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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 Great Britain — Results & aftermath

Norris prevails to take victory at Silverstone after painful Piastri penalty; Hulkenberg earns first podium after 239 starts in chaotic, rain-affected race

In a thrilling and chaotic British Grand Prix, McLaren’s Lando Norris kept it clean and composed to take victory ahead of teammate Oscar Piastri, who dominated the early part of the contest but made a pivotal mistake behind the Safety Car that led to a race-altering 10-second penalty. With heavy rains falling on Silverstone before the race start and more predicted for early in the GP, the field started the Formation Lap on Intermediate wet weather tires on a damp circuit. But Mercedes’ George Russell, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, Haas’s Oliver Bearman, Kick Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoletto and Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar all dove to the pits to gamble on slick tires rather than line up on the grid despite the still quite wet final third of the circuit. With Red Bull’s Max Verstappen leading away from the pole, followed by Piastri in P2 and Norris just behind in P3, it didn’t take long for the first incident on a day full of them. The second Racing Bul of Liam Lawson tangled with Haas’s Esteban Ocon, sending the Aussie spinning off track and out of the race. A Virtual Safety Car was quickly deployed, and Mercedes also brought Kimi Antonelli in for a set of Hard Pirellis, with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll also pitting to take Softs. But for some it was too soon for that maneuver, as even the slick-clad Bortoleto spun out into the gravel once the VSC ended on Lap 4, prompting another VSC just two laps later when his car stalled on track. Stroll pitted again for fresh Softs before the VSC ended during Lap 7, a key move for the Aston man that left teammate Fernando Alosno wondering why his side of the garage hadn’t executed the same tactic on the rapidly drying track.

 

;

No sooner did racing resume but the rain started to fall in earnest, with Antonelli diving to the pits on Lap 10 to get back on Inters and teammate Russell, Ferrari’s Leclerc and Stroll yet again, having made the most of his Softs to gain valuable track position, following for the same swap a lap later. Verstappen stayed out on his aging set of Inters, however, and promptly ran wide coming out of Chapel, allowing Norris to briefly take P2, with teammate Piastri diving in for fresh Inters. Norris and Verstappen followed Piastri in, with a slow stop by McLaren costing Norris the position and a clean one by Red Bull getting Verstappen out in P3, while Piastri had assumed the lead ahead of the yet-to-pit Williams of Alex Albon. With the rain really chucking it down and visibility terrible by Lap 13 of this 52-lap contest, a full Safety Car was deployed a lap later for the wellbeing of the drivers until the deluge could subside. The SC ended on Lap 17, and Piastri restarted ahead of Verstappen, Norris in P3, Stroll amazingly in P4 and Kick Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg suddenly in P5 after an early stop for fresh Inters on Lap 9 paid off handsomely for the German veteran in then increasingly wet conditions thereafter. But a lap later there was yet another Safety Car deployed for the recovery of the crashed Racing Bull of Hadjar at Copse, having run into the back of Antonelli’s Silver Arrow in the blinding spray. While Antonelli came to the pits again for fresh Inters, the rear diffuser of his Mercedes was badly damaged and he would be forced to retire a few laps later.

With the Safety Car coming in on Lap 21, Piastri made the crucial error in judgment that destroyed his race. While controlling the restart from the front, the young Aussie braked far too hard to set up his getaway, nearly causing Verstappen to ram into the back of him such was his excessive deceleration. While Piastri then scooted away, the incident was almost immediately and ominously under review by the stewards. Piastri was eventually penalized 10-seconds for the excessive braking action, a backbreaker for his hopes of victory on the day. But Verstappen was unable to capitalize on this eventuality because he spun out in pursuit at the restart on Lap 21, dropping the Dutch Master all the way down to P10. This all redounded to Norris’s great benefit, because when the penalty was handed down and Piastri eventually had to pit for Medium tries on Lap 43 due to a now-finally drying track, Norris inherited P1 while his teammate sat stationary for that agonizingly slow 10-seconds before any work could be done on his car. So, despite coming in a lap later for his own set of Mediums, he still emerged with the lead of the race, such was the impact of Piastri’s penalty. Controlling the race from the front and with no more incidents to speak of, Norris was able to keep his teammate at bay and take an emotional victory at his home Grand Prix in front of of his adoring countrymen and women in the  grandstands. For Piastri, it was a doubly bitter pill to swallow, as he not only finished P2 in a race he likely should have won but also saw his points advantage to Norris in the Drivers’ Championship slip to just eight. Obviously unhappy with how the day transpired, Piastri will have a lot to stew on before the next race at the end of the month in Belgium, while Norris will be riding high with his confidence fully restored  in the interim after his dream victory here at Silverstone.

