Norris takes Silverstone victory while Hulkenberg finally score a podium

Lando Norris took a popular victory at Silverstone by gaining an advantage over a penalty for teammate Oscar Piastri, as Nico Hulkenberg finally claimed his first Formula 1 podium after 239 starts.

The McLaren driver moved ahead of Piastri when the championship leader served his ten-second penalty, and managed to draw out his lead despite Piastri’s attempt at a fightback to ensure he collected a home win.

Having passed polesitter Max Verstappen for the lead in the early wet conditions, Piastri picked up a penalty for a safety-car infringement at the end of a second safety car period, where he appeared to accelerate before the restart before slowing down suddenly. This caught out Max Verstappen who was directly behind the McLaren.

As a result, Piastri took a ten-second penalty which he served during his final pitstop to hand Norris, who picked up second when Verstappen slid off on that same restart, the lead.

Although Piastri attempted to fight back and put Norris under pressure at the end, simultaneously exerting pressure on his pitwall by suggesting “if you don’t think if it was fair, we should swap back and just race”, McLaren chose to leave the order as was – and Norris then managed to add to his lead to capture his first British Grand Prix win.

Hulkenberg drove an incredible race to claim third, having moved up the order by timing a first pitstop for a second set of intermediates perfectly to sit fourth following the safety cars.

The Sauber driver then closed in on Lance Stroll, who was up to third with his own fortunate pitstop timings, and passed the Aston Martin driver when DRS became available. Hulkenberg had to deal with the incoming threat of Lewis Hamilton once the Ferrari driver passed Stroll, but held firm at the end of the intermediate stint and timed his final stop for slicks correctly to lock down third place.

A borderline wet track contributed to a stop-start opening seven laps, as the likes of George Russell, Charles Leclerc, Isack Hadjar, Gabriel Bortoleto and Oliver Bearman pitted at the end of the formation lap for slick tyres, gambling on the wet final sector drying up.

A brace of VSC periods followed – Liam Lawson going off with damage after a clash with Esteban Ocon, prompting three laps of a full-course yellow, before Bortoleto slipped off at Turn 2 to produce another stoppage in racing.

Once racing finally resumed on the seventh lap, Piastri immediately put Verstappen under scrutiny and got on his rival’s tail; he stalked the defending champion through the opening sector and kept with him through the second to build a run out of Becketts. He made the move for the lead into Stowe, and proceeded to clear off.

Verstappen was thus left in Lando’s clutches, as the McLaren driver had shaken off an early challenge from Lewis Hamilton to preserve third. By lap 11, Verstappen’s tyres were starting to ail and Norris attempted to pounce through Copse – but held off and picked up second when the Red Bull slipped off at Becketts.

However, the rain began to fall once again and the front runners pitted for another set of intermediate tyres; McLaren’s slower stop for Norris ensured Verstappen could reclaim second. Once the two had passed the yet-to-stop Alex Albon, Norris tried to reclaim second – but ran out of time as the safety car emerged despite the worsening rain.

The field was frozen for over three laps behind the safety car before the race resumed, but the field managed about half a lap before it returned in front of Piastri as Hadjar put his car in the wall at Copse after rear-ending Andrea Kimi Antonelli into the braking zone.

After a four-lap train to clear the Racing Bulls debris, Piastri took the reins as the safety car pulled in; Oscar then tried to back up the pack on the Hangar Straight, which almost caught Verstappen unaware.

The race stewards deemed Piastri’s actions worthy of a ten-second penalty. Verstappen then spun on his own as Piastri led the field away through Vale, conceding second to Norris and dropping to P10.

Verstappen recovered to fifth position; despite balance struggles in the wet, he put a series of moves on the Williams drivers, Pierre Gasly, and Stroll – although was 17 seconds adrift of Hamilton by the end. Gasly, Stroll, Alex Albon, Fernando Alonso, and George Russell completed the top ten.

So a crazy race thanks to the typical UK weather. The rain made the racing exciting but the penalty for Oscar Piastri was harsh. The championship leader deserved better but that’s the rules. Lando Norris is a worthy winner at his home race and for McLaren to score a 1-2 finish, this is a solid result at Silverstone.

As for Nico Hulkenberg, finally a podium after so many races! The Sauber driver fully deserves this achievement after a fine drive from starting P19 to come home in P3. What a result at the British Grand Prix for the Hulk.

British Grand Prix, race results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:37:15.735
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren +6.812s
3 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +34.742s
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +39.812s
5 Max Verstappen Red Bull +56.781s
6 Pierre Gasly Alpine +59.857s
7 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +60.603s
8 Alexander Albon Williams +64.135s
9 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +65.858s
10 George Russell Mercedes +70.674s
11 Oliver Bearman Haas +72.095s
12 Carlos Sainz Williams +76.592s
13 Esteban Ocon Haas +77.301s
14 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +84.477s
15 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull +1 lap
Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes DNF
Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls DNF
Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber DNF
Liam Lawson Racing Bulls DNF
Franco Colapinto Alpine DNF

Verstappen takes a surprising pole at Silverstone

Four-time world champion Max Verstappen took a surprising pole position for the British Grand Prix, beating both the McLarens to go top at Silverstone.

