logo
What time is the F1 on today? When to watch on Channel 4

What time is the F1 on today? When to watch on Channel 4

Norris will be hoping to claim his fourth race win of the year and close the gap on McLaren team mate Oscar Piastri at the top of the driver's standings.
Russell will also be looking to finish on the podium during today's race and stay in contention for the driver's championship, while Hamilton is racing for his 10th victory at Silverstone.
Meanwhile, Bearman will start further back on the grid (18th) after being issued a 10-place penalty for a red flag infringement during P3 (Practice 3).
Starting grid for today's British Grand Prix
Red Bull's Max Verstappen claimed pole position at Silverstone during qualifying on Saturday (July 5), ahead of McLaren duo Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris.
George Russell qualified fourth for Mercedes, one place ahead of Lewis Hamilton (fifth).
Fellow British driver Ollie Bearman (Haas) will line up from 18th for his first home race after being served a 10-place grid penalty for crashing in the pit lane.
The full starting grid for today's British Grand Prix is:
Max Verstappen (Red Bull Racing) Oscar Piastri (McLaren) Lando Norris (McLaren) George Russell (Mercedes) Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) Pierre Gasly (Alpine) Carlos Sainz (Williams) Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull Racing) Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls) Alexander Albon (Williams) Esteban Ocon (Haas) Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) Gabriel Bortoleto (Kick Sauber) Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) Oliver Bearman (Haas) Nico Hulkenberg (Kick Sauber) Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
What time is the F1 on today?
Lights out in the 2025 British Grand Prix will be at 3pm on Sunday (July 6).
When to watch the Silverstone Grand Prix on Channel 4?
You can watch all the action from the British Grand Prix at Silverstone live on Channel 4 on Sunday.
RECOMMENDED READING:
The build up to the race will begin on Channel 4 at 1.30pm with commentary from the likes of Steve Jones and Lee McKenzie.
They will also be joined for the first time by ex-team principal Claire Williams.
The live race show begins on Channel 4 at 2.30pm, ahead of lights out at 3pm.
Following the race there is also an hour time slot from 5pm until 6pm for reaction, which will also be presented by Jones, McKenzie and the rest of the Channel 4 team.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Ben Sulayem says F1 could have V8 engines as soon as 2029
Ben Sulayem says F1 could have V8 engines as soon as 2029

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

Ben Sulayem says F1 could have V8 engines as soon as 2029

July 7 (Reuters) - Formula One could go back to using noisy V8 engines with fully sustainable fuel by 2029 at the earliest, according to FIA president Mohammed Ben Sulayem. The sport is entering a new engine era next season but the head of the governing body suggested last February that a return to the naturally-aspirated V8s or V10s was being considered after that. The V8 engines were last used in 2013, before the current 1.6-litre V6 units. "The current engine is so complicated, you have no idea, and it is costly," Ben Sulayem told reporters at the weekend's British Grand Prix. "R&D is reaching 200 million (dollars), and the engine is costing approximately 1.8 to 2.1, so if we go with a straight V8, let's see. "Many of the manufacturers produce V8s in their cars, so commercially it's correct. How much is it? You drop it. The target is more than 50% in everything." Ben Sulayem said the V8 engine would also have significant weight advantages and the sound would be welcomed by both nostalgic fans and the new generation. "To us, the V8 is happening. With the teams now, I'm very optimistic, happy about it. FOM (Formula One Management) are supportive, the teams are realising it is the right way," he said. "We need to do it soon... you need three years, so hopefully by 2029 we have something there, but the fuel is also very expensive, and we have to be very careful with that. Transmissions are very expensive." Ben Sulayem also spoke about the possibility of a Chinese team filling the final 12th slot, something he has mentioned before, and said he still felt the sport needed more cars rather than more races. "The time will come when we feel it is right to open an expression of interest," he said of filling the 12th slot. "We are not here to upset other teams. It won't be just go and do it for the sake of doing it. It has to be worth it for us. The team has to add value to sustaining the business of Formula One." General Motors' Cadillac brand is due to become the 11th team next season, a slot won after initial resistance from the other teams and Liberty Media-owned Formula One.

Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie
Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie

