
Lando Norris lands first ever British Grand Prix win and F1 ace ends unwanted record as rain causes chaos at Silverstone
The Bristol-born 25-year-old has gone from asking for autographs at Silverstone as a kid to winning the home race with over 10,000 fans in his very own Landostand.
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It was a dream day out for the McLaren driver, who started in third and was helped by his teammate Oscar Piastri being slapped with a 10-second time penalty for a bonkers safety car incident.
Stewards felt the Aussie driver had slowed down unnecessarily under the safety car as Max Verstappen momentarily overtook him before spinning off track.
Norris roared 'wooo, we did it' as he crossed the line, with him now just eight points behind Piastri in the standings.
Piastri came in second and Nico Hulkenberg secured third-place and a first-ever podium in 239 starts.
Martin Brundle's star-studded grid-walk featuring Tom Holland, Hannah Waddingham, Idris Elba and many more showed just how many eyes are on Silverstone every year.
There was chaos before the race had even started as several drivers including George Russell and Charles Leclerc pitted for slick tyres as the rest of the top 10 stayed out.
Oscar Piastri got away well and had a sniff on the inside of the Dutchman, but the Red Bull stayed firm on his line and held the lead.
Max Verstappen got off like a shot-gun from then, snapping well beyond the two McLarens behind him.
Lewis Hamilton, the king of Silverstone in the rain, was all over the back of Lando Norris in the wet final sector.
The Ferrari even pulled alongside the McLaren but youngbuck Norris just held off the old maestro.
The virtual safety car was called into action as Esteban Ocon clattered into Liam Lawson, ending the race for the Kiwi driver and damage to the Haas man's car.
ANOTHER VSC was called into action, this time to allow Gabriel Bortoleto's car to be cleared as he had spun off track causing a piece to fling off, before desperately trying to make it back to the pint lane.
Leclerc, Russell and Antonelli were slogging it out on slick tyres designed for a dry track, well behind those on the inters.
There was thrilling racing at the front of the pack though, with Piastri snapping at Verstappen's heels before easily dispatching him on lap 8 for the lead.
The heavens opened and Max Verstappen, whose tyres were knackered, ran wide and allowed Norris to pass him.
The top three then all stopped for fresh intermediate tyres but Norris suffered a dreadful stop and lost his place back to Verstappen.
The rain lashed down and Hamilton stated the obvious on his team radio, saying: 'It's definitely wet tyres right now.'
His team-mate Charles Leclerc had a huge droplet of water in his visor causing hi to go completely off track and cross country but he recovered to carry on
On lap 14, it continued peeing it down and with the conditions getting treacherous so the safety car was sent out.
That was terrible news for Piastri, who had opened up a 13-second gap out front.
It was out for five laps before Piasri got away again strongly, holding his lead with Norris tucked behind Verstappen in third.
Russell attacked Hamilton for eighth but the seven-time world champ got the place back and one more as his old teammate was caught behind Ocon.
There was more chaos and another safety car as Isack Hadjar slammed into the wall and was luckily left unhurt.
The Racing Bulls youngster had crashed into the back of Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli.
It was a bonkers restart as Verstappen momentarily pulled in front of Piastri who slowed right down.
Amid all the confusion Verstappen spun dramatically before recovering and dropping all the way back into 11th.
The Dutchman was left fuming, and said on his team radio: "Whoa, Mate! Jesus, just suddenly again slows down!"
The stewards were then investigating Piastri for a Safety Car infringement and he was later slapped with the ten-second time penalty.
Norris just needed to stay within touching distance from his teammate and the Silverstone crown would be his.
Antonelli was forced to retire for Merc, with the damage from his earlier collision proving too great.
It was game on for Hamilton, who licked his lips at the prospect of first Ferrari podium, nipping past Pierre Gasly on lap 29.
He then left Lance Stroll for dust and soared into fourth - he just needed to deal with Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg.
Russell's gamble to stop early and put on hard tyres did not work for him as he spun off the sodden track, bumping across the grass and re-emerging onto the track in 13th.
On lap 42, Hamilton's tyres were shot and he stopped for a set of softs before coming back out in fourth.
He dropped behind Leclerc but both Ferraris went off track before the Monaco-born driver pitted and Hamilton shuffled ahead again.
Piastri bizarrely said McLaren should swap his position with Norris if they think that he was unfairly punished for the safety car mishap.
You can imagine Norris' reaction to that and the Aussie driver's request was shut down by his team, not that he knew anything about it as he trumped his teammate at home.