With Ferrari, in particular Lewis Hamilton, seeming the most likely to challenge Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris to pole, it was instead reigning world champion Verstappen who put in a final lap with one minute, 24.892 seconds to grab the top position.

Championship leader Piastri will start on the front row after a small error on his final effort. Norris was the top of the home favourites but only able to go third-quickest for McLaren, with an all-British second row as Geroge Russell was fourth for Mercedes.

Ferrari had threatened to steal McLaren’s glory following a strong start to the Silverstone weekend, but Hamilton could only manage fifth due to a messy final sector on his last flying lap, with his teammate Charles Leclerc will start alongside.

Rookies Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Oliver Bearman were next up, but both have penalties for the race, with Antonelli dropping three places following his crash into Verstappen in Austria last week, while Bearman was hit with a ten-place penalty for the second time this season due to a red-flag infringement in FP3.

Fernando Alonso took ninth for Aston Martin but will be pleased to start seventh, alongside the Alpine of Pierre Gasly.

Ferrari looked in trouble towards the end of Q2 but had saved a fresh set of tyres for both drivers, who delivered under the pressure on a single lap, Hamilton just beating Leclerc for the fastest time.

It was not to be for Williams, however, with Carlos Sainz coming home in P11 and Alex Albon in P14, while Yuki Tsunoda and Isack Hadjar of Racing Bulls were knocked out too – although the penalties for Antonelli and Bearman at least promote some further up the grid.

With continuing question marks of Franco Colapinto’s seat at Alpine, the crash in Q1 was awkward and it ended his qualifying prematurely – especially with Gasly’s performance on the other side of the garage.

Having spun off at the final corner, he initially kept the car running and got back on track after minimal contact with the wall, but – as Alpine advisor Flavio Briatore put his head in his hands – the red flag was brought out as Colapinto’s car came to a halt and required rescue from the marshals.

The others to be eliminated in Q1 were Liam Lawson, who ran wide in his Racing Bulls on his final flying lap, while Lance Stroll was inbetween the Saubers of Gabriel Bortoleto and Nico Hulkenberg.

So an exciting end to the final segment of qualifying and yet it was a surprise to see Max Verstappen take pole position as predictions were made that the McLarens were the favourite to land a front row and pole. The low downforce on Max’s car helps for straight-line speed and yet Oscar and Lando have a quick race car. Going to be a thrilling British Grand Prix.

British Grand Prix, qualifying positions:
1 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:24.892
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:24.995
3 Lando Norris McLaren 1:25.010
4 George Russell Mercedes 1:25.029
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:25.095
6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:25.121
7 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:25.621
8 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:25.785
9 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:25.746
10 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:25.374*
11 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 1:25.826
12 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:25.864
13 Alexander Albon Williams 1:25.889
14 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:25.950
15 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 1:26.440
16 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:26.446
17 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:26.504
18 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:25.471**
19 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:26.574
20 Franco Colapinto Alpine 1:27.060
*Three-place grid penalty for collision at the Red Bull Ring
**Ten-place grid penalty for red-flag infringement in FP3

Norris is victorious at the Red Bull Ring

Lando Norris recovered from a non-finish at Canada to take race victory at the Austrian Grand Prix with a commanding drive from pole to race victory at the Red Bull Ring. His McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri had to settle for second, scoring Papaya an 1-2 finish while Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was third.

As for the home crowd favourite Max Verstappen, the Red Bull driver was unable to complete a lap as he was innocently taken out by an out of control Andrea Kimi Antonelli in Turn 3. Having to start in P7 on the grid was a disappointment and to be knocked out on lap 1 was painful for the defending champion. At least the Mercedes driver was feeling and saying sorry for an early exit.

It was an intense battle between the McLarens as there was no team orders for Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri. The championship leader tried to get ahead but Norris was in control and this was a perfect comeback after a collision from Canada. The next race is Lando’s home race so expect a big welcome in Silverstone.

Piastri had been given permission to battle for the lead before being warned by the McLaren pit wall that one of his attempts had been too close. In the final stages of the race, a late push was not quite enough to give him the chance to threaten Norris for the lead due to the backmarkers.

Charles Leclerc took the final step on the podium, coming home a distant third for Ferrari, which proved to be the best of the rest as Lewis Hamilton took fourth position.

George Russell, race winner in Canada, was over half a minute behind Hamilton in fifth, with Liam Lawson an impressive sixth for Racing Bulls.

A battle of master and apprentice saw the Aston Martin of Fernando Alonso hold off a late challenge from Gabriel Bortoleto for seventh, the Sauber rookie picking up his first points of his Formula 1 career.

Nico Hulkenberg also scored points for Sauber in ninth, with the Haas of Esteban Ocon rounding out the top ten.

The initial start was aborted as Carlos Sainz failed to get his Williams off the starting line and was only able to be pushed away from the starting grid as Norris led the formation lap into the final corner.

Sainz eventually got going but, after coming into the pits, the rear of his Williams caught fire and his mechanics sprinted to the end of the pitlane to quell the flames – only for Sainz to be forced to retire before the restart.

Once the five red lights finally went out, Piastri passed Leclerc into turn one as Russell got past former teammate Hamilton, it was behind them, though, where the action happened. Reigning world champion Verstappen was left waving to his adoring fans as Antonelli locked his rears and steamed straight into the world champion at Turn 3.

