Tag Archives: McLaren

2025 F1 Grand Prix of the United States — Qualifying results

Verstappen keeps pressure on McLaren duo with pole ahead of Norris at COTA; Piastri underwhelms in P6; Leclerc good enough for P3

Top 10 qualifiers for the USGP:

  1. Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 1m32.510s
  2. Lando Norris (McLaren) 1m32.801s
  3. Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 1m32.807s
  4. George Russell (Mercedes) 1m32.826s
  5. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 1m32.912s
  6. Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 1m33.084s
  7. Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) 1m33.114s
  8. Ollie Bearman (Haas) 1m33.139s
  9. Carlos Sainz (Williams) 1m33.150s
  10. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) 1m33.160s

Complete qualifying results available via Formula.com.

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Singapore — Qualifying results

Russell earns second Mercedes pole of season with blistering effort at Marina Bay; Verstappen a frustrated P2; Piastri secures P3 ahead of adrift Norris in P5

 

Top 190 qualifiers of the Singapore GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:29.928

1:29.562

1:29.158

18

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:30.028

1:29.572

1:29.340

18

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:30.313

1:29.813

1:29.524

20

4

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:30.036

1:29.649

1:29.537

17

5

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:29.932

1:29.809

1:29.586

20

6

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:29.765

1:29.936

1:29.688

20

7

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:30.370

1:29.914

1:29.784

22

8

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls

1:30.214

1:30.016

1:29.846

19

9

87

Oliver Bearman

Haas

1:30.420

1:30.076

1:29.868

17

10

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

1:30.745

1:30.054

1:29.955

18

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live beginning at 8 AM Eastern on ESPN here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Azerbaijan — Results & aftermath

Verstappen dominates in Baku for easy win; Russell rallies through illness for P2, Sainz earns maiden Williams podium in P3; Piastri crashes out on opening lap but P7 Norris fails to truly capitalize

Red Bull ace Max Verstappen earned his second victory in a row with a dominant win from pole at Sunday’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix. At the highly technical yet also high speed Baku City Circuit, Verstappen showed his flawless precision and race management, leading every lap of the 51-lap contest, setting the fastest lap and gapping the second place Mercedes of George Russell by a whopping 14.6 seconds at the finish. Carlos Sainz capitalized on his somewhat fortunate P2 starting position after Saturday’s highly chaotic qualifying to earn his first podium with Williams in P3. Meanwhile, McLaren had a weekend to forget, as championship points leader Oscar Piastri followed up his crash out in Q3 on Saturday with a very similar shunt on the race’s opening lap that ended his day in dramatic fashion. But despite being fated to score zero points on the day, teammate and chief championship rival Lando Norris could not make up much ground due to his own mediocre qualifying effort, the young Briton finishing exactly where he started when all was said and done in P7. Norris was therefore only able to reduce his deficit to Piastri by 6 points, the Aussie still retaining a 25-point cushion with seven rounds remaining. Still, as the home stretch of the 2025 season comes into view, Piastri looks mentally vulnerable for the first time and he will be staring at the walls of another very claustrophobic street circuit when the teams unload in Singapore in two weeks.

Kimi Antonelli continued his recent resurgence, making it an excellent day for the Silver Arrows by complimenting Russell’s P2 with a solid fourth place result. Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson also had an excellent race, holding off multiple contenders in the final laps to secure an impressive P5. Teammate Isack Hadjar also contributed to the Racing Bulls points haul by coming home in P10.  Those unable to pass Lawson as the laps ran out were the second Red Bull of Yuki Tsunoda, who nevertheless placed an encouraging P6, as well as the frustrated Norris in P7 and the best placed Ferrari of Lewis Hamilton in P8. Hamilton got the better of his Scuderia stablemate Charles Leclerc with a pass late in the going, relegating the Monegasque to P9. Regardless, it was not a strong weekend for Ferrari and they will be keen to leave Baku behind for Singapore and the friendly confines of the Marina Bay Street Circuit, where they have traditionally run very well under the lights.

