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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Billy Munday

Hamilton earns maiden F1 Ferrari victory as Antonelli fails to finish in Barcelona – as it happened

Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton celebrates after winning.
Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton celebrates after winning. Photograph: Lluís Gené/AFP/Getty Images

Race report

Luke McLaughlin was at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya to witness that little piece of F1 history – here’s his write-up

Thanks for reading this lap-by-lap report. On to Austria next week …

Championship standings

Lewis Hamilton and George Russell close the gap at the top of the drivers’ standings to Kimi Antonelli:

The top 10
1 Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) 156pts
2 Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 115
3 George Russell (Mercedes) 106
4 Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 75
5 Lando Norris (McLaren) 73
6 Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 68
7 Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 55
8 Pierre Gasly (Alpine) 41
9 Isack Hadjar (Red Bull) 34
10 Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) 26

Constructors championship top 4
1 Mercedes 262pts
2 Ferrari 190
3 McLaren 141
4 Red Bull 89

Final race standings

OK, after all that, let’s have a look at where everybody ended up. Only 14 cars finished the race.

1 Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari)
2 George Russell (Mercedes)
3 Lando Norris (McLaren)
4 Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
5 Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
6 Isack Hadjar (Red Bull)
7 Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
8 Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
9 Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)
10 Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls)
11 Gabriel Bortoleto (Audi)
12 Carlos Sainz (Williams)
13 Esteban Ocon (Haas)
14 Sergio Pérez (Cadillac)

Ret Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes), Nico Hülkenberg (Audi), Charles Leclerc (Ferrari), Ollie Bearman (Haas), Alex Albon (Williams), Valtteri Bottas (Cadillac), Lance Stroll (Aston Martin), Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)

Fernando Alonso’s last home F1 race at Barcelona, we expect, ends in disappointment.

Updated

Hamilton bounds on to the podium in sheer delight and God Save the King is played, three British flags raised to represent a historic top three. The Ferrari crew launch into the Italian national anthem, with Hamilton nodding along and wiping the odd tear from his eyes.

Updated

“The season just got interesting,” writes Edwin. “I am so happy to see Hamilton driving like this. I hope this car is the real deal.”

George Russell and Lando Norris suddenly look a bit like fanboys standing next to Hamilton. “Nice to see him back on top,” Norris says as both congratulate the 41-year-old. “Well done boys,” Norris says on the all-British podium.

“We are going to keep working, we’re going to keep trying to close that gap. It’s not over,” Hamilton says on his title chances. He closes the gap to Antonelli at the top to 41pts after the Italian’s late retirement.

Hamilton continues with his grazie’s as he speaks to former teammate Nico Rosberg: “I’m with the best fanbase a sportsperson could ever ask for.”

Asked where this win ranks in his 106 career grand prix victories …

They’re all special in their own way but this one is something else. When I was young, I watched Ferrari have all their success on TV. I always wondered what it would feel like.

History-making milestones

Let’s clear up those statistics

  • Hamilton’s last race win: Belgium, July 2024

  • Ferrari’s last race win: Carlos Sainz, Mexico City, October 2024

  • Last all-British podium: Jackie Stewart, Graham Hill, John Surtees; United States, October 1968!

Hamilton launches himself into the red-suited Ferrari crew! They are swamped by a pack of photographers looking to capture this historic moment. Kimi Antonelli, the championship leader who had to retire in the final few laps, gives him a big hug.

Hamilton takes himself away to a quiet corner by the weighing scales and drops to his haunches, taking in the moment by himself. George Russell offers his congratulations.

“Grazie a tutti! Thank you so much for helping me achieve this dream,” says an emotional Lewis Hamilton over the Ferrari team radio. It’s a famous, famous victory – and a dream fulfilled.

4th to 10th: Verstappen, Piastri, Hadjar, Gasly, Colapinto, Lawson

Lewis Hamilton wins Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix!

Hamilton wins his first grand prix since Spa two years ago and, therefore, his first for Ferrari! Their 3-stop strategy worked a treat after a little luck with a virtual safety car.

George Russell and Lando Norris complete an all-British podium for the first time since 1968!

Updated

Lap 66/66: Novak Djokovic gets ready to wave the chequered flag as Hamilton prepares to steer his Ferrari home!

Lap 65/66: Hamilton’s lead is a gigantic 25sec. Antonelli watches on, helmet off, by the side of the track. He exits the scene on the back of a moped.