The incident brought out the safety car just moments after Hamilton had retaken fourth from the Mercedes of Russell, with the Ferrari able to hold Russell at the restart.

Up front, McLaren gave Piastri the clearance to race Norris and he kept the pressure on the leader, who was racing in the clean air.

It was lap 11 where Piastri made his move into Turn 3 after a small error from Norris, who kept a cool head and cut back underneath the rear wing of his teammate to retake the lead.

Alex Albon compounded a dreadful afternoon for Williams, retiring at the end of lap 16 to leave both cars in the garage.

Meanwhile, out front, Norris came in for his first stop at the end of lap 20, having survived a late lunge from Piastri that saw the McLaren driver lock up slightly.

Norris switched to the hard compound but a stop of 3.1s gave Piastri a chance to push – even if he reported a flat spot from the earlier dive at Norris into Turn 4. McLaren asked Piastri if he wanted to follow his teammate into the pits or stay out and have fresher tyres later in the race.

Piastri came in on lap 24 and it was another slow stop from McLaren, 3.4 seconds stationary in his box as he emerged over five seconds adrift of Norris – he was then given a message over the radio that his Turn 4 attempt was too close for comfort at McLaren.

Yuki Tsunoda, struggling for performance as the sole Red Bull remaining in the race, was battling further down the field and clipped Franco Colapinto at Turn 4, Tsunoda requiring a new front wing and dropping to the back of the field before the Red Bull driver was handed a 10-second penalty for the collision.

As the race passed the midway point, Piastri started to close in on Norris as he took a whole second out of the leader on lap 40.

The positions remained the same heading into the second round of stops, Norris boxing a lap earlier while Piastri ended up behind the Tsunoda/Colapinto battle and was almost crashed into by the latter, who appeared oblivious to the fact he was being lapped and was handed a five-second penalty as a result.

Heading into the final ten laps, Piastri cut the gap once again, getting to within two seconds of Norris who pleaded over the radio – “I need some pace, please help.” He was later told that he had front-wing damage that the team could not address.

Norris would hold on to take the win, managing to put the battle of Alonso and Bortoleto between himself and Piastri for the closing lap.

So a fantastic pole to win for Lando Norris. He needed this to regain his confidence after a crash in Canada. His home race is next so expect a warm welcome from the passionate crowd at Silverstone.

Austrian Grand Prix, race results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:23:47.693
2 Oscar Piastri McLaren +2.695s
3 Chalres Leclerc Ferrari +19.820s
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +29.020s
5 George Russell Mercedes +62.396s
6 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls +67.754s
7 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +1 lap
8 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +1 lap
9 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +1 lap
10 Esteban Ocon Haas +1 lap
11 Oliver Bearman Haas +1 lap
12 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +1 lap
13 Pierre Gasly Alpine +1 lap
14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +1 lap
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine +1 lap
16 Yuki Tsuonda Red Bull +2 laps
Alexander Albon Williams DNF
Max Verstappen Red Bull DNF
Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes DNF
Carlos Sainz Williams DNS

Norris takes Austrian Grand Prix pole

McLaren’s Lando Norris dominated the qualifying session at the Red Bull Ring by being quickest in all three segments of the session with the end result scoring a pole position.

Norris had earlier sat out of FP1 for Formula 2 driver Alex Dunne. After that, Lando led all the way in every session and was untouchable in Q3 that was tempered by a late yellow flag.

Lando’s super pace saw him take P1 with the biggest gap of the season to date, his lap time of one minute, 03.971 seconds was more than enough to keep Charles Leclerc behind him – although the Ferrari driver will be delighted to have split the Papayas.

Championship leader Oscar Piastri will start third after a spin for the Alpine of Pierre Gasly ruined the final lap of the McLaren driver, as well as the Red Bull of Max Verstappen – who will start seventh having taken pole in the past four Austrian Grand Prix.

Lewis Hamilton will start in fourth position for Ferrari with Canadian Grand Prix race winner George Russell fifth and Liam Lawson impressing by taking sixth for Racing Bulls.

With Verstappen down in seventh he will start alongside the Sauber of Gabriel Bortoleto, who followed up his Formula 2 win in Styria last year by putting in his best Formula 1 qualifying performance of his rookie season.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli was ninth for Mercedes with Gasly’s untimely spin leaving him only P10.

A red flag in Q2 due to a fire at the side of the final corner, where Hamilton had run wide, meant that all 15 drivers were pushing for fast laps when the session resumed with a little over five minutes remaining.

Bortoleto put in a quick effort as Fernando Alonso, Alex Albon, Isack Hadjar, Franco Colapinto and Oliver Bearman were those unable to produce a time to get through to Q3 and will start P11-P15, respectively, with Antonelli edging through.

Pressure continues to grow on Yuki Tsunoda as he was eliminated in Q1 at the team’s home race.

The Red Bull driver will start in P18, with the back row taken by Carlos Sainz, the Williams driver knocked out in the first stage of qualifying for the third race in a row, and the experienced Sauber of Nico Hulkenberg.