Top 10 finishers of the Azerbaijan GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

51

1:33:26.408

25

2

63

George Russell

Mercedes

51

+14.609s

18

3

55

Carlos Sainz

Williams

51

+19.199s

15

4

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

51

+21.760s

12

5

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

51

+33.290s

10

6

22

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

51

+33.808s

8

7

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

51

+34.227s

6

8

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

51

+36.310s

4

9

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

51

+36.774s

2

10

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls

51

+38.982s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in a fortnight at another demanding street circuit — the nighttime Singapore GP from the beautifully illuminated Marina Bay Street Circuit. Verstappen will be looking to keep his mojo working, Piastri will surely be looking to regroup while Norris ratchets up the pressure, Mercedes will try to keep climbing and Ferrari will be desperate to get back to the sharp end of the field. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Italy — Results & aftermath

Vintage Verstappen dominates at Monza; McLaren engineer Norris-Piastri to secure P2 & P3; Leclerc P4, Hamilton P6 in difficult weekend for Ferrari at home race

For one race weekend in the countryside of Northern Italy on the occasion of Round 16 of the Formula 1 World Championship and the Italian Grand Prix at Autodromo Nazionale Monza, it seemed just like old times for four-time champ Max Verstappen and the Red Bull team. Imperious on Saturday in setting the Monza lap-record en route to pole, Verstappen survived an early lap kerfuffle with McLaren rival Lando Norris in the Grand Prix that saw the Dutchman have to give up the lead after forcing Norris off track at the very start of the race. But mighty Max would not be denied this Sunday and he forcefully took the position back on Lap 4 with a perfectly gauged late-braking maneuver steaming into the first chicane. And despite being so early in the course of this 53-lap contest, once Verstappen regained the lead, it was lights out for any other aspirant on the day. In a vintage performance by Verstappen and in a Red Bull that more closely resembled the fearsome rocket that dominated the sport just a few years ago, Verstappen ran away from both McLarens with apparent ease, intuited that their overcut gamble would not thwart his pursuit of victory when he pitted some ten laps earlier than the Papaya duo eventually would, and then easily maintained his lead when Norris and teammate Oscar Piastri did finally come in for fresh rubber on Lap 46. And while McLaren denied to run that long first stint purposely to try and get an advantage by running their final short stint on Soft Pirellis in opposition to Verstappen’s older Lap 37 switch to Hards, it didn’t really work out and Verstappen headed the McLaren duo by a whopping 19.2 seconds when the checkers flew. It was Verstappen’s first victory since the other Grand Prix in Italy this year, Emilia-Romagna, way back in Round 7. Now, whether he and Red Bull can replicate this Monza resurgence at the very different animal that is Azerbaijan in a fortnight remains to be seen. But for one race weekend, at least, the Dutch king and his court were back in action.

McLaren, meanwhile, had a bit of a kissing your sister kind of experience here at Monza. Already surprised at their usually superior pace being bettered easily by Verstappen’s Red Bull, the team’s braintrust found themselves at pains to keep everything civil between their two gentlemanly pilots, Norris and Piastri. While their gamble to run a long first stint on Mediums and then make the late switch to Softs was a sound one in the face of Verstappen’s dominance and their own cushion to the runners behind them, things got complicated when they finally did call their drivers in. Running in third behind his teammate, Piastri was first in for service, with Norris being assured that despite staying out an extra lap, Piastri would play the team game and not fight it out via the undercut when they reemerged on track. But Norris’s stop was painfully slow with a sticky front left tire change costing him about four extra seconds stationary compared to his teammate and championship rival. So, Norris now emerged behind Piastri in P3 after all that time spent on pit lane. The team quickly ordered Piastri to swap back since the loss of position was no fault of Norris’s and they had all been down this road together in Hungary last year. With only the mildest grudging hesitation, Piastri ceded P2 back to Norris cleanly. Despite being told he was free to race after that, the young Aussie points-leader could never find the pace to really execute any sort of overtake in the final few laps of this fast moving race. With a lot of extra championship points in hand after Norris’s unfortunate mechanical DNF in Zadvoort last Sunday, Piastri could well afford to spot Norris three here at Monza.

