Saturday, 18 July 2026

Belgium GP Qualifying Report

First Gasly and then Hamilton crashed into the same bit of wall during Free Practice; Gasly gave his team 24 hours more to fix the car before Qualifying.  Everyone was ready for the first session and we were having an unusual Spa because the weather was not top of the agenda.  There were no shock exits in the bottom six: Albon, Ocon, Bottas, Perez, Alonso and Stroll.  It was Norris, Verstappen and Hadjar at the top of the time sheet with the highest running Mercedes being Russell in fifth.  Was it looking like the battle to bring upgrades was finally paying off?

Antonelli was back at the top after the second session.  The bottom siz were Lawson, Gasly, Colapinto, Hulkenberg, Sainz and Bearman.  

Between sessions, Hulkenberg had to retire his car at the side of the track because of a hydraulics leak.  He was removed quickly.  With six minutes to go, the final session was Red Flagged and stopped because there was gravel on the track.  Norris was fairly close to pole but abandoned his last lap allowing Antonelli to take it.  Behind him was Verstappen, Norris, Russell, Leclerc, Hamilton, Piastri, Linblad, Bortoleto and Hadjar who did not set a time despite going out to give his team mate a tow.

Hadjar will start at the back of the grid and Norris will move back ten places, both for taking on new parts to their cars.  It still looks like an interesting front row to start the Belgian Grand Prix with although I feel it is inevitable that Verstappen will lead the first ten laps or so before Antonelli takes over for the win.

Sunday, 5 July 2026

GB GP Race Report

The wind had been discussed for the whole of the weekend but the weather must have been a little chilly because Naomi Schiff was wearing a knitted, woolly dress.  

There was extra time for the build-up because the drivers' parade would take over fourteen minutes in the Lego go-karts.  The crowd roared with laughter after several drivers tried to cut a corner and beached their cars in the gravel.  It was all such a novelty to rookie Linblad that when his on-board camera was being used for the feed, he got his phone out to video it on the big screen.  Alonso, having sat back to cuise an old man Sunday afternoon drive, finished first.  

After that, the Sky team had to fill a lot of time before they could play the VT of Bearman driving one of Senna's cars.  It was emotional for him and he had a cry; if I could hazard a guess it's because he realised he will never drive anything as good as that.

Gasly had been moved back on the grid for impeding during Qualifying.  Alonso wasn't last on the grid because his team mate took a ten place grid penalty for a new power unit.  He ended up there though, going into the pits after coming to a stop on the track during the formation lap.

Mercedes poor starts were back and both Ferraris were past Antonelli off the start.  Hadjar got going well but I found it hard to tell which car is which now that McLaren have changed their livery.  There were a few incidents on the first lap including Piastri sustaining some damage in a tangle with Lawson, Ocon doing something we never saw and Albon lost control and ran into Bearman and ended up last, with a ten second penalty to come.  It was an odd start for Williams with one driver falling to last place and the other getting into the points in tenth.

The starting three's order was changed again when Hamilton was given a five second penalty for moving before the green lights.  After eleven laps, Antonelli made an easy pass on him.  If the Mercedes were performing better in race conditions, it was an easy boosted pass by Verstappen on Russell, so all did not seem equal for some reason or other.  He went straight into the pits after.

Halfway through the race a Virtual Safety Car was set which meant that many drivers should have been able to claim a quicker pit stop but it was an umbrella that had blown onto the track.  It was quickly removed by the marshal which was a relief for Red Bull as they had both already pitted.

Hamilton didn't want to pit as his tyres were still good and he would have been doubly angry as they only told him about his penalty as he was coming in.  It's no wonder the radio wasn't broadcast.  Ferrari gave Leclerc a clean stop.  Verstappen and Hamilton fought hard then the Red Bull got past Russell for third.  He was keen to fight back but was radioed by his team that he had a puncture.  

As Hamilton got past Verstappen for third position, to the crowd's delight, Hulkenberg had to pull off to the side of the track.  A Virtual Safety Car was called for and Verstappen, Norris and Hadjar pitted.  I was surprised Leclerc didn't risk it from the lead because Antonelli was catching him quickly.  

The next time penalty was given to Stroll for exceeding track limits more than five times; this is not a track where it is hard to stay between the white lines.  With eleven laps to go, Antonelli radioed in that something was broken on his car.  He was asked for more information and spoke in a panicked, rushed way.  They replaced the nose which took twenty seconds, coming out in fifth place behind Russell.  It seemed strange that they would make that change and permit him to box taking his word for it and then just changing the nose without knowing what the problem is.  As he went back out, he reported that the suspension was broken; Antonelli offered to carry on and the team radioed that they thought it was a broken wheel shield.  He was struggling to turn the car precisely; they asked him to retire but he begged to carry on.  A compromise was reached that he should pit and they would try to rip it off.

It was all go in the last five laps: Antonelli decided to go for it with a broken car, Albon retired and Verstappen crashed.  The Safety Car came out and everyone pitted except for Russell, who took second place.  The commentators were very keen for the race to restart before it ended but I could only see that they wanted Leclerc to lose the lead and more places so that it would be an all-British podium.  It would have been very unfair for Leclerc to lose the place but his tyres were brand(ish) new and Russell's old.  Then, just as we were going to see one lap of racing the Safety Car was redeployed.  I can see this will be a big controversy after the race.  The pundits would have a dilemma - do they get upset that Ferrari pitted Hamilton and so losing the place to Russell?  Or should they be pleased for Russell's canny manoeuvre with Mercedes?

