Piastri pays penalty as Norris cuts world title lead
The McLaren driver came from second place on the grid to lead, then incurred a 10-second penalty before seeing teammate and chief rival Lando Norris go clear to take the chequered flag.
If Piastri, who had begged his team to allow him back in front, felt himself under a cloud long after the Silverstone rain had passed, he could not be blamed.
As the race to the world title passed the halfway mark, what was once a healthy advantage has shrunk dramatically.
Oscar boxes for a set of mediums and serves his penalty. Keep pushing, Oscar 👊#McLaren | #GoogleChrome | #BritishGP 🇬🇧 pic.twitter.com/eu17jfYyob
— McLaren (@McLarenF1) July 6, 2025
Norris has now won successive races, in Austria and now on his home tarmac in front of an ecstatic 160,000 crowd, to cut Piastri's championship lead from 15 points to just eight.
The key moment, and just how significant it could prove to be will become clearer as the season progresses, came when Piastri was informed he had been given a 10-second penalty by the stewards after he slammed on his brakes at 130mph ahead of a safety car restart.
Max Verstappen was forced to take evasive action amid the spray. Holding both hands up in disgust, Verstappen was straight on the radio: "Whoa, mate, f***, he just suddenly slows down again," he said.
Piastri switched to dries on lap 43, serving his punishment to allow Norris to pit on the following lap for his switch to slicks. The Briton emerged from the pits in front and went on to finish 6.8 seconds ahead of Piastri.
Piastri, who also survived a late spin scare, called on the Mclaren pit wall to swap positions with Norris and allow a straight fight to the flag. McLaren dismissed the plea leaving Norris to win the British race for the first time in his career.
"Oscar, we're not going to do any team orders. It's just five laps to the end," came the message from McLaren control.
"This one means a lot, It's beautiful," said Norris over the team radio as as he savoured victory.
In a race with plenty of crashes and spins, Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg was third from 19th on the grid for his first podium finish in his 239th race of an Formula One career that began in 2010.
Verstappen, the defending champion, started on pole but ended up fifth after spinning from second at a safety-car restart, briefly dropping to 10th.
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