By Paul Chappell, Founder, SIMPRO Academy Phuket | 10 June 2026 | ~1,300 words | Reading time: 5 min
Five races. Five wins. Sixty-six championship points clear of the field. Kimi Antonelli is 19 years old, drives for Mercedes, and is rewriting Formula 1 history at a pace that even the sport’s statisticians are struggling to keep up with. His Monaco victory on 7 June 2026 made him the youngest-ever winner of the most glamorous street race on the calendar — breaking a record set by Lewis Hamilton eighteen years earlier. With the 2026 Spanish Grand Prix at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya now just days away (12–14 June), the question is no longer whether Antonelli can win the championship, but how quickly.
At SIMPRO Academy Phuket, we spend a lot of time analysing the connection between real-world motorsport performance and the simulation environment. The 2026 F1 season — with its new power unit architecture and active aerodynamics — makes that conversation more interesting than ever.
Table of Contents
ToggleNo driver in the 76-year history of Formula 1 has won the first five races of a season consecutively. Ayrton Senna came closest with four consecutive wins in 1991; Michael Schumacher’s 2004 season was dominant but spread across a longer arc. Antonelli has not just matched the record — he has surpassed it before the season is even a quarter complete.
| Pos. | Driver | Team | Points | Wins |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st | Andrea Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes | 156 | 5 |
| 2nd | Lewis Hamilton | Ferrari | 90 | 0 |
| 3rd | George Russell | Mercedes | 88 | 0 |
| 4th | Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 75 | 0 |
| 5th | Oscar Piastri | McLaren | 60 | 0 |
| 6th | Lando Norris | McLaren | 58 | 0 |
| 7th | Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 43 | 0 |
| 8th | Isack Hadjar | Red Bull | 29 | 0 |
| 9th | Liam Lawson | Racing Bulls | 26 | 0 |
| 10th | Pierre Gasly | Alpine | 26 | 0 |
George Russell — Antonelli’s own team-mate at Mercedes — told the press on Thursday in Monaco that the championship was Antonelli’s “to lose.” With Hamilton 66 points adrift and a maximum of 25 points available per race win, the teenager would need a sustained run of mechanical failures to surrender this lead. He has not suffered a single retirement all season.
The 2026 regulations are the most comprehensive overhaul of F1 rules since the ground-effect era began in 2022 — and they have changed almost everything. Here is what is new, and why it is relevant to understanding how Antonelli’s Mercedes has been so dominant.
The 2026 power unit delivers approximately 1,000 bhp with a roughly equal split between the internal combustion engine and the electric motor. The MGU-K now produces 350 kW to the rear wheels — nearly three times the output of its 2025 predecessor (120 kW). The MGU-H, which recovered energy from exhaust gases, has been removed entirely. The ICE runs on Advanced Sustainable Fuels (ASF).
Traditional DRS is gone. Every car now carries moveable front and rear wing elements that automatically adjust between high-downforce and low-drag configurations. Drivers also have a Manual Override/Boost (MOB) mode for overtaking. The result is cars that look similar to before but perform very differently in sector splits.
After three years of Venturi-tunnel ground-effect cars (2022–2025), the 2026 rules mandate flat-bottomed aerodynamics. Downforce now comes primarily from upper-body aerodynamics, redistributing tyre loads and forcing every team to redesign suspension geometry from scratch — creating a genuine performance reshuffle at the start of the season.
Barcelona has hosted Formula 1 since 1991 and is universally regarded as the most complete test of a Formula 1 package on the calendar. Its mix of slow hairpins, medium-speed sweeps, and a long main straight punishes imbalanced setups and exposes tyre management weakness with clinical precision. Three corners define every race weekend:
With the 2026 flat-floor package generating downforce differently to the Venturi-tunnel cars, thermal degradation appears more front-axle-biased than in previous seasons. Multi-stop strategies are expected across the field.
🏁 Experience F1 2026 — Book Your Session at SIMPRO Academy Phuket
Race the iconic Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya in Assetto Corsa Competizione on triple 32-inch curved screens, a Simucube 2 Pro direct-drive wheel (25 Nm), and Simtrecs load-cell pedals — the same hardware specification used by professional sim racers worldwide.
1,300 THB per 90-minute coached session (excl. 7% VAT and 3% booking fee). Located at Boat Lagoon Marina, Phuket.