Charles Leclerc was the best placed Ferrari in P4, the Prancing Horses never really in contention for a podium this year with that eventual lightning fast top three in front of them. Leclerc’s teammate Lewis Hamilton did manage a very solid effort to work his way up from a penalty-induced tenth place start on the grid to P6 at the finish, but it was hardly a weekend to remember for the Scuderia or the hoards of loyal tifosi in the stands. Mercedes’ George Russell split the Ferraris in P6, while rookie Silver Arrows teammate got a confidence boosting result with a solid if unspectacular P9. Alexander Albon had an excellent drive for Williams to come home P7, while Kick Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto continued his upward trajectory with a P8 finish. And Racing Bulls Isack Hadjar, yet another impressive rookie from this year’s bumper crop, had another superlative drive a week after his first podium in the Netherlands, willing himself from a pit lane start all the way into a points-paying P10.

Top 10 finishers of the Italian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

53

1:13:24.325

25

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

53

+19.207s

18

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

53

+21.351s

15

4

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

53

+25.624s

12

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

53

+32.881s

10

6

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

53

+37.449s

8

7

23

Alexander Albon

Williams

53

+50.537s

6

8

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick SGabrielauber

53

+58.484s

4

9

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

53

+59.762s

2

10

6

Isack Hadjar

 

Racing Bulls

53

+63.891s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in two week’s time at the very entertaining Baku City Street Circuit in Azerbaijan. A horse of a very different color than flat-out Monza, it will be interesting to see if Verstappen and Red Bull can keep their Italian mojo working there or if it will be a return to McLaren’s mostly dominant form this season. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Italy — Qualifying results

Verstappen pulls a classic lap out of the bag for pole at Monza, betters P2 Norris, P3 Piastri; Ferrari forced to settle for fourth and fifth fastest at home race

Red Bull’s peerless Max Verstappen proved once again why he is still a top driver in Formula 1 even without the superior equipment he’s had in the past, pulling out a final lap during Saturday Qualifying  good enough for pole at Sunday’s Italian Grand Prix. Despite the best efforts of the normally blindingly fast McLaren duo of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris, who run one-two in the points, it was Verstappen who wrested pole away from them both with a brilliant final flying lap here at Autodromo Nazionale Monza, the Temple of Speed. The put paid to Norris’s brief moment atop the pylon after finally hooking up all three sectors during his final attempt, putting some rather disjointed earlier efforts that risked dropping him perilously down the grid in the rearview. And Piastri, while solid, will have to try and get by both aces, as the young Aussie Drivers’ leader was relegated to P3.

For a brief, shining moment Ferrari’s faithful tifosi thought one of their pilots might just pull off the pole on their home turf. But once Verstappen and the two McLaren’s really found their grooves, Charles Leclerc’s best effort in Q3 was only good enough for P4, ironically the same position the Monegasque started from when he won last year’s race here. But it’s hard to imagine Leclerc repeating that feat with this year’s Prancing Horse consistently being the third or even fourth fastest car over the long runs. Lewis Hamilton qualified P5 in his Monza debut with the Scuderia but will also be penalized five grid spots for a Yellow Flag infraction in last week’s Dutch GP.

