "And hopefully, he's listening to us as we say
those reassuring words, because we absolutely know that he is
putting in the effort on his side of that bargain."