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Lando Norris did not let a cut nose dampen his celebrations after winning his first British Grand might end up with a second scar on his nose, to match one caused by a glass cut last year, after a photographer fell off the pit-wall barriers and knocked the McLaren driver's winner's trophy into his face as he was trying to celebrate his Silverstone victory with the a little while later he was up on the fan stage, two strips of medical tape on his injury, with his team-mate Oscar Piastri and McLaren chief executive officer Zak did three 'shoeys', the celebration where a winner drinks champagne out of his shoe brought to Formula 1 from Australian sport by his former team-mate Daniel Ricciardo, and Piastri and Brown followed was the least he - and they - deserved after a demanding, incident-packed, intensely difficult race in constantly changing conditions between wet and dry, which Piastri would have won but for a controversial penalty for what was adjudged a safety-car will be stewing over that one for a while, but while Norris inherited the win, there was little to choose between them all weekend. And the Briton was pressing Piastri hard at the time the Australian pitted for tyres for the final time and served the had driven exceptional races, in a different class from the rest of the field, in a car that looked as impressive as it has done all season."Eventful race," Norris, 25, said. "It means a huge amount. Being on top in your home race is very, very special." Norris first started watching F1, he said, when Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso were driving silver McLarens at Silverstone in 2007. He recalled that, as well as Hamilton's brilliant victory in the wet in now, with Hamilton and Alonso still in the field, Norris had taken his own win in a silver - well, partially, anyway, at least for this weekend - McLaren."Lewis won, and I got that picture of him going around and seeing all the fans standing up, and that picture of what an atmosphere in Silverstone is like, and dreamed of that for many, many years," Norris said."Today I got to live that feeling myself and see it through my own eyes. So pretty amazing, pretty special. A lot of people, from my friends and family, my brother, my sisters, my mom, my dad, my dad's parents."Every person that I could have here is here. So, yeah, more special than ever, 100%. And tough race to do it in as well." The win reduced his deficit to Piastri in the championship to eight points, and it was the first time he has ever won two races in a row. But he was wary of talking about the meaning of it beyond itself."You can always class it as momentum or whatever," he said. "I don't know. It's whatever you want to believe in the end of the day. I think it's still just one race at a time."I give my credit to Oscar at the same time because he drove an extremely good race."It's two wins, but they've not come easy by any means. We've had good fights, but they're pretty strenuous, exhausting weekends because you're fighting for hundredths and thousandths, and you're fighting for perfection every session and I'm against some pretty good drivers. So, it takes a lot out of you, especially when you have a race like today."I've had two good weekends and, of course, I would love to continue that momentum, but it still requires more consistency. Two weekends doesn't mean anything otherwise. And I just need to keep it up and keep working hard." Piastri penalty 'very harsh' The events of the day were demanding on everyone, but the way the race turned was, according to McLaren team principal Andrea Stella, "very harsh" on was penalised for braking hard in the middle of the straight as he prepared for the restart after the final one of three safety car periods. This, in the stewards' view, "resulted in (Max Verstappen's Red Bull) having to take evasive action to avoid a collision".Piastri was furious. But, wary of the stance the FIA is taking at the moment on drivers speaking out and not wanting to risk a further penalty or a fine, he kept his remarks well under control afterwards."Apparently you can't brake behind the safety car any more," he said. "I mean, I did it for five laps before that. Again, I'm not going say too much till I get myself in trouble."Piastri was bemused by the penalty, because all drivers know the leader's actions dictate things for those behind in this sort of situation, even if there are rules to issue seemed to be that he had driven in this way after the safety car had switched its lights off, the point at which the rules say he must "proceed at a pace which involved no erratic braking nor any other manoeuvre which is likely to endanger other drivers".Piastri said: "I hit the brakes. At the same time I did that, the lights on the safety car went out, which was also extremely late. And then obviously, I didn't accelerate because I can control the pace from there."I didn't do anything differently to my first restart. I didn't go any slower. I can only comment on what I felt I did, which I felt was well within the rules, and I did it once already in that race. So, yeah. I don't really get it. I'll go have a look back." The contrast with the outcome of a very similar incident in Canada two races ago between Mercedes' George Russell and Verstappen was Montreal, after the stewards took no action, Red Bull lodged a protest, but it was dismissed out of said: "Going back to Canada, I think he had to evade more there than he did today. So, yeah, I'm a bit confused to say the least."There was also the feeling within McLaren that Verstappen may have 'gamed' the system by exaggerating how much it affected him."I don't think he had to evade me," Piastri said. "I think he managed the first time."Team principal Andrea Stella said: "We'll have to see also if other competitors kind of made the situation look worse than what it is."Because we know that as part of the race car, some competitors definitely there's also the ability to make others look like they are causing severe infringement when they are not."Verstappen said: "The thing is that it happened to me now a few times, this kind of scenario. I just find it strange that suddenly now Oscar is the first one to receive 10 seconds first."Was that because because there was no difference to what Russell did in Canada?"Well, to the stewards, yes," Verstappen end result was that Norris has now moved himself on to four wins for the season, one short of Piastri."I felt like I drove a really strong race," Piastri said. "Ultimately, when you don't get the result you think you deserve, it hurts, especially when it's not in your control."I will use the frustration to make sure I win some more races later."Both have two weekends off to reset and refresh before battle is rejoined at the Belgian Grand Prix, the start of the second half of the season.