Tsunoda could consider himself slightly unlucky, he was only 0.250 seconds off the Q1 pace of teammate Verstappen – but that proved the difference between P6 and P18, while Lance Stroll and Esteban Ocon were also unable to get into Q2.

So a dominant qualifying performance by Lando Norris. Quickest in Q1, Q2 and Q3. Taking pole was well deserved and he looks the favourite to score the Austrian Grand Prix victory on race day.

Austrian Grand Prix, qualifying results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:03.971
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:04.492
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:04.554
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:04.582
5 George Russell Mercedes 1:04.763
6 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 1:04.926
7 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:04.929
8 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:05.132
9 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:05.276
10 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:05.649
11 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:05.128
12 Alexander Albon Williams 1:05.205
13 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:05.226
14 Franco Colapinto Alpine 1:05.288
15 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:05.312
16 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:05.329
17 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:05.364
18 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 1:05.369
19 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:05.582
20 Nico Huldenberg Sauber 1:05.606

Russell wins in Canada as the McLaren drivers clashed

George Russell defeated Max Verstappen to take his first victory of the season at the Canadian Grand Prix, while Lando Norris was forced to retired after making contact with his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri.

Mercedes driver Russell fended Verstappen off at the start after claiming pole and then produced a measured drive, with his lead never under serious challenge.

In a predicted two-stop Formula 1 race, Russell always had an answer to Verstappen’s pitstops and built up a decent gap over the second stint to delay his final stop until lap 43 of 70, which then allowed him to keep his rival at length until the chequered flag to take his and team’s first win of 2025.

Behind Russell and Verstappen, who settled for second, the battle for the final podium podium heated up over the final stint. Russell’s teammate Andrea Kimi Antonelli produced his finest Grand Prix drive of his impressive career and even passed Verstappen right as the Red Bull driver went into the pits.

Verstappen’s earlier pitstop allowed him to keep position and, in the second half of the race, Antonelli’s challenge for second faded. The Mercedes rookie instead had to look in his mirrors to fend off McLaren’s Piastri, whom he had overtaken for third on lap one and held off until the finish to take a maiden Formula 1 podium and hand Mercedes a 1-3 finish.

Piastri and McLaren did not enjoy their usual race pace or tyre wear advantage in Canada, despite Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve being a track that focuses on rear tyre management.

As such Piastri was unable to benefit from having fresher hard tyres than Antonelli to find a way past the Mercedes driver, with the championship leader instead coming under pressure from McLaren teammate Norris.

After a disappointing qualifying session to seventh, Norris was having a strongest race pace following an alternative strategy as a way to fight his way back into contention.

Norris started on hards, extended his first stint and then put himself in a position to put pressure on Piastri. After pressuring Piastri for several laps, Norris initially passed the championship leader at the hairpin on lap 46 before the pair went towards the final chicane side by side.

Piastri kept the position by being later on the brakes, but on the main straight Norris then made an error of judgement as he attempted to pass his teammate on the left into a closing gap. The McLaren driver then drove into the back of Piastri and hit the pitwall to suffer terminal suspension damage and a missing front wing.

Norris immediately admitted his mistake on the team radio, saying it was “all on me”, as he suffered a big points loss in the drivers’ championship.

Ferrari suffered a disappointing afternoon, with Charles Leclerc furious as his team abandoned what appeared to be a manageable one-stop strategy and instead settled for sixth, which became fifth after Lando’s retirement.

Lewis Hamilton had a tricky afternoon with disastrously slow race pace, which undid a solid fifth qualifying position and saw him finish behind Leclerc in sixth. The seven-time world champion is believed to have suffered damage after he hit a groundhog, which cost him downforce.

Fernando Alonso and Nico Hulkenberg both produced another combative drive to grab their second consecutive points-scoring results in seventh and eighth respectively.

The final points went to the Haas of Esteban Ocon and Williams driver Carlos Sainz, who overcame a disappointing qualifying session where he started P16 on the grid.

Williams teammate Alexander Albon was less fortunate after having to park up on lap 48 with a Mercedes power unit issue, while Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson also retired to conserve engine mileage.

In the drivers’ standings Oscar Piastri extends his lead on Norris by 12 points to take a 22-point advantage heading into the Austrian Grand Prix, which takes place on the Red Bull Ring in two weeks’ time.

So congratulations to Mercedes with a double podium. George Russell winning the race and Andrea Kimi Antonelli scoring his first podium result. Defending world champion Max Verstappen finished between the Silver Arrows pair as the team’s home race is up next.

As for the McLarens, it was predicted that an on-track clash will take place at some point this season due to the highly competitive nature of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri. This turned out to be true with the Papaya pair collided into one another. Lando was forced to retire and this has harmed his points in the drivers’ standings. Oscar was able to continue and took fourth but this is the first time this season that neither McLarens finished on the podium.

Canadian Grand Prix, race results:
1 George Russell Mercedes 1:31:52.688
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull+0.228s
3 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +1.014s
4 Oscar Piastri McLaren +2.109s
5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +3.442s
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +10.713s
7 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +10.972s
8 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +15.364s
9 Esteban Ocon Haas +1 lap
10 Carlos Sainz Williams +1 lap
11 Oliver Bearman Haas +1 lap
12 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull +1 lap
13 Franco Colapinto Alpine +1 lap
14 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber F+1 lap
15 Pierre Gasly Alpine +1 lap
16 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +1 lap
17 Lance Stroll Aston Martin A+1 lap
Lando Norris McLaren DNF
Liam Lawson Racing Bulls DNF
Alexander Albon Williams DNF

Russell takes Canada pole

George Russell grabbed pole position for the Canadian Grand Prix and will start on the front row alongside his Barcelona rival Max Verstappen.

