Mercedes have not decided who will replace Lewis Hamilton but Italian teenager Andrea Kimi Antonelli is one of the leading candidates Sky Sports News understands; watch every session of the Monaco GP this week on Sky Sports F1, with the action starting on Friday
Tuesday 21 May 2024 17:36, UK
Lewis Hamilton has named Andrea Kimi Antonelli as the driver he would choose to replace him at Mercedes at the end of this year.
Mercedes are yet to decide who will take Hamilton's seat when the seven-time world champion joins Ferrari in 2025 but 17-year-old Formula 2 driver Antonelli is one of the leading candidates, Sky Sports News understands. Max Verstappen still remains a target for Mercedes but his Red Bull contract runs until the end of 2028.
Ferrari's Carlos Sainz is understood to not be an option for Mercedes, leaving Antonelli and Verstappen as the two main candidates.
Antonelli is highly rated after he won multiple junior single-seater titles at the first time of asking since stepping up from karts to racing cars in 2021.
In Imola, Hamilton was asked whether Sainz would be a good fit for Mercedes but responded by saying his preference would be Antonelli.
"Carlos is a great driver, so I think wherever he goes I think he would be a positive for any team," said Hamilton.
"Honestly, I have no idea what Toto's plans are, but for me, taking on a youngster, if it was my role, I would probably take on Kimi."
Mercedes have denied reports they asked for an exemption from the FIA to award Antonelli a superlicence to drive in F1.
After Max Verstappen joined the sport as a 17-year-old, the sport's governing body introduced a minimum age restriction of 18 years old.
Antonelli is 17 but turns 18 on August 25 this year, the same day as the Dutch Grand Prix. Due to his junior success, he already has enough superlicence points to race in F1, so only his age is stopping him.
Wolff spoke to Sky Sports F1 about his feelings of Hamilton racing in Italy at the weekend for the first time since his shock move to Ferrari was announced and brought up Antonelli.
"I guess for the Italians it's super exciting to have Lewis Hamilton in red next year. We will get used to the outfits, but we have got to look at ourselves," he said.
"Maybe there is an option that we shine more with an Italian in our car, so we're pushing back hard."
Mercedes have tested Antonelli in their 2021 and 2022 F1 cars in April but have tried to play down their expectations of the Italian.
Technical director James Allison praised Antonelli, who has been matching and, at times, outperforming his Formula 2 team-mate Oliver Bearman this season.
"I have had the great pleasure of listening to the engineers describe the interaction with him," said Allison.
"Just a young, enthusiastic driver, very, very fast, metronomic in his pace. Has not been in an F1 car until recently, but made it look like he'd been in one for ages within a lap or two.
"He came at this generation of cars, the ground effect cars, with an open mind. He feels all the same things that you'd expect him to feel. But he's not sort of polluted by the previous cars, so he just takes them as they are and tells us what he is feeling as weaknesses and strengths.
"He lets the engineers work to try to improve those things. But he looks like a very promising young driver."
Wolff has been trying not to put pressure on Antonelli but previously suggested Mercedes could be "bold" with who they decide to replace the departing Hamilton.
In Imola, the Mercedes team boss said: "We are hyping that young man for a long time now and he will be a very good and a great driver one day in Formula 1, but he's 17. Fourteen months ago, he drove an F4 car and there is so much expectation in Italy.
"We are also a little bit guilty about talking about him at that stage and I think we should let him do his F2 thing, deliver results and not be too carried away with what could be or should be.
"Look at George [Russell], he has won F3 and F2 in his rookie year. At the same time, Kimi has delivered on those junior series and is in F2 now so we will see. He's going to be in Formula 1 one day but let's not rush."
Prior to the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Alex Albon signed a new contract to stay at Williams until at least 2026, which ended speculation he could join another team.
Red Bull's Sergio Perez had a difficult weekend as he was knocked out in Q2 and only finished eighth in the race, while team-mate Verstappen converted pole position into a win, and appears no closer to confirming his future as his current deal expires at the end of this year.
It comes at a time when RB's Yuki Tsunoda performed strongly by qualifying seventh and finishing in the points for a second race running.
Sainz could be waiting to see if Red Bull decide to keep Perez as Sauber and Audi continue their pursuit of the Spaniard.
Asked whether an announcement is still a long way off, Sainz said: "I think so, yeah. It's not moving too quick."
Sauber's Valtteri Bottas was spotted talking to Williams boss James Vowles, with the Finnish driver linked to a return to his old team.
Bottas, whose contract at Sauber also expires at the end of this year, didn't give anything away about his chat with Vowles.
"[It was] normal things, about life! Of course, when you're on the free market, you want to check around what's out there," he said.
"It's a pretty normal situation being you're on the free market."
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