2026 Chinese Grand Prix — Antonelli, the youngest winner in history, Mercedes crushes everything

Shanghai doesn't tremble. Shanghai crowns. And on this Sunday, March 15th 2026, a 19-year-old kid with tears in his eyes held the world of Formula 1 in his hands for 56 laps. Kimi Antonelli has won his first Grand Prix. And it was no ordinary one.
🇮🇹 Antonelli, history in real time
On Friday, he becomes the youngest polesitter in the entire history of Formula 1 at 19 years old, breaking Sebastian Vettel's record. On Saturday, Russell wins the sprint from that very same pole. On Sunday, Antonelli lines up on the front row again — and this time, he doesn't let go.
At the start, Hamilton takes the lead from the outside. Everyone holds their breath. But Antonelli is sharp, clean, and he reclaims the lead as early as the second lap on the main straight. From that point on, he only checks his mirrors to monitor. Never out of fear.
5 seconds ahead of Russell. 25 seconds ahead of Hamilton. And tears in the post-race interview. At 19 years old. On the Shanghai circuit. The very year of his 20th birthday — and the year that marks 20 years since the last win by an Italian driver in F1.
Because it needs to be said : Kimi Antonelli is the first Italian driver to win a Grand Prix since Giancarlo Fisichella in Malaysia in 2006. The year of his birth. A circle that closes in a way that gives you goosebumps. 🇮🇹
📋 Final Classification — 2026 Chinese GP
| 🥇 1st | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes |
| 🥈 2nd | George Russell | Mercedes |
| 🥉 3rd | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari |
| 4th | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari |
| 5th | Oliver Bearman | Haas |
| 6th | Pierre Gasly | Alpine |
| 7th | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls |
| 8th | Isack Hadjar | Red Bull |
| 9th | Carlos Sainz | Williams |
| 10th | Franco Colapinto | Alpine |
💛 Hamilton, the emotion of a first Ferrari podium
Some results go beyond a simple classification. Lewis Hamilton's podium in Shanghai is one of them. Since joining Ferrari at the start of the season, the seven-time World Champion had been carrying the weight of expectations — his own, the tifosi's, the entire world's. This Sunday, that weight lifted.
To get there, Hamilton had to fight his own teammate for around twenty laps. Leclerc and he delivered an absolutely intense internal battle — attacks, counter-attacks, corner defences lap after lap, a Ferrari pit wall holding its collective breath. Hamilton comes out on top of the internal showdown. His first podium in red. A moment that will last.
😤 McLaren, the ghost weekend
Not on the grid. Not in the race. Not in the points.
Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri don't even make it to the start. An electrical failure for one, a last-minute mechanical issue for the other. Two cars. Zero laps completed. McLaren watches its rivals rack up points while their cars sit motionless in the garage. After Piastri's Australian disaster, this is a season start to forget immediately for the Woking outfit. In a championship where every fraction of a point can change everything, it's a haemorrhage.
💀 Verstappen: the nightmare goes on
Six places lost at the start on yet another botched getaway. A laborious climb through the midfield. And Red Bull calling their own champion into the pits at lap 46 — retirement, likely due to an electrical issue, at a point where he was running sixth.
The four-time World Champion himself called his weekend "a nightmare". The word fits. Red Bull is struggling. The car is unpredictable, hard to trust, far from the dominance that crushed the previous seasons. For a team used to wrapping up championships before summer, the 2026 wake-up call is brutal.
🏆 Drivers' Championship after 2 rounds
🥇 George Russell (Mercedes) — 51 points
🥈 Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) — 47 points
🥉 Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) — 3rd in the championship
McLaren: 0 points in two races. Mercedes already has both hands firmly on the wheel of this championship.
🔥 What Shanghai taught us
Mercedes is serious. Dead serious. Two Grand Prix, two one-twos, a sprint win, and an Antonelli who looks nothing like a rookie. Ferrari is there, present, capable of hurting — but sometimes does as much damage to itself as to its rivals. Red Bull is still searching. McLaren simply doesn't exist right now.
And in the middle of all of this, a 19-year-old Italian in tears on the Shanghai podium reminds us why this sport is unlike anything else. Next stop : Suzuka in two weeks for the Japanese Grand Prix, third act of an already exceptional season. 🇯🇵
Formula 1 is so much more than a sport — it's a passion you live with everything you have, race after race, corner after corner. And the 2026 season has only just begun.