The Red Bull driver was hit with a ten-place penalty and three penalty points after colliding with Russell’s Mercedes during the Spanish Grand Prix. Now, the duo’s battle will head to extra time as the pair will start on the front row in Montreal.

Russell looked strong all weekend and took his first pole since the Las Vegas Grand Prix, a race he went on to win, with a lap time of one minute, 10.899 seconds.

Verstappen had early topped the leaderboard until Russell’s final run upstaged the defending champion, while championship leader Oscar Piastri will start third for McLaren.

Piastri’s title challenger and teammate Lando Norris suffered a tough afternoon and is down in seventh, starting on the fourth row alongside the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc.

Andrea Kimi Antonelli will start fourth, with Lewis Hamilton fifth and Fernando Alonso taking an excellent sixth for Aston Martin. Isack Hadjar and Alex Albon round out the top ten.

Yuki Tsunoda was take a ten-place grid drop and three penalty points during the session after the race stewards ruled on a red flag infringement during FP3. This means he will start from the back of the field having been P11 in Q2.

Franco Colapinto improved on his weekend so far and will start in the P11 vacated by Tsunoda, with Nico Hulkenberg and the Haas pair of Oliver Bearman and Esteban Ocon following close behind.

There were some surprising drivers out in Q1, with Pierre Gasly the slowest and Liam Lawson also knocked out in P19. Home favourite Lance Stroll struggled on his return from injury and is down in P18.

There was a delay during the session with a red flag needed after Albon’s Williams shed a large part of bodywork – engine cover – down the back straight.

His teammate Carlos Sainz was then left frustrated with Hadjar, who had clearly impeded the Williams driver as he narrowly missed the cut, with the Sauber of Gabriel Bortoleto also eliminated.

So a great qualifying session for Mercedes and George. It will be interesting if Russell has the pace to stay ahead of his Spanish Grand Prix rival Verstappen and the championship leader Piastri. Bring on the race!

Canadian Grand Prix, qualifying positions:
1 George Russell Mercedes 1:10.899
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:11.059
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:11.120
4 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:11.391
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:11.526
6 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:11.586
7 Lando Norris McLaren 1:11.625
8 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:11.682
9 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:11.867
10 Alexander Albon Williams 1:11.907
11 Franco Colapinto Alpine 1:12.142
12 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:12.183
13 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:12.340
14 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:12.634
15 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:12.385
16 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:12.398
17 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:12.517
18 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 1:12.525
19 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 1:12.102*
20 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:12.667
*Ten-place grid penalty due to overtaking under the red flag in FP3

Piastri wins in Spain as Verstappen gets penalty

Oscar Piastri extends his championship points lead following race victory at the Spanish Grand Prix, leading home to a McLaren 1-2 at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, as Max Verstappen received a ten-second time penalty for clashing with George Russell.

Piastri led from pole into Turn 1, while Verstappen jumped Lando Norris by sweeping around the outside.

Behind them there was an intense battle between the Ferraris and the Mercedes cars, with Lewis Hamilton emerging ahead and seventh-starting Leclerc soon passing Russell as well to take fourth and fifth. Leclerc was soon ordered past Hamilton by Ferrari while the seven-time champion struggled from a lack of rear grip.

Verstappen couldn’t keep second for long, though, with Norris breezing past the Red Bull driver on lap 13 into Turn 1. At that point Lando’s gap to his leading teammate had extended to five seconds, a gap which Norris couldn’t reduce before the first round of pitstops.

Verstappen responded by making an early pitstop for another set of soft tyres, the tyre compound everyone bar his pitlane starting teammate Yuki Tsunoda had begun the race with.

With the advantage of fresh rubber being huge at the tyre-hungry circuit, Verstappen quickly undercut Norris and after both McLarens pitted around lap 22 and 23 the Red Bull driver emerged in a net lead, despite with an important tyre life deficit.

Verstappen was vocally frustrated with the Red Bull’s lack of grip, compounded by clutch issues, as he quickly converted from a two to a three-stop strategy to drop behind the McLarens once more.

That second set of softs allowed the four-time world champion to stay in the mix by cutting into the second-placed Norris, who suffered from front-left tyre graining but still managed to keep the gap to his teammate stable. At the halfway point Piastri led from Norris by four seconds, with Verstappen another two seconds behind. Leclerc was a lonely fourth followed by a battling Hamilton and Russell.

Verstappen continued gaining on Norris until his mediums were past their best and both McLarens started upping their pace. The Red Bull final roll of the dice was another undercut attempt with a third pitstop for used softs, but both McLarens responded with stops of their own to keep the top three positions as they were.

Having battled past the lapped Alonso, Lawson and Bearman, the race was then neutralised following the retirement of Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who went off with an apparent technical issue to bring out a full safety car.