With his team’s strategy paying off beautifully, Hulkenberg made a crucial pass on Stroll for P3 and then held off the charging Ferrari of Lewis Hamilton easily to take P3 and his maiden pole in F1 after an astonishing 239 race starts. As the saying goes, better late than never and it was the feel good story of the whole day to see the veteran German pilot rewarded for his years of skillful and professional driving with teams of various quality. Hamilton slotted in at P4 at one of his favorite tracks, bettering by far his Scuderia stablemate Leclerc, who had a miserable day in the wet with a multitude of offs and came home well out of the points in P14. Verstappen managed to recover from his ill-timed spin somewhat to take P5 but it was still a day to forget for the normally flawless four-time champion after starting from the pole. It’s distinctly possible that the team’s decision to really trim the car out hurt him when he most needed downforce during the race, despite netting him the pole. Pierre Gasly had another fine drive for Alpine in P6 and Stroll’s early race tire gambles paid off for Aston Martin even if he faded bit on his final stint, still coming home a solid P7. Teammate Alonso took P9, with Williams’ Albon splitting them in P8, another impressive drive that flew somewhat under the radar amidst all the excitement. Russell took a lone solitary point in P10 after what turned out to be a pretty awful day for the Mercedes factory team. The Monday morning debrief at Brackley should be fairly brutal and they” be looking to get back on form at Spa in three weeks’ time.

Top 10 finishers of the British GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

52

1:37:15.735

25

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

52

+6.812s

18

3

27

Nico Hulkenberg

Kick Sauber

52

+34.742s

15

4

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

52

+39.812s

12

5

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

52

+56.781s

10

6

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

52

+59.857s

8

7

18

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin

52

+60.603s

6

8

23

Alexander Albon

Williams

52

+64.135s

4

9

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

52

+65.858s

2

10

63

George Russell

Mercedes

52

+70.674s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race weekend doesn’t begin until July 25th, as team’s will have loads of time to prepare for the Belgian Grand Prix at the venerable Spa-Francorchamps circuit, including the added pressures of a Sprint weekend there. For Norris, it will mean more time to savor his dream win at his home Grand Prix. For Piastri, it will mean a long time between races to stew on his nightmare penalty and his own culpability for that. And for most of the other drivers, it will mean putting Britain in the rearview and starting fresh in Belgium — except for Hulkenberg, who will surely savor his career achievement and be looking to make it two podiums in a row. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Great Britain — Qualifying results

Verstappen snatches pole from two McLarens with stunning final effort at Silverstone; Piastri settles for P2, Norris P3; Mercedes’ Russell solid in P4, as Ferrari fail to follow up on practice pace

After a disappointing race last week in Austria that saw his day end on Lap 1 due to a crash that was not his fault, Red Bull’s Max Verstappen rebounded big time during Saturday Qualifying for the British Grand Prix. Proving one again that he remains the sport’s most talented pilot even in a car no other driver seems to be able to come to grips with, Verstappen laid down a final flying lap in Q3 that vaulted him ahead of the McLarens of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris and onto the pole for Sunday’s race. If they want to show what a perfect lap looks like at Silverstone in the future, they can simply replay the Flying Dutchman’s sublime effort, which looked smooth and effortless en route to a blistering 1:24.892 time. Contrast that with the other contenders’ final efforts, when they knew the pressure was on to produce and the track was at it’s best, and there were small mistakes aplenty, including from P2 Piastri, who Verstappen knocked off from the top spot, and McLaren teammate Lando Norris, who had to settle for P3 and the second row after getting just that little bit too aggressive over the kerbs of the tricky final sector.

