
Kimi Antonelli achieved his second career victory in Formula 1 and becomes the new championship points leader. The timing of the safety car helped the Mercedes driver to gain track position over Oscar Piastri, Charles Leclerc and George Russell.
As was the case in the previous two races, the Ferraris made an excellent getaway, but this time it was not enough to take the lead as the McLarens were just as quick off the grid too. Piastri went first ahead of Charles Leclerc and Lando Norris, as Mercedes drivers Antonelli and Russell dropped to sixth and fourth respectively from the first row.
However, it took just a single lap for Antonelli to make his way past Lewis Hamilton in fifth, then Russell overtook Norris for third on the following lap and Leclerc for second on lap four – those three overtakes going into Turn 1.
Russell started pressuring race leader Piastri on lap seven. He dove down the inside in the chicane on the following lap, but Oscar strike back on the next straight.
Antonelli finally found a way past Norris to take fourth on lap 11, with the top six drivers still within six seconds. Kimi overtook Charles into the chicane on lap 15, but had a wild move exiting the corner and was repassed.
Norris was the first frontrunner to pit on lap 16 as he tried to attempt to undercut Leclerc and Antonelli. Piastri also pitted earlier than Russell, preserving his lead. And yet seconds after Geroge’s pitstop, an accident involving Oliver Bearman turned the race fortune.
Surprised by the closing speed relative to Franco Colapinto going into Spoon Curve, the Haas driver ended up losing control on the grass and suffered a 50G crash, with the safety car neutralising the race. Ollie was diagnosed with a right knee contusion.
Antonelli and Hamilton were yet to change tyres and enjoyed a free pitstop in this safety car situation, moving up to first and fourth, with Piastri and Russell between them.
This also meant that everyone had pitted at the halfway point of this Suzuka race, so it was a straight contest to the chequered flag.
As the green flag was waved on lap 28, Hamilton grabbed third from Russell straight away, while Antonelli increased the gap to Piastri – it reached five seconds in just eight laps.
Russell put pressure on Hamilton but never found a way past, then was overtaken by Leclerc on lap 37. The trio kept battling for the final step on the podium, with Leclerc going around the outside of Hamilton in Turn 1 on lap 42 and Russell repeating that overtake on the following lap.
The seven-time world champion was losing pace and only held off Norris until lap 51, shortly after Russell passed Leclerc for third in the chicane – but the Ferrari driver fought back in Turn 1.
Antonelli eventually outpaced Piastri by 14 seconds and scored his second consecutive Grand Prix victory, becoming the youngest multiple Grand Prix winner in history at 19 years and seven months old – Max Verstappen was 20 when he achieved it.
Kimi also takes the lead of the drivers’ championship from teammate Russell as the sport takes a five-week break following the cancellation of Bahrain and Jeddah.
Behind the top six, Alpine’s Pierre Gasly took a remarkable seventh-place finish – holding off Red Bull’s Verstappen, who felt like he was “driving without power steering”, so heavy his steering was.
Esteban Ocon and Arvid Lindblad established themselves at the bottom of the top ten early on, ahead of Isack Hadjar, but those three drivers pitted before the safety car period and therefore lost out.
As a consequence, Liam Lawson and Gabriel Bortoleto gained the last two points-scoring positions, but the Audi driver dropped to P13 in the second half of the race, with Ocon retrieving P10.
Other than Bearman, the only retirement was Lance Stroll due to a suspected water pressure issue. At least Fernando Alonso made it to the finish this season with Aston Martin finishing in P18.
So congratulations to Andrea Kimi Antonelli with his back-to-back victories. Scoring his first in China and now his second in Japan is a fantasic achievement. To become the new championship leader is a bonus and it will be fascinating if Kimi can build this winning feeling at Miami.

Japanese Grand Prix, race results:
1 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:28:03.403
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes +13.722s
3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +15.270s
4 George Russell Mercedes +15.754s
5 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes +23.479s
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +25.037s
7 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes +32.340s
8 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford +32.677s
9 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford +50.180s
10 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari +51.216s
11 Nico Hulkenberg Audi +52.280s
12 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford +56.154s
13 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi +59.078s
14 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford +59.848s
15 Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes +65.008s
16 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes +65.773s
17 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari +92.453s
18 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda +1 lap
19 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari +1 lap
20 Alex Albon Williams-Mercedes +2 laps
Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda DNF
Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari DNF


