Book your session at simproacademyphuket.com →In coaching sessions at SIMPRO Academy Phuket, we run Assetto Corsa Competizione GT3 and GT4 platforms across Barcelona-Catalunya alongside iRacing’s broad circuit library and Automobilista 2 for Formula car configurations. The core performance fundamentals are directly transferable: brake-point precision, trail-braking technique through Turn 3, and energy management on the back straight.
SIMPRO founder Paul Chappell draws on 23+ years as a professional airline pilot to contextualise the active-aero challenge: “In aviation, fly-by-wire systems make hundreds of micro-corrections per second that the pilot never consciously inputs. The 2026 F1 active aerodynamics work on a similar principle — the driver sets intent, the system optimises delivery. In a simulator, we train drivers to understand what the car is doing beneath the automation, not just react to it.”
Our iRacing sessions give students access to Spa-Francorchamps, Silverstone, Monza, Suzuka, Watkins Glen, Laguna Seca, and many more circuits. Interlagos and Imola configurations via Automobilista 2 bring the feel of the South American and Italian F1 rounds to life.

The honest answer, based on the data from the first five races, is: not easily. But Barcelona changes the conversation for several reasons.
First, it is a genuine car-development circuit. Teams that have run cautious upgrade programmes may arrive in Spain with significant aero and suspension packages. Ferrari and McLaren have both signalled updates for the Spanish weekend, and Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari team has been the most vocal about closing the gap.
Second, Barcelona historically punishes mechanical fragility. The 2026 power units are still in their first competitive season, and reliability remains an unknown variable. Verstappen’s retirement at Monaco — his third mechanical DNF in five races — demonstrates that the pace hierarchy can be disrupted as easily by component failures as by raw speed.
Third, and most importantly: tyre management at Circuit de Catalunya is the great equaliser. In a field where every driver has access to the same active aerodynamics, the human element — tyre sensitivity, brake balance management, corner-entry technique — becomes the defining performance variable. This is precisely the skill set that structured sim coaching addresses.
| # | Driver | Team | Points | Wins | Podiums |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | A.K. Antonelli | Mercedes | 131 | 4 | 5 |
| 2 | G. Russell | Mercedes | 88 | 1 | 2 |
| 3 | C. Leclerc | Ferrari | 75 | 0 | 2 |
| 4 | L. Hamilton | Ferrari | 72 | 0 | 2 |
| 5 | L. Norris | McLaren | 58 | 0 | 1 |
| 6 | O. Piastri | McLaren | 48 | 0 | 2 |
| 7 | M. Verstappen | Red Bull | 43 | 0 | 1 |
| 8 | P. Gasly | Alpine | 20 | 0 | 0 |
| 9 | O. Bearman | Haas | 18 | 0 | 0 |
| 10 | L. Lawson | RB | 16 | 0 | 0 |
Monaco is the benchmark story in motorsport for the same reason it has been since 1950: it demands every skill simultaneously. Spatial awareness. Millimetre brake markers. Zero-lift throttle application through blind crests. Patience over two laps, aggression in a single corner.
The skills that make a driver fast at Monaco — trail braking precision, early rotation, patience with traction — transfer directly to every other circuit. The same skill that build reation speed, apatial awareness and decision-making under pressure on the simulator are what coaches target in every session at SIMPRO Academy Phuket.
At a home setup, you can turn laps. On a Simucube 2 Pro direct-drive wheelbase with load-cell pedals and a coach reading your telemetry in real time, you improve. Those are different experiences – and it’s why sim racers travel internationally to race on professional hardware.
| Component | Specification | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Wheelbase | Simucube 2 Pro direct-drive — 25 Nm peak torque | Same class used by F1 driver academies and Le Mans Virtual teams. Feedback you cannot replicate on a belt-driven wheel. |
| Pedals | Simtrecs load-cell brake pedal set | Pressure-based braking — mirrors real cars. The single biggest lap-time factor for most drivers on their first session. |
| Display | Three 32-inch curved monitors (~150° wrap) | Full peripheral vision. No VR latency. Best configuration for competitive lap times. |
| Coaching | Live telemetry debrief — brake trace, throttle map, racing line | A coach behind your chair watching every input in real time across Spa, Silverstone, Bathurst, or whichever circuit you choose. |

At SIMPRO Academy Phuket, we run Assetto Corsa Competizione — which includes the full Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya — on a Simucube 2 Pro direct-drive wheelbase (25 Nm), Simtrecs load-cell pedals, and triple 32-inch curved monitors. Sessions are 90 minutes and include coaching. Located at 23 Boat Lagoon Marina, Soho Pool Club, Phuket.