Somewhat lost in all the excitement was another fine effort from Mercedes’ George Russell, who kept it clean enough for a solid P4 time, quite a bit better than teammate Kimi Antonelli’s P7. The Italian Silver Arrows’ rookie will also be demoted three grid spots from there due to the penalty accrued from his ill advised first-lap lurch at the Red Bull Ring last week that took out not only himself but also Verstappen. Ferrari disappointed somewhat after teasing legitimate pole speed throughout the practice sessions. The Prancing Horses receded a bit come crunch time and Lewis Hamilton could only work his way up to P5, with Charles Leclerc just behind in P6, both drivers having slightly scruffy last efforts in Q3. The Ferrari faithful will be hoping that somehow their race pace will be better tomorrow than the one-lap speed in relation to the other top teams today.

Haas’s Oliver Bearman showed both his brilliance by setting a super strong P8 time and also his rookie-ness by picking up a 10-spot grid penalty for hard charging the pit lane entrance under Red Flag conditions at the end of Practice 3. Fernando Alonso got the most from his recently upgraded Aston Martin with the ninth fastest time and Alpine’s Pierre Gasly also did yeoman’s work to make it into Q3 even if he could not improve on P10.

Top 10 qualifiers for the British GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:25.886

1:25.316

1:24.892

18

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:25.963

1:25.316

1:24.995

21

3

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:26.123

1:25.231

1:25.010

20

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:26.236

1:25.637

1:25.029

19

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:26.296

1:25.084

1:25.095

19

6

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:26.186

1:25.133

1:25.121

21

7

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:26.265

1:25.620

1:25.374

18

8

87

Oliver Bearman

Haas

1:26.005

1:25.534

1:25.471

18

9

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

1:26.108

1:25.593

1:25.621

15

10

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

1:26.328

1:25.711

1:25.785

21

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 10 AM Eastern here in the States. With any of the top six having a legitimate shot at victory, it should be a compelling contest, and if the rain that didn’t come today does come tomorrow, who knows what could happen? Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Austria — Results & aftermath

Norris prevails over Piastri in chaotic Austrian GP; Ferrari gain in Constrcutors’ with Leclerc P3, Hamilton P4; Red Bull score zero at home race after Verstappen taken out by Antonelli on Lap 1, sloppy Tsunoda finishes last

A race after crashing out in a clash with his teammate in Canada, McLaren’s Lando Norris kept his cool under the hot Spielberg sun, fending off his chief rival and fellow Papaya driver Oscar Piastri to take victory at Sunday’s Austrian Grand Prix. In a chaotic race that saw four retirements, including the usually impervious Red Bull of Max Verstappen, Norris reestablished his championship potential by controlling the race from the front after starting from the pole, deftly weaving his way through back-markers at the very short and intense Red Bull Ring and executing a very clean final stint under pressure to earn a valuable win. Despite a late race charge by Piastri after the final round of pit stops in this 70-lap contest, Norris withstood the challenge, as his young Aussie rival and current points leader could never quite close up enough to get the DRS and find a way by. Norris’s 25-points on the day versus Piastri’s second place 18 tightened up his deficit to a mere 15-points and, most importantly, restored the young Briton’s confidence after his error in judgement in Canada. It will be game on at Silverstone next weekend, where Norris will enjoy a slight home race advantage from the fans, while Piastri will be looking to reassert his dominance over his teammate and reignite his championship campaign.

