Kimi Antonelli 'lucky to have wisdom of Bono and Toto Wolff' after Canada sprint, says Martin Brundle
Martin Brundle believes Kimi Antonelli is fortunate to have the guidance of Toto Wolff and Peter Bonnington after his frustrations boiled over during his Canadian GP sprint battle with George Russell
Kimi Antonelli, Peter Bonnington
Photo by: Reginald Mathalone / NurPhoto via Getty Images
The 2026 Canadian Grand Prix weekend at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve saw the intra-team battle between championship leader Kimi Antonelli and his Mercedes team-mate George Russell intensify.
While Antonelli claimed another victory at the Canadian Grand Prix, it was the Saturday sprint race that painted a picture of the 19-year-old's growing pains as well as the important role of his experienced race engineer, Peter 'Bono' Bonnington, and Mercedes team chief Toto Wolff.
As Antonelli and Russell battled it out on track during the sprint, the Italian driver's frustrations boiled over onto his team radio, where he accused his team-mate of pushing him off the track. As he continued to complain, Wolff stepped in to instruct his young driver to save it for a private conversation following the race, while Bonnington consistently told the driver to shift his focus back to the race.
Sky Sports Formula 1 co-commentator and analyst Martin Brundle reflected on the moment in a column.
"The inevitable happened into Turn One when Antonelli attempted to pass around the outside," the former driver wrote. "He was very close to earning the right to racing room from his more senior team-mate, but in the end any driver fighting for a victory let alone a championship was going to run him out of track. Any of us would have done, or expected, the same.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes
Photo by: Alex Bierens de Haan / LAT Images via Getty Images
"Kimi lost his head a bit for the duration of the Sprint such that the headmaster Toto Wolff even intervened on the radio. Kimi is lucky to have the wisdom of Bono and Toto at these moments, the rest of us would have just gone straight to the scene of the contact or accident, and recriminations post race."
It all seemed to be put behind Russell and Antonelli by the time that grand prix qualifying came around, and they went on to have another great battle during the Canadian Grand Prix before the Briton was forced to retire due to a battery failure.
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