Most drivers came in again – making it three stops for McLaren and four for Verstappen – with Red Bull’s lead driver dismayed by being put on the much slower hard tyres, having no other tyres left.

On the lap 62 restart, a hefty delay after letting lapped cars unlap themselves, Piastri controlled from Norris at the front.

Meanwhile, Verstappen had a huge slide out of the final corner that saw him lose momentum to allow Leclerc to jump ahead on the restart. Verstappen still struggled on the hard tyres into Turn 1 as Russell lunged down the inside, with Verstappen taking to the escape route.

Verstappen went into Mad Max mode when told to let Russell past by his race engineer and after appearing to give the position back into Turn 4 it then looked like he clashed the Mercedes out of the way deliberately, an incident that was then investigated by the stewards.

After the chequered flag, the stewards decided to apply a ten-second penalty for Max Verstappen. So the Red Bull driver drops down to P10.

At the front Piastri led Norris home by 2.4 seconds to take his fifth win of the 2025 season, extending his championship lead on Norris to ten points.

Leclerc took the final spot on the podium ahead of Russell and Verstappen, but the Red Bull man then received a post-race penalty that dropped him to tenth and a single championship point.

In the background Nico Hulkenberg was a brilliant fifth for Sauber after a late pass on Ferrari’s Hamilton. Isack Hadjar kept his nose clear to finish seventh, adding to his impressive run of results with Racing Bulls. Pierre Gasly lost out but still scored important points for Alpine in eighth.

Fernando Alonso finally got off the mark with his first points of the season in ninth, the last driver to be elevated ahead of an angry Verstappen.

As well as Antonelli, Williams driver Alex Albon retired from the race following contact with Liam Lawson. Aston’s Lance Stroll didn’t start the race, withdrawing on medical grounds due to recurring pain to his right hand and wrist.

So a crazy restart following a late safety car. Max’s bash against George was not ideal and even with the ten-second penalty, the four-time champion will receive further punishment.

As for McLaren, a double podium is fantastic for the constructors’ standings. Oscar Piastri scoring his fifth win is significant in terms of the championship.

Spanish Grand Prix, race results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:32:57.375
2 Lando Norris McLaren +2.471s
3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +10.455s
4 George Russell Mercedes +11.359s
5 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +13.648s
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +15.508s
7 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +16.022s
8 Pierre Gasly Alpine +17.882s
9 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +21.564s
10 Max Verstappen Red Bull +21.826s*
11 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls +25.532s
12 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +25.996s
13 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull +28.822s
14 Carlos Sainz Williams +29.309s
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine +31.381s
16 Esteban Ocon Haas +32.197s
17 Oliver Bearman Haas +37.065s
Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes DNF
Alexander Albon Williams DNF
*Ten-second time penalty for causing a collision with George Russell

Piastri beats Norris to take pole in Spain

Oscar Piastri defeated his McLaren teammate Lando Norris to pole position at the Spanish Grand Prix.

The championship leader made the difference in the final run of Q3, putting two tenths on Norris after the pair had been closely matched before.

On the first run in the top-ten shootout Piastri opened with a time of one minute, 11.836 seconds lap, with teammate Norris replying with an effort of one minute, 11.819 seconds, just 0.017 seconds quicker than Oscar.

They resumed battle on the final run, with a superb second sector from Piastri key to his pole winning run of one minute, 11.546 seconds. Norris only marginally improved his lap time to settle for second as Oscar took the fourth pole of the 2025 season and his Formula 1 career.

Max Verstappen and George Russell set identical lap times to take the second row, with the Red Bull driver ahead of the Mercedes as he was first to cross the finishing line.

Lewis Hamilton beat his Mercedes replacement Andrea Kimi Antonelli to fifth, as well as Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc, who only completed a single Q3 run that left him seventh place.

Pierre Gasly qualified an excellent eighth for Alpine as he hopes to repeat his Bahrain Grand Prix performance, while Isack Hadjar continued his outstanding form with another top ten result in ninth for Racing Bulls.

Alonso offset his run plan by setting his only Q3 lap time in between everyone else’s two sets of runs, temporarily beating Verstappen to fifth much to the Aston Martin’s driver delight, but after the final series of runs Fernando dropped down to P10.

In Q1 it was plain sailing for the frontrunners, with Piastri leading the way from Verstappen and Norris, although the tiny margins meant there was less than two tenths separating Leclerc in sixth from the drop zone.

Before claiming P12 in Q2, Sauber’s Bortoleto had already starred by getting there in P10, with Bearman was also delighted to make it through in the Haas. Nico Hulkenberg was less successful after missing out on Q2 by half a tenth.

Ocon was also beaten by his rookie teammate, while Carlos Sainz was eliminated in P18 in front of his home fans. Franco Colapinto was eliminated by an issue on his Alpine that saw him unable to perform a final run, leaving him P19 on the grid.

But the biggest victim in Q1 was Yuki Tsunoda, who lost time in each sector to start last on the grid.

So well done to Oscar Piastri by beating his Papaya teammate to an important pole position. It will be interest if Lando Norris can fight back in the race. Bring on the Spanish Grand Prix!