As if to drive home the point of McLaren’s absolute dominance this Grand Prix weekend, Not only did Norris and Piastri finish 1-2 but the third place Ferrari of Charles Leclerc was nearly 20-seconds in arrears when he took the checkered flag.  Still, with stablemate Lewis Hamilton slotting in at P4, it was a good day for the Scuderia in the points, especially on a day where their nearest rivals for second place in the Constructors’ had downright dismal outings. Ferrari couldn’t have drawn it up any better when Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli made an overly optimistic dove bomb move on Lap 1 steaming into Turn 3. The Silver Arrow’s rear tires locked up under breaking and Antonelli slammed into the rear of Verstappen’s Red Bull, ending both their races before they could even compete a single circuit. To show just how rare that DNF was, it ended Verstappen’s astonishing 31-race scoring streak, a catastrophe for the team, as Yuki Tsunoda ran a ragged race and came home P16 when all was said and done, plumb last among the surviving cars. Still, it must be noted that Verstappen put himself into jeopardy by only qualifying P7 and Tsunoda is only the latest in a long line of second Red Bull drivers who are unable to find any kind of pace in the car. So, Red Bull’s situation might be even more grave than their zero-points result in Sunday in Austria before most of their corporate brass. For Antonelli, it was a brutal comedown after scoring his first podium in Canada two weeks ago and a reminder that they don’t call them “rookies” for nothing. George Russell salvaged at least a little something on the day, finishing where he started in P5, but Mercedes still saw Ferrari overtake them for P2 in the Constructors’ one race after it seemed they were ascendent after a 1-3 in Montreal. They’ll be hoping to get back on terms when they fire the engines up again in Silverstone.

Places 5 through 10 were nothing but happy surprises and good vibes, with Racing Bulls’ Liam Lawson continuing his rebound from his short-lived tenure with Red Bull at the start of the season by scoring his best ever F1 finish in P6. Wily old vet Fernando Alonso kept his Aston Martin out of trouble and the pursuing whippersnapper Gabriel Bortoleto behind him en route to seventh place. It was still an outstanding day for Kick Sauber, with not only rookie Bortoleto driving superbly to score his first F1 points in P8 but also veteran teammate Nico Hulkenberg adding to the team total in P9. Haas’s Esteban Ocon made it two races in a row in the points with a solid P10, no doubt helped by the slew of retirements, including both midfield-running Williams.

Top 10 finishers of the Austrian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

LAPS

TIME / RETIRED

PTS.

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

70

1:23:47.693

25

2

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

70

+2.695s

18

3

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

70

+19.820s

15

4

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

70

+29.020s

12

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

70

+62.396s

10

6

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

70

+67.754s

8

7

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin

69

+1 lap

6

8

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

69

+1 lap

4

9

27

Nico Hulkenberg

Kick Sauber

69

+1 lap

2

10

31

Esteban Ocon

Haas

69

+1 lap

1

Complete race results available via Fomula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time — the British GP from the legendary Silverstone Circuit, the grandaddy of them all in F1. We’ll see if  McLaren can keep pulling away from the field at a very different kind of circuit than the Red Bull Ring and, if so, whether the Piastri-Norris battle may once again lead to an internecine clash that opens the door for the other contenders. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Austria — Qualifying results

Norris claims pole at Red Bull ring ahead of P2 Leclerc, teammate Piastri in P3

Looking to rebound from the clash with his teammate that ended his race in Canada prematurely two weeks ago, McLaren’s Lando Norris blistered the field to earn pole during Saturday Qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix. Norris mastered the short and tricky Red Bull ring to the tune of a record-setting 1:03.971 fast lap, half a second ahead of Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari and a few tenths more than that versus McLaren stablemate and current points leader Oscar Piastri. After the the Papaya duo collided late in the race in Quebec a fortnight ago, costing Norris any points at all and nearly taking out Piastri as well in the process, Lando will be desperate to get away and stay away from all of the other contenders, run a clean race and take home maximum points to reignite his championship aspirations. With Leclerc’s Prancing Horse slotting in at P2 and teammate Lewis Hamilton pulling one out of the bag good enough for the fourth fastest time, Piastri could well have his hands full just trying to fend off the Ferraris, let alone getting  back on terms with Norris, who frankly looks like he has the edge here in Spielberg.

