Pierre Gasly said Alpine were “too slow” at the British Grand Prix after a slow pit stop dropped him behind team-mate Franco Colapinto on the way to 10th at Silverstone, as both drivers described Sunday as a race of “damage limitation”. Gasly said: "Good damage limitation for the team – three points – just a bit annoying to lose P9 to Franco because we had a slow stop on our side. I exited five seconds behind and then it stayed that way so I'm not very happy with that. It doesn't really change the world. We're just too slow here. We're slow and we need to definitely improve very quickly."

The FIA is considering ending F1’s current customer power unit model from 2031 by offering an off-the-shelf third-party engine supply to “B-teams”, as part of a push towards cheaper, simpler V8 regulations. The idea is framed as a way to reduce the leverage engine manufacturers can have over smaller teams’ voting and alliances. FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem told British newspapers at Silverstone, via Reuters: “If it is affordable, then we will have one engine for the rest of the B-teams, so nobody can leverage them and tell them to ‘vote this way’.”





Lewis Hamilton kept his British Grand Prix podium after the stewards decided not to issue a post-race time penalty for an alleged yellow-flag infringement when Nico Hulkenberg stopped with a gearbox failure. Hamilton avoided a time penalty because the stewards judged he had very limited warning of the yellow flag. He entered the sector before any yellow flag or light panel was shown, the steering wheel alert appeared only briefly near the end of the zone, and his attention was understandably on his mirrors after battling Verstappen. Although he did not slow enough to fully comply, the stewards decided the circumstances made a reprimand the appropriate penalty, allowing him to keep third place.

Charles Leclerc says he tried to block out the “negativity” around him and never doubted his ability after winning the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Leclerc said: "I don't know if it fuels me. Honestly, I think anybody that says that would lie. I think whenever there's so much negativity around, it's not something so nice to see. You try to cancel the noise as much as possible. My job was really to just try and cancel that noise, to not look at anything, to not listen to anything. And I know that I didn't become a bad driver from one day to the other."

Christian Horner says Red Bull’s power unit department has done “incredibly well” after an FIA ruling under the ADUO (Additional Development and Upgrade Opportunities) system judged the team’s 2026 combustion engine to be the strongest in the field. Horner said: "It was a collective effort, and I think it's underestimated what they've actually done. To have an engine ahead of Ferrari, ahead of Honda, ahead of Audi, ahead of even Mercedes - nobody thought that was possible."

Kimi Antonelli says Mercedes still have momentum after technical problems and a track-limits penalty left him 15th in the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Antonelli said: "I think we lost a lot of points. But the momentum is there because I think this weekend we showed the speed. We showed what we are capable of, so I think that the momentum is still there, and actually it makes the fire grow even more to go out there in Spa and try to do even better."

Lando Norris jokingly considered whether he could take the chequered flag via the pitlane under the late Safety Car at the British Grand Prix, asking McLaren on the radio: “You’re not allowed to box are you? You can’t win it in the pit lane?” Race engineer Will Joseph replied: “No, you’re not,” with Norris responding: “Shame.” Norris finished fourth and admitted McLaren’s pace was poor, saying the car “wasn’t very nice in any way whatsoever today” and “we have a lot to improve”.


Oscar Piastri said the British Grand Prix start felt like a “multi-class race” because drivers were using different power deployment modes under this year’s regulations, after opening-lap contact broke his front wing and left him recovering to 11th. Piastri said: "Lap one on these kind of circuits is just carnage, it's almost like a multi-class race start. I was trying to overtake Lindblad, and I seemed like I had more power than him. Lawson then passed me, who seemed like he had even more power than me, and it's just a mess. You're trying to judge your speed to the car in front of you, look at the car behind you."








Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies said Max Verstappen was right to be unhappy after spinning into the Stowe gravel trap four laps from the end of the British Grand Prix. Mekies said: "Look, he's right not to be happy. It is very unpleasant for drivers to be let down by the car in high-speed corners in two consecutive races, let it be for two different reasons. So he's right to be unhappy. I have no doubt that, as a team, we will put in place what is necessary for that not to happen again, even if we failed to do that today."

Lance Stroll collected three separate five-second penalties for track limits at the British Grand Prix, triggered after he had already reached the maximum of three warnings. The infringements came on laps 33, 35 and 42, with the stewards noting each time that he left the track “without a justifiable reason”, taking his total time penalties to 15 seconds. Stroll finished last of the 19 classified runners and said: “We had a lot of understeer during the race and a very unpredictable car, so it’s hard with track limits.”


Formula 1 is working towards decisions on reshaping the second half of its 2026 calendar after the Bahrain and Saudi Arabian Grands Prix were postponed earlier this year, with Stefano Domenicali saying any move to reinstate one of those races must be decided “before the summer break”. RacingNews365 reports talks over bringing back the Bahrain GP have progressed well and a deal is “very close”, after Bahrain’s Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa held discussions with Domenicali and FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem at Silverstone. Domenicali also said a call on Qatar and Abu Dhabi is needed “within the middle of September.”

Jos Verstappen has called Sky F1 pundit Martin Brundle an “idiot” after Brundle suggested “Team Verstappen” had “torpedoed” Red Bull’s management. Jos Verstappen said: "Another idiot who thinks he knows what it's like."

Kimi Antonelli says failing to score in the British Grand Prix has “made the fire grow even more” as he chases the 2026 Formula 1 world championship, after front-end damage and a five-second penalty dropped him out of the points. Antonelli said: "I think we lost a lot of points. But the momentum is there because I think this weekend we showed the speed. We showed what we are capable of, so I think that the momentum is still there, and actually it makes the fire grow even more to go out there in Spa and try to do even better."


George Russell said he has gone “beyond sort of anger and frustration” at his luck this season after a puncture during the British Grand Prix at Silverstone dropped him down the order before he still finished second. Russell said: "Then the puncture, I just couldn't believe my luck. I've gone beyond sort of anger and frustration now. If you told me I'm going to end up P2, I wouldn't have even comprehended how that was possible. So, I'm very grateful to have stood up on the podium."

Liam Lawson says Racing Bulls are getting closer to Formula 1’s top four teams after another double points finish at the British Grand Prix. Lawson said: "[I'm] very happy. Obviously, when a lot of the top guys don't score, we get a lot of bonus points in there which is great. But it is just a big credit to all the work that has been going in from the team to be now consistently in front of the midfield, which is really, really good. Friday we were not far away from the front guys, and a few races ago we were miles away. So, we have definitely really improved things... it would be nice to keep the momentum going."

Lewis Hamilton admitted “all the magic just disappeared” across the British Grand Prix weekend after he ended up third at Silverstone in a race won by his Ferrari team-mate Charles Leclerc. Hamilton said: "Congrats to Charles. He did a great job. All the magic that I had on Friday just disappeared through the weekend. I was just lacking front end. We massively under-egged it with the front wing and that's my fault and the engineering fault."




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