Antonelli says he still has questions to answer

Teenager Kimi Antonelli has won five consecutive races this season and has also been on pole position four times
- Published
Mercedes driver Kimi Antonelli says he still has a lot to prove despite the imposing championship lead he has established after just six races this season.
The 19-year-old Italian has a 66-point lead over Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton after winning five of the first six grands prix this year.
His team-mate George Russell, who won the opening race of the season, has suffered a slump that leaves him a further two points adrift going into this weekend's Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix.
Antonelli said: "There are questions that still need to be answered on my side - how much further I can go in a short period of time, how much I can push myself even further and how much I can grow and how big is the potential?"
He admitted that a period in the middle of his debut season last year, when he was off the pace and suffered a number of incidents, had knocked his confidence at the time but had turned out to be an important part of his development.
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"Last year I would doubt a lot myself, especially during that difficult period in Europe," he said.
"This year it's a different story and you mature a lot after one year in F1 not only as a driver but also as a person.
"Last year during the difficult period, I got to know myself better. Considering how bad it was in the moment, I am very grateful it happened because it made me grow a lot and taught me a lot about myself. This year I haven't been questioning or doubting myself."
Antonelli finished last year seventh in the championship, three places and 169 points behind Russell.
The Briton won two grands prix, while Antonelli's best result were podium finishes in Canada, Brazil and Las Vegas.
He outqualified Russell only five times all season, and was 0.24 seconds slower on average.
This year, Russell has suffered some bad luck at various times - including with a pit stop that went wrong and led to a penalty in Monaco last weekend.
But he acknowledged in Monaco that he was struggling to get the best out of the car.
Antonelli is 5-4 ahead in the qualifying head-to-head at an average advantage of 0.110secs.
He said: "A lot has changed. The year of experience itself played a massive role - making your own experiences, understanding what is good and not good for you during the weekend and outside the weekend.
"The experience, being able to come back into the weekend and having done it the year before plays a massive difference. You know better the track evolution and so on and you are able to balance your energies in a better way so you feel better in the car in terms of energy.
"You become more aware of your potential and you know better the team, it's all little things that play a massive role."
Antonelli said that so far the pressure of competing for the championship had not affected him.
"I am not really worrying about it," he said.
"Of course I know the opportunity that is on the table and of course I want to make the best out of it.
"But at the same time I don't want to drive or race thinking about that.
"I want to really focus on the process and what I have to do and enjoy as much as possible the weekend and drive as fast as possible and then we will see where we end up at the end of the year."
Russell said he feels that with "neutral" luck, he would "probably be slightly behind Kimi in the standings" but "it would have been, you know, five out of six races on the podium, maybe a couple of wins".
He added: "Now I feel the pressure feels off, to be honest. I'm just going to try and enjoy every race, not even thinking about a championship.
"It's so far out of reach right now that it's just go and enjoy the races and have fun, drive fast and do what I know I'm capable of doing and what I've done for my whole career in Formula 1 and, yeah, that's what I'm excited for."
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Admiration from legends
Two-time champion Fernando Alonso, who made his F1 debut more than five years before Antonelli was born, said the Italian was "an incredible talent".
The Spaniard added: "Now he has a car that is dominating and he is adapting to that car and winning races without making mistakes and feeling the pressure of leading the championship and leading the race, which is a very good achievement.
"But this is F1 and you need to perform at the highest level always. He has the opportunity and if he is able to deal with the pressure and deliver the title, it is an incredible thing."
Four-time champion Max Verstappen, the only driver to win a grand prix at a younger age than Antonelli, said: "At that age, to be doing what he's doing and trying to find that consistency as well, I think it's very impressive. Also, what he did in Monaco at that age is quite tough.
"He's, of course, a great talent. I knew that. I could see that coming. In the first season, you have to make mistakes. It's about how you learn from them. He's doing that very well.
"It's just very nice and impressive to see what he is doing currently. Also, what is there still to come? It's important also just to be yourself. Don't look at others or try to be like someone else. Just be yourself. You just need to do everything. Because that's also how you grow up."