Mercedes suffered by comparison when measured against McLaren and the Scuderia, perhaps due to the extremely hot conditions here at the circuit, with George Russell only good enough for P5 and rookie teammate Kimi Antonelli scuffling his way to a lowly P9 spot on the grid. Racing Bulls Liam Lawson, who has really come on after a very rough start to the year in the senior Red Bull team, shocked his old teammate Max Verstappen by out-qualifying the Flying Dutchman, P7 to P8. Verstappen may have gotten a taste of what his wingmen usually have to deal with, as the four–time champ complained that his car was literally un-drivable. He struggled with snap oversteer repeatedly over the course of these short but demanding laps, and teammate Yuki Tsunoda fared even worse, coming home a shocking P18 and rueing his lack of front grip. On the other side of the coin, Kick Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto achieved his best-ever qualifying result with a very impressive time good enough for P8. Alpine’s Pierre Gasly rounded out the Top 10 in P10, unable to improve his time when he spun on his final quali effort.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Austrian GP:

POS.

NO.

DRIVER

TEAM

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren

1:04.672

1:04.410

1:03.971

18

2

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:05.197

1:04.734

1:04.492

21

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

1:04.966

1:04.556

1:04.554

19

4

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:05.115

1:04.896

1:04.582

21

5

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:05.189

1:04.860

1:04.763

18

6

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

1:05.017

1:05.041

1:04.926

17

7

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing

1:05.106

1:04.836

1:04.929

18

8

5

Gabriel Bortoleto

Kick Sauber

1:05.123

1:04.846

1:05.132

21

9

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:05.178

1:05.052

1:05.276

17

10

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine

1:05.054

1:04.846

1:05.649

21

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Sunday’s race airs live beginning at 9AM Eastern on ESPN here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out if Norris can keep his quali momentum going and get his championship campaign back on track with a victory, or if Lady Luck — and his teammate Piastri and the two charging Ferraris — have other plans in store.

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Canada — Qualifying results

Russell excels with superb final lap to take pole in Montreal, bests P2 Verstappen & P3 Piastri; Norris off the pace in P7

Saturday qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix delivered thrills aplenty, as the gap between the top three teams and the top four drivers appeared to narrow sharply here at the short and fast Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve. With Red Bull’s Max Verstappen looking the favorite to take pole ahead of the two McLaren’s of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris late in Q3, it was Mercedes’ George Russell who seemed to come from nowhere and lay down a blistering lap to knock off Verstappen and Piastri and grab pole for himself. It was the second year in a row Russell earned pole in Canada and he clearly has an affinity for the temporary Notre Dame Island street circuit smack dab in the middle of the St. Lawrence River. Not only did Russell’s excellent effort burnish his own sterling credentials this season — the Briton has four podiums out of nine races so far — but it also might be evidence that Mercedes is finally closing the gap to McLaren and Verstappen’s Red Bull, as Silver Arrows teammate Kimi Antonelli also qualified a very solid P4. Verstappen’s best flying lap still kept him ahead of points leader Piastri and on the front row, P2 vs P3, but the second McLaren of Lando Norris fumbled his way to a poor P7 time and will have his work cut out for him fighting his way to the front from there. .

Lewis Hamilton was the highest placed Ferrari on a favored circuit where he has won a record-equalling seven times, besting his teammate Charles Leclerc P5 to P8. Fernando Alonso made the most of his vast experience and the Aston Martin’s latest upgrades to claim a surprise P6, while Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar earned P9 but was subsequently penalized three grid spots for impeding earlier in qualifying. Alexander Albon rounded out the top ten starters, putting in an excellent effort just to make it to Q3 let along set the tenth fastest time after his Williams’ engine cover literally blew apart midway through Q1. Albon’s mechanics deserve extra plaudits for getting the car ready to progress to Q2 during the not overly long Red Flag period caused by the cleanup of all that Williams debris on track

Top 10 qualifiers for the Canadian GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:12.075

1:11.570

1:10.899

21

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:12.054

1:11.638

1:11.059

20

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:11.939

1:11.715

1:11.120

23

4

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:12.279

1:11.974

1:11.391

21

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:11.952

1:11.885

1:11.526

27

6

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:12.073

1:11.805

1:11.586

27

7

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:11.826

1:11.599

1:11.625

22

8

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:12.038

1:11.626

1:11.682

27

9

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

1:12.211

1:12.003

1:11.867

21

10

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

1:12.090

1:11.892

1:11.907

30

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Sunday’s race airs live on ABC beginning at 2PM Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out between the extremely competitive top three starters and really a top eight that could conceivably take the victory in Canada!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Spain — Results & aftermath

