Three Britons can win at home Formula One race but Oscar Piastri has his own script

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Formula One F1 - Austrian Grand Prix - Red Bull Ring, Spielberg, Austria - June 29, 2025 McLaren's Oscar Piastri celebrates with a trophy on the podium after finishing second in the Austrian Grand Prix REUTERS/Gintare Karpaviciute

McLaren's Oscar Piastri celebrates with his trophy on the podium after finishing second in the Austrian Grand Prix.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Three British winners have their sights on a home grand prix victory this weekend, but Oscar Piastri could rain on that particular parade as Formula One returns to where the championship started 75 years ago.

Australia’s championship leader Piastri can still count on plenty of support as a McLaren driver but much of the crowd, and certainly the 10,000 in Silverstone’s sold-out “Landostand”, will be cheering more for his British teammate Lando Norris.

Norris won Piastri’s home Grand Prix in Melbourne in March – an added incentive for the Australian if he is seeking revenge at Silverstone – and the pair are turning the season into a two-horse race as the campaign reaches its halfway point.

Piastri is chasing a sixth win in 12 races while Norris arrives from Austria on a high after dominating every practice session he took part in, taking pole by a huge margin and holding off his teammate to win.

The two drivers are 15 points apart, with Red Bull’s reigning four-time world champion Max Verstappen third overall but now a hefty 61 points off the lead after a first retirement of the season at his team’s home track at Spielberg.

“My favourite weekend of the year,” said Norris, who has yet to take back-to-back wins.

“It’s already a special circuit but to also have my family, friends, home fans and so many of the team there supporting us takes it to another level. I’ll try to make sure I give the fans a wave as I drive past.”

Piastri, meanwhile, recalled he had fans chanting his name at Silverstone not so long ago. “I am not sure if I will get that again, but they have always been very accepting of me. I race for a British team. I am expecting that there will be more Lando fans than there are for me, but that’s fair enough,” he said.

If Norris’ support is strong, then Ferrari’s seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton will always be the big sentimental favourite. The last two races have been won by British drivers – George Russell for Mercedes in Canada and then Norris last weekend. Could Hamilton make it three and send the crowd crazy?

The 40-year-old won with Mercedes in 2024 for a record ninth time and taking that tally into double figures, in what will be his first home appearance in the Italian team’s red colours, would be something else.

Ferrari are the only top-four team without a win this season, other than Hamilton’s Shanghai sprint success, and the veteran has yet to stand on the podium for his new employers. He has also gone 13 races without a top-three finish, a career low.

On the plus side, Ferrari were second-fastest in Austria, with Charles Leclerc third and Hamilton fourth, and a new floor seems to be doing what it was supposed to do. Hamilton usually manages to produce something special at Silverstone, which is set to welcome a record half-million fans over the four days.

Last year, he arrived at Silverstone after 52 races without a win and seized one of the most emotional triumphs of his extraordinary career.

Russell, who started on pole alongside teammate Hamilton last year, also has a strong chance – especially if temperatures drop – and will be keen to rebound after a difficult weekend in Austria. Italian rookie teammate Kimi Antonelli, meanwhile, carries over a three-place grid drop from Austria.

Britain’s fourth driver, rookie Oliver Bearman of Haas, will be aiming for points, while the same goes for British-born Thai driver Alex Albon at Williams.
REUTERS

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