Andrea Kimi Antonelli has been heavily linked with the vacant Mercedes seat – and a major rule change by the FIA has boosted his chances of joining the Formula 1 grid.
The Silver Arrows are searching for their replacement for Lewis Hamilton, who will be making the switch to Ferrari in 2025, with several drivers being mentioned in the running for the seat.
Antonelli, who currently competes in F2 with Prema, is highly rated by the Brackley-based team and has had a number of tests in Mercedes machinery in preparation for F1.
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It had even been rumoured that the team were looking to get him in at Williams to replace Logan Sargeant as early as Imola and that they were looking to obtain a super license for the 17-year-old via special circumstances.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli has been heavily linked with the vacant Mercedes seat
The Italian has completed several tests in F1 machinery
FIA change super license rule
The rules had stated that in order to obtain a super license to compete in Friday practice sessions or to compete in a grand prix, a driver needed to be at least 18-years-old and hold a valid driving license.
However, that clause has now been removed and it now states that “at the sole discretion of the FIA, a driver judged to have recently and consistently demonstrated outstanding ability and maturity in single-seater formula car competition may be granted a Super Licence at the age of 17 years old”.
This now means that, theoretically, Antonelli – who turns 18 in August – is now eligible to race in F1 and speaking to F1.com ahead of the Spanish Grand Prix, Mercedes boss Toto Wolff was asked for his reaction to the decision.
“The president of the FIA always had the ability and discretion of letting a driver drive, if you believe that the performance was good enough,” he said.
Antonelli currently races in F2 with Prema Racing
But despite the rule change, Wolff refused to outline when the Italian will make his F1 debut.
“Whatever that means for Kimi,” he added. “We’re leaving the second seat [alongside George Russell] open for the moment, we don’t want to take a decision”.
“He’s doing a great job in testing with us in F1, he’s good in F2 – the team mate [Ferrari-backed Oliver Bearman] is the benchmark. So yeah, we’re observing.”