Piastri bookends triple header with win in eventful Spanish GP, Norris earns P2 as McLaren keep rolling; Leclerc scores opportunistic podium after late Safety Car; Verstappen loses cool while battling with Russell, penalized 10-seconds and dropped to P10 from fifth place

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri prevailed over teammate Lando Norris and a chaotic late race Safety Car restart to take victory in the Spanish Grand Prix at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on Sunday. Despite having a reputation for fostering processionals, the circuit served up a very tense and nervy contest, with the leading teams attempting different tire strategies that put the respective pit walls under constant pressure. In the end, McLaren capped off a grueling triple header with three wins in a row after Piastri won in Emilia-Romagna and here in Spain and Norris taking the coveted Monaco Grand Prix victory a week ago. While Piastri never really seemed under threat, starting from pole and leading the first three quarters of the race with aplomb, a late Safety Car on Lap 55 of this 66-lap tilt brought his closest rivals, notably teammate Norris and Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, right back up to his gearbox as his lead was erased prior to the end of the Safety Car on Lap 60. But the young Aussie controlled the restart like a multi-year veteran, jamming on the brakes to balk Norris’s momentum and then sprinting away to reestablish his leading gap, which he would never relinquish en route to the checkered flag.

Meanwhile Norris also benefitted after the top ten runners all boxed under the SC for fresh Pirellis because, while he and Piastri still had a set of used Soft Pirellis to finish out the race after two previous stops, Verstappen only had a new set of Hards remaining due after running a counterintuitive but still quite effective three-stop strategy. One wonders if he might have been better served by staying out, as this fourth tire change disadvantaged the Dutchman greatly when things resumed and Piastri sped away to end Lap 60 and begin Lap 61. When Verstappen put his foot down for the restart from P3, his car squirmed as the cold Hards struggles for grip and he instantly fell into the clutches of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. Leclerc put an overtaking move on the Red Bull down the start-finish straight, with Verstappen banging into the Prancing Horses side pod for good measure as he desperately tried to close the door.

To rub salt into the already irate Verstappen’s wounds, he next found himself going mano-a-mano with Mercedes’ George Russell, with Russell also attempting to pass as Verstappen took the escape road in an effort to avoid contact. The Red Bull team were quickly on the blower to inform Max that he would have to give Russell P4 due to leaving the track. The incredulous Verstappen instead closed the door while Russell believed he was ceding the position, smashing into the Silver Arrow’s side pods.  Fortunately, neither car was badly damaged, though Verstappen was issued a 10-second time penalty for his reckless maneuver, dropping him from P5 at the line all the way down to P10, a massive points loss for for team and driver for a brief moment of red mist.

This benefitted all the other runners from sixth to ninth, with the improbable Kick Sauber of Nico Hulkenberg getting the greatest prize after an already excellent day’s work by being promoted to an astonishing P5, the team’s first points since the opening round in Australia. The second Ferrari of Lewis Hamilton slotted in at P6 on a day when the seven-time champ struggled mightily with rear tire grip. Impressive Racing Bulls rookie Isack Hadjar was vaulted to P7, Alpine’s Pierre Gasly took P8 and Spaniard Fernando Alonso scored in front of the adoring home fans in P9, a fine result on a day when Aston Martin teammate Lance Stroll did not start due to a mysterious post-qualifying injury.

