
Antonelli Wins Silverstone Sprint and Pole, Widening F1 Title Grip
The Mercedes driver overtook Lewis Hamilton in the sprint and then beat the Ferraris to pole, extending his championship lead to 43 points.
Kimi Antonelli delivered a commanding Saturday at the British Grand Prix, first reeling in Lewis Hamilton’s pole-sitting Ferrari to win the sprint race, and then snatching pole position for Sunday’s main event with a lap of 1:28.111. The Italian teenager’s double success at Silverstone extended his world championship lead to 43 points over team-mate George Russell, with Hamilton a further four points adrift in third.
The sprint unfolded as a strategic duel shaped by the energy deployment demands of the 2026 hybrid regulations. Hamilton defended tenaciously through the opening seven laps, but Antonelli’s Mercedes – managed more efficiently on battery usage – narrowed the gap relentlessly. On lap eight, the decisive move came on the Hangar Straight: Antonelli drew alongside with a surge of electric power that made the pass appear effortless, pulling away to win by 2.7 seconds. Behind them, Lando Norris took third for McLaren after a frantic multi-car scrap, while Russell and Charles Leclerc recovered to fourth and fifth, respectively; Max Verstappen, who had started third, faded to sixth as Red Bull grappled with energy recovery.
Qualifying later that afternoon reinforced the sense of Mercedes dominance. Antonelli’s pole, his fifth of the season, was achieved with a 0.175-second margin over Leclerc’s Ferrari, with Hamilton a similar gap further back. Italian commentators noted the historical resonance: the first Italian pole at Silverstone in 73 years. British analysts, meanwhile, highlighted the home crowd’s disappointment as Hamilton – a nine-time winner here – conceded that his car lacked the pace to match the Mercedes over a single lap. Russell qualified fourth after striking the barriers in Q1 and mounting a recovery, leaving him facing an uphill fight from the second row.
The championship picture is increasingly ominous for Antonelli’s rivals. His 179 points after the sprint surpasses Russell’s 136 and Hamilton’s 132, while Mercedes’ constructor lead over Ferrari stands at 100 points. Hamilton acknowledged the gap: “He just came flying past… we have a bit of work to do.” Leclerc struck a more optimistic note, pointing to improved Ferrari performance, but both will need to harness tactical teamwork – and perhaps unsettle Antonelli at the start – to disrupt his momentum on race day. The 52-lap grand prix, before a record crowd, thus shapes as a stern examination of whether Mercedes’ supremacy can be challenged under sustained pressure.
| Atlantic / Anglosphere press | +0.80 | aligned |
|---|---|---|
| Latin American press | −0.20 | neutral |
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