Spanish Grand Prix, qualifying results:
1 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:11.546
2 Lando Norris McLaren 1:11.755
3 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:11.848
4 George Russell Mercedes 1:11.848
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:12.045
6 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:12.111
7 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:12.131
8 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:12.199
9 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:12.252
10 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:12.284
11 Alexander Albon Williams 1:12.641
12 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:12.756
13 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 1:12.763
14 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:13.058
15 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:13.315
16 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:13.190
17 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:13.201
18 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:13.203
19 Franco Colapinto Alpine 1:13.334
20 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull 1:13.385

Norris is victorious at Monaco

Lando Norris took victory at the famous street circuit for McLaren even though the mandatory two pitstops at Monaco was unable to provide a spectacle.

In a race was turned into an odd game of chess by a one-off mandate to use three sets of Pirelli tyres, and therefore make two pitstops, Norris avoided the spectre of unfortunately timed neutralisations to convert his pole into his second win of the season.

Charles Leclerc and Oscar Piastri joined him on the podium, with Max Verstappen fourth after banking on a late red flag to no avail.

At the start Norris locked up his tyres to keep the lead from Leclerc into Turn 1’s Ste Devote, while Piastri stayed ahead of Verstappen after the Red Bull driver looked around the outside.

At the rear Gabriel Bortoleto found the wall on the exit of Portier after duelling with Andrea Kimi Antonelli, the Sauber driver continuing but not before triggering a virtual safety car.

The leaders stayed out, but the yellow flag was shown so Yuki Tsunoda, Pierre Gasly and Oliver Bearman to make an early first pitstop. Gasly’s efforts to make an alternate strategy work ended into the back of Tsunoda’s Red Bull at the Nouvelle Chicane, with Gasly reporting “no brakes” as he smashed up his front-left corner, with Tsunoda fortunate to escape damage.

On three wheels Gasly made his way back to the pits to retire, with a local double yellow flag for a piece of Alpine front wing. Piastri dodged the piece of wing which gave Verstappen a chance to stick his nose alongside, but much to the Red Bull driver trying to get past, Piastri promptly closed the door in the fight for third.

Liam Lawson created a buffer for fifth-place starting teammate Isack Hadjar, who then made a cheap pitstop for softs, only losing two positions thanks to his teammate.

The front of the midfield pitting changed the dynamic of the race, with the leaders now no longer being able to afford cruising around. Norris and company immediately upped the pace by several seconds per lap to keep their pitstop gap intact.

Hamilton was able to jump Hadjar, who soon boxed a second time for hard tyres so he could go to the end.

Norris was the first of the lead group to blink, pitting on lap 20 for hard Pirellis. Piastri followed him in on the next lap to undercut Leclerc but the home hero responded on the next lap to keep position.

A couple of tense laps followed for the McLarens as Verstappen was released into free air, hoping for some sort of safety car as he lacked the outright pace to threaten the Papaya cars. But the race stayed green until the Red Bull driver made his first stop on lap 29, re-emerging where he started in fourth.

Norris carried on in the lead with a six second gap to Leclerc and another handful of seconds on Piastri and Verstappen, with Hamilton the biggest mover at the halfway point from seventh to fifth.

The race order was stable until the second and final round of pitstops provided the next chance for some chaos.

Piastri moved first on lap 49, which triggered a reaction from Leclerc’s Ferrari pitcrew on the following lap, and Norris on lap 51. Meanwhile, Verstappen stuck to his plan by staying out, increasing the pace and hoping for a safety car once more.

Norris and Leclerc soon closed the gap to Verstappen, which meant the only hope for Red Bull had left was a red flag for a free tyre change. With Hamilton also pitting, Verstappen was under no pressure to take his final stop before the very end.

Verstappen’s slow pace backed Norris into the Leclerc and Piastri, which made Lando’s final series of laps fairly uncomfortable.

But the world champion’s second pitstop with one lap to go finally allowed Norris back past to claim his second win of the season ahead of Leclerc and Piastri, with Verstappen and Hamilton in the top five.

Hadjar finished an excellent sixth thanks to Lawson’s early teamwork and Racing Bull’s clever strategy. Esteban Ocon’s Haas team also perfectly planned with two pitstops to finish seventh, while Lawson was rewarded for his efforts with eighth.

Williams duo Alex Albon and Carlos Sainz took the final points, which was also the result of the pair backing up the chasing Mercedes cars.

Both Russell and Antonelli were unable to make their way into the points after qualifying outside the top ten, gambling on chaos by delaying their two pitstops after those of their rivals.

Frustrated with Albon’s blocking, Russell decided to pass the Williams by cutting the chicane, intentionally taking a time penalty instead of giving the position back. But the race stewards responded by handing Russell a drive-through instead of a time penalty to stop his plan.

Alonso lost out on his first points of the season by retiring with suspected power unit issue, parking his Aston Martin behind the wall at Rascasse to avoid any disruption to the race.

In the championship Norris closes the gap to points leader Piastri to just three points. Verstappen lost three points to Oscar and heads to next weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona 25 points behind.

So not the most thrilling Monaco race even though the sport’s governing body added the two pitstops as mandatory to improve the spectacle. The teams just stick to their strategy plan with the drivers managing the tyres.

Congratulation to Lando Norris in winning the most famous race on the Formula 1 calendar. He closes the points gap to McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri by three points. Roll on Spain.