Top1 10 finishes of the Spanish GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

LAPS

TIME/RETIRED

PTS

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

66

1:32:57.375

25

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

66

+2.471s

18

3

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

66

+10.455s

15

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

66

+11.359s

12

5

27

Nico Hulkenberg

Kick Sauber Ferrari

66

+13.648s

10

6

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

66

+15.508s

8

7

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

66

+16.022s

6

8

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

66

+17.882s

4

9

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

66

+21.564s

2

10

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

66

+21.826s

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Spain — Qualifying results

Piastri pips Norris for pole in Barcelona; Verstappen heads Russell, P3 to P4

In a tense and intriguing Saturday Qualifying for the Spanish Grand Prix, McLaren’s Lando Norris set the ultimate one-lap pace with a blistering final effort to wrest pole position from his teammate, Lando Norris. with Norris sitting atop the pylon ahead of the final flying laps of Q3, Piastri was letter perfect in all three sectors of the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, while Norris seemed to overdrive on his ultimate effort and ended up losing time to his hard-charging Aussie teammate. It was Piastri’s fifth pole of the season but only the second front row lockout for team McLaren.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen also saved his best for last, getting the better of the very competitive Mercedes of George Russell, P3 to P4. Both of those elite drivers will be looking to pounce if there is any kind of kerfuffle between the McLaren duo on the opening lap of tomorrow’s race, a distinct possibility as their duel for the championship really heats up. Verstappen’s quali was even more impressive in the context of the second Red Bull of Yuki Tsunoda ending up dead last in P20, while Russell’s Silver Arrows wingman Kimi Antonelli earned a more representative P6. No matter who Red Bull put in that second car, it seems apparent that only Verstappen can get a handle on the tricky RB21.

Filling out a very competitive top seven, Ferrari showed well, with Lewis Hamilton getting the better of Charles Leclerc, P5 to P7, at a track where the seven-time champ has always run well. Alpine’s Pierre Gasly in P8, Racing Bulls’ impressive rookie Isack Hadjar in P9 and home race favorite Fernando Alonso in P10 rounded out the top ten starting spots on the grid.

Top 10 qualifiers for the Spanish GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:12.551

1:11.998

1:11.546

14

2

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:12.799

1:12.056

1:11.755

15

3

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:12.798

1:12.358

1:11.848

12

4

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:12.806

1:12.407

1:11.848

12

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

1:13.058

1:12.447

1:12.045

15

6

12

Kimi Antonelli

Mercedes

1:12.815

1:12.585

1:12.111

18

7

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

1:13.014

1:12.495

1:12.131

12

8

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

1:13.081

1:12.611

1:12.199

18

9

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

1:13.139

1:12.461

1:12.252

15

10

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:13.102

1:12.523

1:12.284

14

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 9 AM Eastern here in the States. While McLaren are clearly the cars to beat, those directly behind them will be hoping they beat themselves and will be looking to pounce on any internecine combat between Piastri and Norris. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Monaco — Results & aftermath

Norris holds off Leclerc for maiden Monaco win in plodding, strategic race; Piastri P3, Verstappen P4: FIA double-pit stop rule change backfires

Formula 1 and the FIA tried to fix the age old problem of passing at the venerable Monaco circuit and avoid last year’s Red Flag-induced processional by mandating two separate pit stops for Sunday’s dry and sunny Monaco Grand Prix. It did not quite work out exactly as planned. Instead of creating more opportunities for strategic overtakes, the clever team engineers bent the procedure to their own individual goals for the race and ended up using whichever car and driver that qualified lower as a blocker for the car that qualified in the better position to create a safe window for their pit stops. This created long stretches of the 78-lap race where most of the field were running well below full speed, as drivers like Williams’ Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon took turns playing cork in the bottle to the second half of the field to ensure each of them could pit twice without any real threat of being overtaken. In the end, the key to Monaco, as it almost always is in good weather, was the Saturday qualifying order. And pole-sitter Lando Norris, who also set the track record in his McLaren en route to the top starting spot, was able to survive the best efforts of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, as well as having to wade through a slew of back markers, to capture his first Monaco victory.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen did his best to put a spanner in Norris’s works by running a long and not particularly fast second stint from nominal the race lead while waiting for the penultimate lap to make his mandated second stop for fresh Pirellis. This backed Norris into Leclerc late in the going as Verstappen was simply goal hanging for a Safety Car of some sort or a Red Flag, and therefore the proverbial “cheap” pit stop.  But there were no late incidents and once Verstappen ducked in, Norris sped away from Leclerc’s Ferrari rather easily to secure the win, with the Monegasque and last year’s storybook winner settling for second place. Norris’s McLaren teammate Piastri had a bit of wild and wooly weekend in the principality, with plenty of drifting and airborne kerb-banging, but kept it clean enough in the race to bring the car home in P3. Piastri now leads in the Drivers’ championship by a mere three points over the reinvigorated Norris. Verstappen, who had nothing to lose by running  to the bitter end for his second stop due to his massive time cushion over the second Ferrari of Lewis Hamilton, claimed P4 at the finish, exactly where he started.

