Wines vary greatly, and for your kit, a lot will depend on if it's Tavola or Forte, and if Tavola, did you use skin packs? The more "stuff" in the wine, the longer aging will benefit it. The "year" period is subjective and is a general measurement, not necessarily a strict one.
I started a FWK Barbera in August, no skin packs or aging oak as I want a quicker drinker. I may bottle today and possibly start drinking it in a few months. That same kit, made with 2 skin packs and 2 oz oak cubes for aging? I probably wouldn't bottle before June and other than occasional tests, I might not start drinking it for a year after that.
My tip -- open a bottle of your Bordeaux every couple of months. Record your impressions and save the notes -- do not look at old notes. After 1 year, read the notes from first to last, so you can see how you experienced the wine aging. Matt P of LP suggests bottling some of the wine in split bottles (375 ml), so you have more wine for tasting early on.
Keep in mind this is your wine. If you're happy, drink it when you want.
EDIT: I see that
@jgmann67 just gave you essentially the same advice!