Rhyl Journal

timean hour ago

  • Rhyl Journal

Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie

The quarter-finals begin on Tuesday, with women's world number one Aryna Sabalenka opening play on Centre Court before Britain's last remaining singles hope Cameron Norrie tackles defending men's champion Carlos Alcaraz. Here, the PA news agency looks back at Monday's action and previews day nine of the Championships. Novak Djokovic recovered from his worst first set at Wimbledon to battle past Alex De Minaur in four sets and reach a 16th quarter-final in SW19. The seven-time champion made 16 unforced errors, including four double faults, and dropped serve three times as he lost the first set 6-1. Bu the Serbian remains on a semi-final collision course with Jannik Sinner, who appeared to be heading for an early exit before Grigor Dimitrov suffered a heartbreaking injury. The 34-year-old Bulgarian was two sets up and playing some inspired tennis when, at 2-2 in the third set, he clutched his chest after serving an ace and was forced to retire injured. World number one Sinner, who helped Dimitrov pack his rackets away and carried his bag off court, said: 'I don't take this as a win at all. This is just a very unfortunate moment to witness for all of us.' Mirra Andreeva was so focused on continually winning the next point that she did not realise she had won. The 18-year-old Russian swatted aside Emma Navarro in straight sets to reach her first Wimbledon quarter-final. But, in front of her hero Roger Federer, she was oblivious to the fact the umpire was announcing her as the winner. 'I kept telling myself I'm not the one who is up on the score, I am the one who is down,' she explained. 'That helped me to stay focused and in the end I completely forgot the score. 'I'm happy that I did it because I think I would have been three times more nervous on a match point.' Wimbledon bosses are 'deeply disappointed' by Sunday's electronic line calling failure but insist it will not happen again. All England Club chief executive Sally Bolton said: 'We did a full review of all of our systems and processes to check all of those kinds of things and to make sure that, both historically and moving forward, we have made the appropriate changes that we needed to make. So we're absolutely confident in the system.' Organisers later clarified the changes that have been made, with a spokesman saying: 'Following our review, we have removed the ability for Hawk-Eye operators to manually deactivate the ball tracking. This error cannot now be repeated.' The British number three is through to the quarter-finals for the first time since he reached the last four in 2022, which was the last time Spanish superstar Alcaraz lost a match in SW19. Since then Norrie has dropped from eight in the world to a low of 91 while Alcaraz, 22, has won two Wimbledons, two French Opens and a US Open. But Alcaraz is taking nothing for granted, insisting facing Norrie on home soil is 'almost a nightmare'. Centre Court (from 1.30pm)Aryna Sabalenka (1) v Laura SiegemundCameron Norrie v Carlos Alcaraz (2) Court One (from 1pm)Taylor Fritz (5) v Karen Khachanov (17)Amanda Anisimova (13) v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova Sunny with highs of 25C, according to the Met Office.

Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie
Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie

North Wales Chronicle

time2 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Wimbledon briefing: Monday recap, day nine order of play and ‘nightmare' Norrie

The quarter-finals begin on Tuesday, with women's world number one Aryna Sabalenka opening play on Centre Court before Britain's last remaining singles hope Cameron Norrie tackles defending men's champion Carlos Alcaraz. Here, the PA news agency looks back at Monday's action and previews day nine of the Championships. Novak Djokovic recovered from his worst first set at Wimbledon to battle past Alex De Minaur in four sets and reach a 16th quarter-final in SW19. The seven-time champion made 16 unforced errors, including four double faults, and dropped serve three times as he lost the first set 6-1. Bu the Serbian remains on a semi-final collision course with Jannik Sinner, who appeared to be heading for an early exit before Grigor Dimitrov suffered a heartbreaking injury. The 34-year-old Bulgarian was two sets up and playing some inspired tennis when, at 2-2 in the third set, he clutched his chest after serving an ace and was forced to retire injured. World number one Sinner, who helped Dimitrov pack his rackets away and carried his bag off court, said: 'I don't take this as a win at all. This is just a very unfortunate moment to witness for all of us.' Mirra Andreeva was so focused on continually winning the next point that she did not realise she had won. The 18-year-old Russian swatted aside Emma Navarro in straight sets to reach her first Wimbledon quarter-final. But, in front of her hero Roger Federer, she was oblivious to the fact the umpire was announcing her as the winner. 'I kept telling myself I'm not the one who is up on the score, I am the one who is down,' she explained. 'That helped me to stay focused and in the end I completely forgot the score. 'I'm happy that I did it because I think I would have been three times more nervous on a match point.' Wimbledon bosses are 'deeply disappointed' by Sunday's electronic line calling failure but insist it will not happen again. All England Club chief executive Sally Bolton said: 'We did a full review of all of our systems and processes to check all of those kinds of things and to make sure that, both historically and moving forward, we have made the appropriate changes that we needed to make. So we're absolutely confident in the system.' Organisers later clarified the changes that have been made, with a spokesman saying: 'Following our review, we have removed the ability for Hawk-Eye operators to manually deactivate the ball tracking. This error cannot now be repeated.' The British number three is through to the quarter-finals for the first time since he reached the last four in 2022, which was the last time Spanish superstar Alcaraz lost a match in SW19. Since then Norrie has dropped from eight in the world to a low of 91 while Alcaraz, 22, has won two Wimbledons, two French Opens and a US Open. But Alcaraz is taking nothing for granted, insisting facing Norrie on home soil is 'almost a nightmare'. Centre Court (from 1.30pm)Aryna Sabalenka (1) v Laura SiegemundCameron Norrie v Carlos Alcaraz (2) Court One (from 1pm)Taylor Fritz (5) v Karen Khachanov (17)Amanda Anisimova (13) v Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova Sunny with highs of 25C, according to the Met Office.

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