While Hamilton ran a lonely and unsatisfying race after a bit of clever pit strategy early on to get him out in front of Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar, his P5 was two places better than his penalty-induced seventh place start on the grid and about as much as one could expect for improvement here on the streets of Monte Carlo. Hadjar continued to impress despite ceding a spot to Hamilton early in the race on pit cycles and came home a very solid P6, with Racing Bulls teammate Liam Lawson also scoring for the squad in P8. Esteban Ocon secured his and Haas’s best result of the season in P7, while the Williams duo of Albon and Sainz were rewarded for their slow going shenanigans by scoring valuable team points in P9 and P10 respectively.

Mercedes had a disastrous day as their gamble on running a long first stint on Hard tires with both their cars did not pay off at all due to the slow pace of the midfield runners in front of them. George Russell and Kimi Antonelli scored exactly zero points on a frustrating day the Silver Arrows team will be keen to put behind them as they pack up for the short trip to Barcelona next weekend.

Top 10 finishers of the Monaco GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

LAPS

TIME/RETIRED

PTS

1

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

78

1:40:33.843

25

2

16

Charles Leclerc

Ferrari

78

+3.131s

18

3

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

78

+3.658s

15

4

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

78

+20.572s

12

5

44

Lewis Hamilton

Ferrari

78

+51.387s

10

6

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

77

+1 lap

8

7

31

Esteban Ocon

Haas Ferrari

77

+1 lap

6

8

30

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

77

+1 lap

4

9

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

76

+2 laps

2

10

55

Carlos Sainz

Williams Mercedes

76

+2 laps

1

Complete race results available via Formula1.com.

The next race is in but a week’s time as F1 wraps up another hectic sequence of three races on the trot with the Spanish Grand Prix from the well-loved Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. Hope to see you then at a much more conventional and faster race track where overtaking should at least be reasonably possible and we’re also sure see the return of only the single mandatory pit stop after this weekend in Monaco’s unintended consequences from the FIA’s fiddling.

2025 F1 Grand Prix of Emilia-Romagna — Qualifying results

Piastri keeps mojo rolling with McLaren pole at Imola; Verstappen & Russell just behind in P2 & P3, but Norris disappoints in P4; Ferrari on back foot on home soil with Leclerc only good enough for P11, Hamilton P12

Top 10 qualifiers for the Emilia-Romagna GP:

POS

NO

DRIVER

CAR

Q1

Q2

Q3

LAPS

1

81

Oscar Piastri

McLaren Mercedes

1:15.500

1:15.214

1:14.670

18

2

1

Max Verstappen

Red Bull Racing Honda RBPT

1:15.175

1:15.394

1:14.704

17

3

63

George Russell

Mercedes

1:15.852

1:15.334

1:14.807

17

4

4

Lando Norris

McLaren Mercedes

1:15.894

1:15.261

1:14.962

19

5

14

Fernando Alonso

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:15.695

1:15.442

1:15.431

19

6

55

Carlos Sainz

Williams Mercedes

1:15.987

1:15.198

1:15.432

21

7

23

Alexander Albon

Williams Mercedes

1:16.123

1:15.521

1:15.473

20

8

18

Lance Stroll

Aston Martin Aramco Mercedes

1:15.817

1:15.497

1:15.581

21

9

6

Isack Hadjar

Racing Bulls Honda RBPT

1:16.253

1:15.510

1:15.746

17

10

10

Pierre Gasly

Alpine Renault

1:15.937

1:15.505

1:15.787

17

Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.

Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 9 AM Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!