The top ten were: Leclerc, Russell, Hamilton, Norris, Hadjar, Lawson, Lindblad (a nice four points for his first British Grand Prix), Bortoleto, Colapinto and Gasly.  The Alpines (and Bortoleto) really scooped up the points from the teams who had drivers falling back.  Piastri finished eleventh and outside the points.  Leclerc was overjoyed and manic over the radio.  Hamilton was under investigation for an infringement under the Yellow Flags; it would come to nothing.  

At the start of the season, it looked like Mercedes would be dominant but, as in the past, other teams do catch up.  Ferrari seem to be there now, helped with better strategy calls and reliability.  Red Bull and McLaren now need to do the same.  There are two races until the summer break.

Saturday, 4 July 2026

GB GP Qualifying Report

Hot from the Sprint race, Qualifying began.  Russell shocked everyone with an early off through the gravel at the start of the first session.  He managed to keep it going and get back to the grid.  The Ferraris were flying again, as they had been in Sprint Qualifying, but the Red Bulls were up there with them.  New tyres and a hotter track made the late runners set very quick times with Hulkenberg popping in the fourth fastest time.  Predictably, out went Ocon, Bottas, Colapinto (who had an off too), Perez, Stroll (less predictably ahead of...) and Alonso.  Hadjar was the fastest.

The second session was less eventful.  The most exciting thing to happen was that Hulkenberg had a lap deleted.  The bottom six were: Bortoleto, Gasly, Hulkenberg, Bearman, Sainz and Albon.  It was a weekend to forget at their home track for Williams.  Ominously, Antonelli was the fastest.

It was even less exciting in the final session.  There was an unsafe release.  There was no shock at the top: it was Antonelli.  It was a shock in second, where Leclerc beat his team mate.  The top ten lined up: Antonelli, Leclerc, Hamilton, Russell, Hadjar, Norris, Verstappen, Piastri, Linblad and Lawson.

Hopefully it will be close racing at the front during the Race Proper.  Will Leclerc and Hamilton come together?  It seems that Russell doesn't have it in him this weekend for a team mate battle to be a worry for Mercedes.

GB GP Sprint Report

It was windier today at Silverstone and Albon had pushed back to start from the pit lane.

Antonelli pushed Hamilton off the grid but the Ferrari was able to hold the place but behind him the Mercedes and McLarens swapped places back and forth.  It took eight laps for Antonelli to take the lead.  He was able to hold it until the finishing line.  There seemed to be nothing Hamilton could do about it.

There was a lot of overtaking although we didn't see any further down the field, I suspect there was some but it's not the focus for the television director unfortunately.  The top eight were Antonelli, Hamilton, Norris, Russell, Leclerc, Verstappen, Piastri and Lawson.

It's a shame that we cannot enjoy the mid-field and backmarkers racing: they aren't able to trouble the top ten and what they do to perform isn't shown.

Friday, 3 July 2026

GB GP Sprint Qualifying Report

It was gusty in Silverstone but sunny enough too so there were challenges but nothing too tricky for the drivers.  There were several British drivers in contention for the Sprint Pole: Russell, Hamilton and possibly Norris.  They just had to watch out for Italian Antonelli or perhaps Leclerc, desperate for a bit of glory at last.

The first SQ session was a parade of drivers and the bottom six nicely lined up in their teams to help their mechanics the next day: two Haas (Bearman then Ocon), two Cadillacs (Perez then Bottas), two Aston Martins (Alonso then Stroll).  If rumours are correct that both Ocon and Bottas are considered to be under-performing by their teams and may be replaced then surely somebody has to look at Stroll?  Both Williams got through which was a good show for their home track.

Norris lost a bit of his car, which would slightly affect the aerodynamics for the rest of Sprint Qualifying.  It didn't matter because we couldn't spot the McLarens on the track as they had changed their livery to green and white and looked remarkably similar at speed to a couple of other teams.

The Ferraris have brought a new engine to this track and it was doing wonders for them.  Hamilton was the fastest in the second session.  If you include the Racing Bulls then the top teams are really excluding any mid-runners from getting into the top ten this season.  Gasly, Bortoleto, Hulkenberg, Colapinto, Sainz and Albon went out.  Sainz has been comprehensively beating his team mate this year which possibly  shows that he never would have been any challenge to Verstappen at Red Bull.  Gasly has been chasing the top runners' tails all season and it would not surprise me if the gossip that Alonso may become his team mate next year turned out to be true.

With less of a gap, that meant that all the top five teams went for the same strategy in the final session: one lap at the end.  Six minutes we waited for the cars to come out.  I was surprised at least one Racing Bull driver didn't try to do something in that time.  I think some of those drivers really could have done with a lap to get their eye in; I'm looking at you George.  Hamilton took a very convincing pole, roared on by his fellow Brits.  Behind him was Antonelli, Verstappen (a Red Bull resurgence?), Leclerc, Russell (losing it all on his home track), Norris, Piastri (not able to keep up with his team mate this year), Hadjar, Lawson and Linblad (who was really proud to have made it through).

The Sprint Race would be a good indication of where the points will go in the main Race.  It didn't look like the British weather would have much of an impact either.