Kimi Antonelli’s fourth-place finish in the Miami Grand Prix Sprint was scrubbed after a post-race FIA penalty, turning a strong drive from second on the grid into sixth in the final classification. The Mercedes rookie crossed the line fourth on the road, but the result did not survive the stewards’ review.
Antonelli had already been shown the black and white flag after three warnings before being placed under investigation for breaching track limits. The fourth breach brought a five-second time penalty that dropped him from fourth to sixth and promoted George Russell and Max Verstappen one place each.
The penalty mattered immediately because Antonelli entered the weekend as the championship leader, and the revised Sprint result tightened the picture at the top. He now has 75 points and leads Russell by seven, with Russell on 68 points after the order was rewritten once the FIA took a closer look at the race.
That is the friction in this result: Antonelli showed enough pace to run second early and finish fourth on the road, but repeated track limits issues erased the reward. For a driver leading the standings, the difference between fourth and sixth in a Sprint is no longer a small detail; it is part of the margin that keeps a title fight under control.
For Toto Wolff and Mercedes, the Miami Sprint leaves a familiar kind of lesson. The speed was there, the points were there, and then the penalty decision changed both.