George Russell, disgruntled by the team’s decision to put him on the Soft Pirelli tires when he wanted Mediums, could only muster P6 for Mercedes, while rookie teammate Kimi Antonelli represented well in P7. Fellow rookie Gabriel Bortoleto continued to impress by hustling his Kick Sauber up to P8, the ageless Fernando Alonso slotted his Aston into P9 and the second Red Bull of Yuki Tsunoda qualified P10, a ways away from his team leader Verstappen.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Italian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:19.455

1:19.140

1:18.792

18

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:19.517

1:19.293

1:18.869

21

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:19.711

1:19.286

1:18.982

19

4

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:19.689

1:19.310

1:19.007

20

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:19.765

1:19.371

1:19.124

20

6

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:19.414

1:19.287

1:19.157

18

7

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:19.747

1:19.245

1:19.200

22

8

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

1:19.688

1:19.323

1:19.390

21

9

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

1:19.658

1:19.362

1:19.424

20

10

22

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

1:19.619

1:19.433

1:19.519

18

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 9 AM Eastern here in the States. It should be a dogfight between the elite top three and perhaps a Ferrari will be inspired by the home crowd to get in on the action, as well — hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of the Netherlands — Results & aftermath

Piastri prevails at Zandvoort as Norris’s championship dreams take hit with late race mechanical DNF; Verstappen inherits P2; Rookie Hadjar earns first podium with spectacular drive ahead of Russell; Ferrari suffer zero-points double retirement

Pics courtesy GrandPrix247.com

Top 10 finishers of the Dutch GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

72

1:38:29.849

25

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

72

+1.271s

18

3

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls

72

+3.233s

15

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

72

+5.654s

12

5

23

Alexander Albon

Williams

72

+6.327s

10

6

87

Oliver Bearman

Haas

72

+9.044s

8

7

18

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin

72

+9.497s

6

8

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

72

+11.709s

4

9

22

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

72

+13.597s

2

10

31

Esteban Ocon

Haas

72

+14.063s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time, as the F1 circus visits the Temple of Speed in Monza, Italy. Piastri will be seeking to extend his advantage while Norris will be desperate to get back in the game and secure a solid result. And Ferrari will be looking for redemption after their miserable Dutch weekend on their home turf and in front of of the rabid tifosi. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of the Netherlands — Qualifying results

Piastri pips Norris for pole as McLaren reign supreme at Zandvoort; Verstappen gives home fans hope in P3

With the August summer recess over, it was a return to 2025’s main theme, as the McLaren duo of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris duked it out for pole amidst the dunes of Zandvoort during Saturday Qualifying for the Dutch Grand Prix. With barely anything to choose between the supremely talented Papaya duo driving the grid’s fastest cars, it was Piastri who pipped Norris in the end by a minuscule .012-seconds. While you could put a sheet of paper between the points leading Piastri and his closest pursuer and teammate, Norris, the McLaren pair managed to gap the P3 Red Bull of Max Verstappen by three-tenths, much to the chagrin of the orange-clad army of his countrymen in the grandstands. Still, it was another fine effort by the Dutch Master at his home Grand Prix, making the most of what has evolved into a surprisingly hard to manage RB21 as the season has progressed.

Despite those three outstanding efforts, the qualifying drive of the day had to be by Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar. The impressive French rookie continued to demand attention by vaulting himself into P4 and the second row alongside Verstappen with an outstanding final flying lap. That demoted Mercedes’ George Russell to P5, adding to Silver Arrows frustration after Kimi Anotonelli was bounced in Q2 with only the eleventh-fastest time in that session. Ferrari also continued to flounder, as Charles Leclerc could do no better than P6 and Lewis Hamilton could only manage P7. The second Racing Bull of Liam Lawson also performed well to take P8, while Williams’ Carlos Sainz excelled by setting the ninth fastest time and Aston Martin’s ageless Fernando Alonso qualified in tenth.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Dutch GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:09.338

