Kimi Antonelli's dream Formula 1 season continues to gather momentum, and if history is any indication, the Mercedes star is rapidly becoming the overwhelming
favourite to lift his maiden world championship.
The 19-year-old strengthened his grip on the 2026 drivers' championship with a dominant victory at the Monaco Grand Prix, extending his lead at the top of the standings to 66 points. While there are still 16 races remaining, several remarkable statistics suggest Antonelli's title challenge is more than just a hot streak.
No Driver Has Ever Lost From Where Kimi Antonelli Is
Antonelli's 66-point advantage after six races is unprecedented territory.
According to Formula 1 records, no driver who has built a championship lead that large at this stage of the season has failed to go on and win the title. While there is still a long way to go, history strongly favours the Italian teenager.
For context, the largest successful championship comeback remains Max Verstappen's recovery from a 46-point deficit to Charles Leclerc in 2022. Antonelli's current cushion is significantly larger.
Five Wins In A Row - A Championship-Winning Formula
Perhaps the most compelling statistic is Antonelli's current winning streak.
Victories in China, Japan, Miami, Canada and Monaco have given him five consecutive Grand Prix wins. Every driver in Formula 1 history who has managed a run of at least five straight victories has gone on to become world champion that season.
The list includes some of the sport's greatest names - Michael Schumacher, Sebastian Vettel, Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton, Jim Clark, Nigel Mansell and Jack Brabham.
Antonelli has now joined that elite company.
A sixth consecutive win in Barcelona would see him equal one of Schumacher's most famous winning streaks and move even closer to Formula 1 immortality.
Kimi Antonelli Breaking Records Before Turning 20
The Monaco triumph added another milestone to Antonelli's rapidly growing collection.
He became the youngest winner in Monaco Grand Prix history and secured the first Grand Slam of his Formula 1 career - taking pole position, victory, fastest lap and leading every lap of the race.
Only 28 drivers have ever achieved a Grand Slam in Formula 1, placing Antonelli alongside legends such as Clark, Schumacher, Hamilton and Verstappen.
A Unique First-Win Record
Antonelli is already doing things no Formula 1 driver has done before.
His first five career victories have all come consecutively, making him the only driver in F1 history to achieve that feat. Previous record holders Damon Hill and Mika Hakkinen managed three consecutive first wins before eventually becoming world champions.
He has also joined Ayrton Senna and Schumacher as the only drivers whose first three career pole positions came in consecutive races.
Those are not just impressive statistics - they are the type of records normally associated with future champions.
Can Anyone Stop Kimi Antonelli?
George Russell and Lewis Hamilton remain Antonelli's closest challengers, but both face a daunting task.
Russell knows championship comebacks are possible. After all, Lando Norris overturned a 34-point deficit late in the 2025 season to win the title. However, overturning 66 points against a driver and team operating at Antonelli's current level is a much taller order.
The Mercedes youngster has combined consistency, speed and maturity beyond his years, while benefiting from arguably the fastest car on the grid.
The Verdict
Formula 1 championships are never won in June, and unexpected twists can still reshape the title fight.
Yet the numbers surrounding Antonelli are impossible to ignore.
A 66-point championship lead. Five consecutive victories. The youngest Monaco winner ever. A place alongside Schumacher and Senna in the record books.
History suggests that drivers who produce these kinds of statistics do not simply challenge for championships - they win them.
And unless something extraordinary happens over the remaining 16 races, Kimi Antonelli appears to be on course to become Formula 1's youngest-ever world champion.

















