Max Verstappen Esteban Ocon Charles Leclerc Carlos Sainz Lando Norris Britain formula 1 Motorsport Max Verstappen Esteban Ocon Charles Leclerc Carlos Sainz Lando Norris Britain

British Grand Prix: 2 winners and 2 losers from Silverstone

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The British Grand Prix was won by Carlos Sainz on Sunday afternoon as the Spaniard sealed his first-ever Formula 1 victory at Silverstone.

Sainz started the race from pole and, at the second attempt following the restart, he held onto the lead and would go onto win – though he was given a little bit of a helping hand by Max Verstappen hitting trouble when taking P1 and by Ferrari’s decision not to pit Charles Leclerc under the Safety Car.

Even so, Sainz deserves a bit of fortune and a win has been a long time coming, so he kicks off our winners and losers piece this time around… Winner – Carlos Sainz Sainz produced a stellar lap time in the wet on Saturday in qualifying to seal his first-ever pole in the sport, and then completed the job by taking his maiden Grand Prix victory at Silverstone.

A popular driver in the paddock and with fans, few would begrudge him victory here. Yes, Max Verstappen had taken the lead off of him after a mistake and may well have taken victory had he not suffered damage to his car running over debris, but that is all academic now and when Sainz saw the chance to take victory from Charles Leclerc on worn tyres in the closing stages, he pounced. Loser – Charles Leclerc On the flipside, Charles Leclerc was naturally a little frustrated to say the very least post-race.

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SILVERSTONE, UK: Carlos Sainz claimed his first Formula One victory in his 150th race on Sunday when he drove his Ferrari to a spectacular triumph in a furious and crash-hit British Grand Prix. The 27-year-old Spaniard, starting from his maiden pole position, resisted a charging Sergio Perez of Red Bull, who recovered from 17th, to take the flag by 3.7 seconds in front of a record 142,000 crowd at the high-speed Silverstone circuit. Home hero seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes took third, to claim a record 13th podium finish on home soil, an unprecedented total by any driver at a single event.

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