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there is always a shunt inductor in SMD (Surface Mount Device) antenna design.
Not in the place where you have drawn it.
There is often a series inductor, to "extend" an antenna that is physically too short. Often combined with a shunt C.
Here's an article from 1953 on matching short antennas: https://www.rfcafe.com/references/qst/short-antennas-mobile-operation-qst-september-1953.htm
As shown above, C1 is just the shunt component, and which is always implemented as an inductor.
That's unusual for the electrically small antennas that I know (or have designed myself). Can you link to the antenna datasheet?
This come from the theory. Small (or short) antennas are capacitive.
So, for impedance matching they need an inductor (or more inductors) to "tune out" this capacitance.
Yes, series inductor is more convenient, but the matching can be done with almost any configuration.
These chip antennas have awful internal impedance which require unusual matching typologies.