Andrea Kimi Antonelli is a 19-year-old Italian driver in his second Formula 1 season with Mercedes. He became the first driver in the sport’s history to win the opening five races consecutively, and at Monaco he became the youngest-ever winner of that race, surpassing a record Lewis Hamilton held for 18 years. He leads the Drivers’ Championship by 66 points heading into Barcelona.
Three major changes define the 2026 cars: (1) a new power unit with a near 50/50 ICE/electric split — the MGU-K now delivers 350 kW vs 120 kW in 2025, and the MGU-H has been removed; (2) active aerodynamics replacing DRS, with moveable wing elements managing downforce and drag automatically; and (3) a return to flat-bottomed cars, ending the Venturi-tunnel ground-effect era of 2022–2025.
Yes — particularly for the techniques that matter most in 2026 F1. Coaching sessions at SIMPRO Academy Phuket focus on corner-entry precision, trail-braking, brake balance adjustment, and tyre management — skills that are transferable across ACC, iRacing, Automobilista 2, and real-world track driving.
Barcelona is just the start of a packed European summer — followed by the Americas, Middle East, and Asia to close out the season. The table below shows every remaining round in 2026, with the circuits you can already experience at SIMPRO Academy Phuket highlighted.
| Grand Prix | Circuit | Race Weekend | (S) | At SIMPRO |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spanish GP | Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya | 12–14 Jun | * ACC / iRacing | |
| Austrian GP | Red Bull Ring, Spielberg | 26–28 Jun | — | |
| British GP | Silverstone | 3–5 Jul | (S) | * ACC / iRacing |
| Belgian GP | Spa-Francorchamps | 17–19 Jul | * ACC / iRacing | |
| Hungarian GP | Hungaroring | 24–26 Jul | * ACC | |
| — SUMMER BREAK — August — | ||||
| Madrid GP | Madrid Street Circuit | 11–13 Sep | — | |
| Azerbaijan GP | Baku City Circuit | 25–27 Sep | — | |
| Singapore GP | Marina Bay Street Circuit | 9–11 Oct | (S) | — |
| US GP | Circuit of the Americas | 23–25 Oct | — | |
| Mexican GP | Aut. Hermanos Rodriguez | 30 Oct–1 Nov | — | |
| Brazilian GP | Interlagos, Sao Paulo | 6–8 Nov | * AMS2 / iRacing | |
| Las Vegas GP | Las Vegas Strip Circuit | 20–22 Nov | — | |
| Qatar GP | Lusail Circuit | 27–29 Nov | — | |
| Abu Dhabi GP | Yas Marina Circuit | 4–6 Dec | — | |
(S) = Sprint weekend | * = Circuit available at SIMPRO Academy Phuket | Source: formula1.com
🏎 Race Barcelona-Catalunya at SIMPRO Academy Phuket
Put yourself in the cockpit on the same circuit Kimi Antonelli will conquer this weekend. SIMPRO Academy Phuket offers professionally coached sessions on a Simucube 2 Pro direct-drive setup (25 Nm), triple 32-inch curved screens, and Simtrecs load-cell pedals.
1,300 THB per 90-minute coached session (excl. 7% VAT and 3% booking fee).
📍 23 Boat Lagoon Marina, Soho Pool Club, Phuket 83000
📞 +66 62 962 2822 | ✉️ info@simproacademyphuket.com
Paul Chappell
Founder & Operator, SIMPRO Academy Phuket
Paul Chappell is Founder and Operator of SIMPRO Academy Phuket. With 23+ years as a professional airline pilot, including a Lead Captain position on a Boeing Business Jet where he managed flight training and checking responsibilities, Paul brings deep expertise in precision performance and simulator-based training. He is a Qualified Flight Instructor with thousands of hours on certified full-motion flight simulators.
Beyond aviation, Paul is a lifelong motorsport enthusiast — 10+ years on high-performance motorbikes, multiple track days in an AMG 45S, a professional rally driver training course, and extensive go-kart racing. He founded SIMPRO Academy in 2024 to bring professional-grade sim racing and flight simulation training to Southeast Asia.
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