1:08.964

1:08.662

18

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:09.469

1:08.874

1:08.674

18

3

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:09.696

1:09.122

1:08.925

18

4

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls

1:09.966

1:09.439

1:09.208

18

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:09.676

1:09.313

1:09.255

18

6

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:09.906

1:09.304

1:09.340

22

7

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:09.900

1:09.261

1:09.390

21

8

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

1:09.779

1:09.383

1:09.500

18

9

55

Carlos Sainz

Williams

1:09.980

1:09.472

1:09.505

18

10

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

1:09.950

1:09.366

1:09.630

17

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live beginning at 9 AM Eastern on ESPN here in the States. With the Drivers’ Championship clearly down to the McLaren duo, we’ll see if Piastri or Norris can begin the final stretch of 10 races left on the front foot. Or perhaps there will be a Dutch spoiler waiting to capitalize on any ill-timed contact between the Papaya pair? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Hungary — Results & aftermath

Norris holds off Piastri to take victory at Hungaroring, closes Championship gap before summer break; Russell wrests P3 from pole-sitter Leclerc after Ferrari suffer race-pace drop off

Top 10 finishers of  the Hungarian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

70

1:35:21.231

25

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

70

+0.698s

18

3

63

George Russell

Mercedes

70

+21.916s

15

4

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

70

+42.560s

12

5

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

70

+59.040s

10

6

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

70

+66.169s

8

7

18

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin

70

+68.174s

6

8

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

70

+69.451s

4

9

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

70

+72.645s

2

10

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

69

+1 lap

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

 

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Belgium — Results & aftermath

Piastri gets the better of Norris early in delayed wet-to-dry race as McLaren finish 1-2 again; Leclerc holds off Verstappen for P3

The legendary Spa-Francorchamps Circuit nestled into the Ardennes Forest lived up to its unpredictable nature on this Belgian Grand Prix Sunday, as heavy rains blanketed the entirety of the long, 7 kilometer track, delaying the start of the Formula 1 race by some eighty minutes. But while it looked for a while like we might be on for a repeat of the aborted 2021 race here, the weather eventually cleared enough to get the Grand Prix underway, albeit behind the Safety Car after a lengthy Red Flag period waiting for the precipitation to let up and track conditions, especially visibility, to improve. With the Safety Car coming into the pits on Lap 5 of this 44-lap contest, it didn’t take long for the decisive move to unfold. As the pole-sitting McLaren of Lando Norris attempted to speed away at La Source, his points-leading teammate Oscar Piastri tucked in behind him and used the slipstream to beautiful effect while heading up Eau Rouge, executing a nifty and authoritative pass steaming into the Kemmel Straight. Piastri then skipped away from the now second place Norris to the tune of a full second by the end of the first racing lap.

But with the track now drying out amidst the unusually warm summer weather here, the next inflection point was just when to duck into the pits to get off the rapidly wearing Intermediate Pirellis and onto slick tires. Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton, having very little to lose after starting form the pits due to a track limits deletion in Q1 on Saturday and the Scuderia’s decision to change the car set up after that, was the first to make the leap, coming in for Medium tires. That started the dominoes tumbling, as Piastri followed in a lap later for the same tire change, as did most of the rest of the field, but Norris stayed out, along with only Yuki Tsunoda, Esteban Ocon and Isack Hadjar. When he did come into the pits a lap later, his pit wall made the audacious decision to switch him to the Hard tire in hopes of making it to the end of the race on those tires while, they hoped, others would be forced to pit off the slightly moire fragile Mediums, which the rest of the field had chosen.

But it didn’t really work out for Norris, as Piastri proved a master at nursing his tires to the end, while also benefitting from running in clear air at the front. While Norris pushed hard until the bitter end and got within 4-seconds of his teammate, it seemed to be his Hards that lost their performance first and the young Briton had a handful of slight moments in the latter two-thirds of the tilt that saw him slide off track momentarily and lose whatever time he had previously gained. Piastri took the checkered flag the victor, with Norris relegated to P2 essentially from the very first action of the race. It was sweet payback for Piastri after the Aussie pilot felt hard done by a penalty in the last race at Silverstone that cost him the win, and it ended the resurgent Norris’s winning streak at two. Clearly, these two drivers have the best cars on the grid on any given weekend so, it will almost certainly come down to a two-man, intra-team battle between these exceptionally talented young Formula 1 stars for the Drivers’ Championship, even as McLaren are now running away with the Constructors’.

