logo
Leclerc tops final red-flagged practice at Silverstone

Leclerc tops final red-flagged practice at Silverstone

Arab Newsa day ago
SILVERSTONE, UK: Charles Leclerc confirmed Ferrari's competitive renaissance by clocking the fastest lap ahead of championship leader Oscar Piastri of McLaren in Saturday's third and final practice at the British Grand Prix.
For the latest updates, follow us @ArabNewsSport
In an incident-filled and closely-contested session, punctuated by red flag interventions, the Monegasque driver was quickest in one minute and 25.498 seconds to outpace Piastri by 0.068 seconds.
Four-time champion Max Verstappen was third for Red Bull ahead of Lando Norris in the second McLaren, a revived Yuki Tsunoda in the second Red Bull and British rookie Ollie Bearman of Haas.
Leclerc was the third different driver to top the times in the three practice sessions following Ferrari team-mate Lewis Hamilton and Norris on Friday.
Alex Albon was seventh for Williams ahead of Mercedes' George Russell and the RB rookies Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson.
Seven-time champion Hamilton, who had been among the front-runners for Ferrari, was on a fast flying lap in the closing minutes when he was forced to abort his lap because of the first of two late red flags.
Both incidents were caused by incidents that required the track to be cleared. In the second Brazilian Gabriel Bortoleto crashed, but was unhurt.
The start of the session was delayed by 10 minutes to clear some minor debris before the two Alpines and both Aston Martins initiated the fray.
On a grey and cool day, with rain threatening the drivers jostled for top spot as Leclerc reported rain at Copse corner.
The track was clearly ramping up and delivering faster lap times as Leclerc demonstrated again by outpacing Piastri by half a tenth before a late red flag, to clear a broken winglet from the circuit at Stowe, paused the action.
Hamilton had been on a flying lap at the time and was given no chance to run again as the final four minutes began, after a restart, before another red flag ended the action.
This time it came when Sauber's Bortoleto lost control at Becketts where he snapped on entry and broke his car's suspension and front wing.
In a separate incident Ollie Bearman lost his Haas and hit the barriers as he headed back to the pits.
In a tight session, the top three were separated by less than one-tenth of a second and the top 14 by less than one-tenth.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Hülkenberg's long wait is over after first podium finish in his 239th F1 race
Hülkenberg's long wait is over after first podium finish in his 239th F1 race

Al Arabiya

timean hour ago

  • Al Arabiya

Hülkenberg's long wait is over after first podium finish in his 239th F1 race

Fifteen years, 239 races, one trophy. Nico Hülkenberg finally made it onto the podium with third place at the British Grand Prix on Sunday. That ended the longest wait in career starts for a driver before claiming a top-three finish in Formula 1 history. To do this, he had to hold off none other than Lewis Hamilton, so often unbeatable in Britain. 'I was thinking that he's going to give it all here in front of his home crowd,' Hülkenberg said. 'And I was like: 'Sorry, guys, but it's also my day.'' Starting from 19th on the grid, a perfectly judged drive in the rain and smart strategy saw the 37-year-old German outperform his uncompetitive Sauber car as other contenders spun off the road. He showed off his attacking skill by overtaking Lance Stroll for third and then had the toughest test of all – holding off seven-time champion Hamilton, who'd won his home race nine times. 'It's pretty surreal and, to be honest, not sure how it all happened. Obviously, crazy conditions, mixed conditions. It was a survival fight for a lot of the race,' Hülkenberg said. He was mobbed by his Sauber team after climbing out of the car and before climbing up to the podium to receive a long-awaited trophy. Hülkenberg made his F1 debut in 2010. In 2011 and for three years, from 2020 through 2022, he was without a full-time race drive at all, except for a few emergency call-ups when other drivers caught COVID-19. Down the years, he's raced for many teams, but never a true contender – Williams, Force India, Sauber, Force India again, Renault, Racing Point, Aston Martin, Haas, and Sauber again. His previous best race result was a fourth place in 2013 and another in 2016. It was the first podium finish for Sauber since Kamui Kobayashi was third at the Japanese Grand Prix in 2012 and the first podium finish for any German driver in F1 since Sebastian Vettel in 2021. Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda now has the most races of any current driver without a podium at 99, but Hülkenberg still holds the all-time record for most races without a win.

Euro 2025: Norway's Graham Hansen Overcomes Finland With Late Goal in 2-1 Win
Euro 2025: Norway's Graham Hansen Overcomes Finland With Late Goal in 2-1 Win

Al Arabiya

timean hour ago

  • Al Arabiya

Euro 2025: Norway's Graham Hansen Overcomes Finland With Late Goal in 2-1 Win

Norway achieved another 2–1 victory at the Women's European Championship on Sunday, this time against an impressive Finland team, despite being outplayed for a significant portion of the match. Caroline Graham Hansen provided the skill that Norway often lacked, deciding the game in the 84th minute with a cross that turned into a goal, deflecting off the post and into the Finland net. Norway's Barcelona forward had forced an own-goal from Finland defender Eva Nyström in the third minute after excellent play on the right wing. Oona Sevenius deservedly leveled for Finland in the 32nd minute, showing fine balance to direct a rising left-foot shot from 16 yards. Finland's tidy play had impressed more than Norway's more star-studded lineup for much of the game, just as Switzerland did in the first half of Norway's opening 2–1 win four days earlier. Norway now sits atop Group A with six points. Host Switzerland plays Iceland later Sunday in a clash of two teams which lost their opening match at Euro 2025. Norway will go to the quarterfinals as Group A winner if Iceland does not beat Switzerland.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store