Monaco Grand Prix, race results:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:40:33.843
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari +3.131s
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren +3.658s
4 Max Verstappen Red Bull +20.572s
5 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari +51.387s
6 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls +1 lap
7 Esteban Ocon Alpine +1 lap
8 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls +1 lap
9 Alexander Albon Williams +2 laps
10 Carlos Sainz Williams +2 laps
11 George Russell Mercedes +2 laps
12 Oliver Bearman Haas +2 laps
13 Franco Colapinto Alpine +2 laps
14 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber +2 laps
15 Lance Stroll Aston Martin +2 laps
16 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +2 laps
17 Yuki Tsunoda Red Bull +2 laps
18 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes +3 laps
Fernando Alonso Aston Martin DNF
Pierre Gasly Alpine DNF

Norris scores Monaco Grand Prix pole

Lando Norris will start the Monaco Grand Prix in pole position for McLaren beating the home favourite Charles Leclerc and championship leader Oscar Piastri to the top grid spot at the famous street circuit.

Norris looked set to lose out to P1 to Leclerc, who had led every practice session, after the second round of laps in Q3. But continuing on his set soft tyres Norris found another tenth and a half to clinch the top grid slot with his third flying lap, beating last year’s race winner by 0.109 seconds.

Lando’s time of one minute, 09.954 seconds lap was a new track record around the 3.3km venue, and earned the McLaren driver’s first pole since the opening Australian Grand Prix.

Norris had also led the first run from teammate Oscar Piastri, with the championship leader eventually settling for third on the grid after losing time in the Nouvelle Chicane.

Lewis Hamilton was fourth on the grid for Ferrari, four tenths behind, but the seven-time world champion may still be demoted after impeding Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in Q1. Verstappen could only manage fifth on the grid for Red Bull, seven tenths behind pole position.

Isack Hadjar was an excellent sixth for Racing Bulls, overcoming two taps with the wall in free practice to end up as the most impressive rookie on the difficult street circuit.

Fernando Alonso was seventh for Aston Martin, just 0.001 seconds behind Hadjar, with Esteban Ocon also putting in a solid effort for Haas to clinch eighth. Liam Lawson took ninth, with Williams driver Alex Albon completing the top ten.

Norris and Piastri led the running in the early part of qualifying, before Leclerc eventually topped Q1 with a time of one minute, 11.229 seconds.

Most cars were fuelled for a longer stint, using cool-down laps to keep the softs in the window. The narrow margins and significant track evolution meant none of the frontrunners could afford to stay in the garage at the end.

There was pressure on Lewis Hamilton to advance, having dropped to P15, but the seven-time world champion did enough to make it to Q2.

It was Gabriel Bortoleto who was the first to miss out in P16, followed by Oliver Bearman, who will start at the back due to a ten-place grid penalty for ignoring red flags in FP2.

Pierre Gasly was out in P18 ahead of Lance Stroll and Franco Colapinto, but the Alpine driver will move ahead of Stroll due to a one-place penalty for Stroll.

The session was also over for Andrea Kimi Antonelli, who squeezed through in P15 but then tagged the wall at the Nouvelle Chicane and suffered terminal damage on his Mercedes, bringing out a late red flag.

There was more drama for Mercedes at the start of Q2 when George Russell reported a loss of power and then ground to a halt in the tunnel with a suspected electrical issue, meaning both Silver Arrows will start in P14 and P15.

After a lengthy red flag to get rid of the stricken Mercedes, Norris led the running ahead of Verstappen and Leclerc, but times continued to tumble rapidly.

The four cars from Ferrari and McLaren continued to trade blows at the top, with Verstappen third until a brilliant last-ditch lap by Albon that put him ahead of the four-time champion.

Albon’s teammate Carlos Sainz was less successful, blaming a lack of grip on the softs as he was pipped to the final Q3 berth by Haas driver Ocon.

Yuki Tsunoda was also out in P12, complaining about impeding from Isack Hadjar, with Nico Hulkenberg and the Mercedes cars eliminated as well.

Sunday’s 78-lap Monaco Grand Prix will be very interesting as there will be a mandatory to run three different sets of tyres, which will force drivers to make two pitstops to open up strategic options. Hopefully this will make the racing exciting as overtaking is very limited.

Monaco Grand Prix, qualifying positions:
1 Lando Norris McLaren 1:09.954
2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:10.063
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren 1:10.129
4 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:10.382
5 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:10.669
6 Isack Hadjar Racing Bulls 1:10.923
7 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin 1:10.924
8 Esteban Ocon Haas 1:10.942
9 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls 1:11.129
10 Alexander Albon Williams 1:11.213
11 Carlos Sainz Williams 1:11.362
12 Yuki Tsunoda Williams 1:11.415
13 Nico Hulkenberg Sauber 1:11.596
14 George Russell Mercedes 1:11.507
15 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:11.880
16 Gabriel Bortoleto Sauber 1:11.902
17 Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:11.994
18 Franco Colapinto Alpine 1:12.597
19 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:12.563*
20 Oliver Bearman Haas 1:11.979**
*Stroll penalised one grid position for causing a collision during practice.
**Bearman penalised ten grid positions for overtaking under red flags in practice.