'Not satisfied': Russell brutally honest on Silverstone weekend'

© XPB 

George Russell further reduced his points gap to Kimi Antonelli in the Drivers’ standings following his runner-up spot in the British Grand Prix, but the Mercedes was anything but satisfied with his performance.

Russell spent most of Sunday chasing shadows, watching Antonelli control large stretches of the day – and the weekend for that matter – before chaos rewrote the order.

By the time the dust settled, the Briton had climbed from the depths of misfortune to an unlikely second place, splitting the Ferraris of race winner Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton.

But the result told only half the story. The mood in Russell’s voice told the rest.

The mirage of a Silverstone silver medal

So, how did Russell find himself on the second step of the podium, splitting race-winner Charles Leclerc and third-placed Lewis Hamilton? Pure chaos.

A catastrophic loose wheel rim cover ruined Antonelli’s race while he fought Leclerc for the win, a late-race crash sidelined Max Verstappen, and Hamilton was shuffled back during a chaotic Safety Car period. Russell essentially fell upward into a trophy.

"After the slow puncture and pitting, then going down to P7, if you told me I was going to come home in second, I would have been like, 'there's no way'," Russell confessed after the race.

"I wouldn't have been able to comprehend how those events would have unfolded.

“I think P3 was probably a deserved result behind Kimi and Charles. Obviously I was ahead of Lewis, I was fighting with Max. Max is a tough competitor, I think I would have passed him at one point. Then standing here P2."

Meanwhile, Antonelli’s nightmare afternoon was compounded by a five-second track limits penalty, leaving the championship leader classified in a lowly 16th position and entirely out of the points.

Brutal honesty in the title chase

Despite the mathematical lifeline the points swing provides, Russell is under no illusions.

He knows that relying on his teenage teammate's mechanical failures is not a viable strategy for a maiden world title, especially when the silver cars are suffering from unexplained performance deficits.

"It is important just to keep on fighting but the truth is, there's been a lot of things this weekend we don't really understand," Russell admitted, refusing to let the silverware mask the team's underlying issues.

"Straight line speed issues yesterday and on Friday, I think it was better today but the performance wasn't good enough and if I'm being brutally honest, I'm not going to fight for a championship if the performances continue like that."

Read also:

For a driver with championship ambitions, backing into a podium on home soil because the faster cars broke down brings zero professional satisfaction.

"I'm not coming away from this weekend satisfied,” Russell concluded.

“I'll take the result, but I would have been more satisfied leaving Canada when I broke down from the lead than I am today standing P2.

"Just because I probably deserved the win in Canada, and today I didn't deserve to stand where I stood."

Keep up to date with all the F1 news via X and Facebook