
Max Verstappen pulled off a late-session stunner to claim pole position for the 2025 British Grand Prix, stealing the spotlight from McLaren and home hero Lewis Hamilton with a blistering lap that left Silverstone in shock.
Despite not featuring prominently in practice, the reigning world champion came alive when it mattered most. On his final flying lap, Verstappen produced a mighty 1m24.892s, pipping championship leader Oscar Piastri by the slimmest of margins and spoiling McLaren’s party.
It was a pole few saw coming, especially with Ferrari and Mercedes looking threatening earlier in the weekend. But Verstappen, as ever, showed that when the stakes are high, he’s always in the mix.
McLarens Close, But Not Quite There
Piastri will start on the front row but admitted a small error on his final lap cost him the chance to snatch back top spot. He’ll be disappointed, but still well-positioned for Sunday’s showdown.
Lando Norris, buoyed by massive support from the home crowd, looked like a real contender throughout the session but could only manage third after a less-than-perfect final sector.
Still, he’ll lead an all-British second row alongside Mercedes’ George Russell, who quietly impressed to secure fourth.
Hamilton Falters, Ferrari Fade
Hamilton, also enjoying roaring home support, looked like he might challenge for pole in the early stages of Q3. But a scrappy final sector left him down in fifth, just ahead of Charles Leclerc, whose early weekend pace didn't quite translate when it counted most.
Ferrari looked momentarily vulnerable in Q2, but smart tyre strategy and cool heads helped both drivers advance. However, they were ultimately outgunned by McLaren, Mercedes, and Verstappen in the top-10 shootout.
Rookies Kimi Antonelli and Oliver Bearman – a surprise visitor into Q3 – showed solid pace but will start further back after serving penalties. Antonelli’s carries over from his Austria clash with Verstappen, while Bearman was hit with another 10-place drop for a red-flag infringement in Saturday’s final pratice - his second such penalty of the season.
Their grid drops mean Fernando Alonso, who qualified ninth, will start seventh, sharing row four with Pierre Gasly, who delivered a quietly strong performance for Alpine.
Colapinto Crashes Out Amid Pressure
One of the more dramatic moments came in Q1 when Alpine rookie Franco Colapinto spun at the final corner and lightly tapped the wall.
While he initially got going again, the car soon stopped on track, prompting a red flag and a head-in-hands reaction from Alpine advisor Flavio Briatore. Not the ideal time for a mistake as questions swirl about Colapinto’s future at the team.
Joining him in the Q1 drop zone were Liam Lawson, who ran wide on his final lap, and Lance Stroll, sandwiched between Sauber pair Gabriel Bortoleto and Nico Hulkenberg in 17th.
With Verstappen on pole, the McLarens locked and loaded just behind, and Hamilton looking to fight back at home, Sunday’s race is shaping up to be a Silverstone classic.
The front four are split by fractions, and with changing weather potentially in the mix, all bets are off.
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