While it was always a going to be some combination of Piastri-Norris for the top two positions today, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was the best of the rest, holding off Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, Saturday’s Sprint winner, to claim P3 and a step on the podium. Leclerc’s stablemate Hamilton put in a brilliant recovery drive, coming all the way from that pit lane start up to P7. Mercedes’ George Russell had a bit of lonely race but still scored valuable points for the Silver Arrows in P5 on a day where rookie Kimi Antonelli continued to falter and finished well down in P16. Williams Alexander Albon was able to stave off Hamilton’s best efforts en route to an impressive P6, and Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson continued his rebound from a tough start with Red Bull and eventual demotion, taking a valuable and confidence boosting P8. Fellow rookie Gabriel Bortoleto continued to impress by coming home in P9 for the much improved Kick Sauber outfit and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly held off a host of midfield pretenders to take the final point in P10.

Top 10 finishers of the Belgian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

44

1:25:22.601

25

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

44

+3.415s

18

3

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

44

+20.185s

15

4

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

44

+21.731s

12

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

44

+34.863s

10

6

23

Alexander Albon

Williams

44

+39.926s

8

7

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

44

+40.679s

6

8

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

44

+52.033s

4

9

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

44

+56.434s

2

10

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

44

+72.714s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time, the Hungarian Grand Prix from Budapest, which is also the last contest before the traditional summer recess. While McLaren certainly seem have the pace on all the other contenders, the Hungaroring is a very different beast than Spa. Hope to see you then to find out whether it’s another internecine fight for the win between Piastri and Norris or if another team and driver can spoil McLaren’s summer holiday!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Belgium — Qualifying results

Norris bests Piastri for pole at Spa; Leclerc out-duels Verstappen for P3

Lando Norris kept his momentum going even after the long break from his emotional win at the last race in England three weeks ago, taking pole in Saturday qualifying ahead of his McLaren teammate at the fabled Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium. Norris pipped Piastri, who had the pole for the earlier Sprint race, by a mere 0.085 seconds, as McLaren locked out the front row. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc surprised Red Bull’s Max Verstappen as grip conditions worsened amidst increasing heat here in the Ardennes, taking P3 from the flying Dutchman, who has earlier stormed to the win in the Sprint. However, with rain predicted for tomorrow’s Grand Prix after nothing but dry weather to begin the race weekend, we could be in for an unpredictable contest where qualifying position might mean less than meets the eye.

After the top four, Williams’ Alexander Albon put in an astonishing final flying lap to vault himself up to P5, relegating Mercedes’ George Russell to P6 in the process. The second Red Bull of Yuki Tsunoda qualified relatively well in P7 in his first race under new team boss and his former chief at Racing Bulls, Laurent Mikes. Mikies replaced Christian Horner at the big team after Christian Horner’s shock sacking on July 9th. Speaking of Racing Bulls, the excellent young duo of Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson continued to impress by qualifying in P8 and P9 respectively, while Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto was able to get into Q3 and will start form tenth on the grid.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Belgian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:41.010

1:40.715

1:40.562

20

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:41.201

1:40.626

1:40.647

21

3

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:41.635

1:41.084

1:40.900

18

4

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:41.334

1:40.951

1:40.903

15

5

23

Alexander Albon

Williams

1:41.772

1:41.505

1:41.201

20

6

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:41.784

1:41.254

1:41.260

18

7

22

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

1:41.840

1:41.245

1:41.284

17

8

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls

1:41.572

1:41.281

1:41.310

19

9

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

1:41.748

1:41.297

1:41.328

20

10

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

1:41.908

1:41.336

1:42.387

18

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live at 9AM Eastern on ESPN here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!