Lap 64/66: What a dramatic finish. Leclerc returns to the pits and is out of the rest of the race. Antonelli has jumped out of his car as the stewards wheel it behind the barriers. Still only a virtual safety car.

Lap 63/66: Leclerc loses his power steering and comes off too, dropping to 6th. Hamilton, Russell and Norris hold an all-British podium as it stands.

Antonelli comes to a stop!

Lap 62/66: Incredible! Antonelli had some damage to his front wing after overtaking Russell but stutters to a stop further along. His engine cuts and he trundles to the grass. The virtual safety car is out.

Antonelli moves past Russell into 2nd!

Lap 61/66: Antonelli looks ominous behind Russell and makes a move on the straight! The Italian sneaks past around turn one and into 2nd! That’ll sting for the man who started this afternoon on pole.

Lap 60/66: Hajdar pits but retains his 8th place ahead of Gasly. Antonelli might have one more go at Russell for 2nd.

Lap 59/66: “I’m happy where I am,” Hamilton tells Ferrari. He doesn’t need to be told what to do from here. It’s the 105 race wins or something – he knows what he’s doing.

Lap 58/66: Hamilton’s lead is 13.5sec. Antonelli (3rd) is still a second back from Russell.

Lap 57/66: Bortoleto comes past Sainz into 15th. The Spaniard was the last Ferrari driver to win a grand prix – in Mexico City in October 2024.

Lap 56/66: Ten laps to go. It’s as you were with the top five:

1 L Hamilton (Ferrari)
2 G Russell (Mercedes) +12.5sec
3 K Antonelli (Mercedes) +1.1sec
4 L Norris (McLaren) +1.9sec
5 M Verstappen (Red Bull) +17.4sec

Lap 55/66: Hamilton is cruising. He leads Russel by 11sec and is on course for a first grand prix victory since Spa in July 2024.

Lap 54/66: McLaren tell Norris they expect Antonelli to get at least a 5sec penalty for breaching the track limits. The reigning world champion is 1.3sec behind the current championship leader.

Lap 53/66: “Pick up the pace, George,” Mercedes tell Russell as Antonelli gains more ground on his teammate. Russell might have to yield the position if he can’t.

Lap 52/66: “You are doing a good job,” is the rather understated message from Ferrari’s team radio to Hamilton. Fred Vasseur is getting quite excited in the pit lane.

Lap 51/66: Elsewhere, it’s Norris tucked in behind Antonelli. Verstappen is almost 20sec back in 5th, followed by Leclerc and Piastri. Hadjar, Gasly and Colapinto make up the rest of the points places.

Lap 50/66: An imperious Hamilton stretches his lead to 8sec. Antonelli is now able to close the gap on Russell to just over 1sec.

Lap 49/66: Russell is keeping Antonelli at arm’s length, the gap is 1.5-2sec. Hamilton extends his lead in front further to 7sec.

Lap 48/66: Still a fair way to go. Hamilton is going faster than anyone in the field, even Verstappen on his medium tyres. The gap to Russell is over 6sec now.

Lap 47/66: Alonso has joined Hülkenberg, Bottas and Stroll back inside.

Lap 46/66: Questions remain over whether Hamilton slowed down enough during the virtual safety car.

Lap 45/66: Hamilton extends his lead to Russell by half a second.

Lap 44/66: Russell must now keep pace with Hamilton’s flying Ferrari. A yellow flag infringement for Hamilton has been noted by race control … 4sec is the gap to Russell in 2nd.

Perfect pit stop for Hamilton!

Lap 43/66: Hamilton is still out in front after his third pit stop. He’s on course for his first grand prix victory since 2024 and his first for Ferrari!

Updated

Lap 42/66: Ferrari take their chance to bring Hamilton in for a 3rd stop. It’s all going to plan for them, it seems. Right on cue, the virtual safety car ends.

Virtual safety car – Alonso's race is over

Lap 41/66: Virtual safety car! Alonso comes off on to the grass and what is probably his final F1 race at Barcelona is over. Verstappen dips into the pits and comes out in front of a Haas, producing some angry fist shaking from their crew.

Updated

Lap 40/66: Russell sneaks past Leclerc into 2nd after the Ferrari driver had made life a bit difficult. Leclerc comes in to pit.

Lap 39/66: “It’s the critical moment. We have our chance,” Ferrari tell Hamilton over the radio. He will do another 7 laps on these tyres before coming in for a third time. Could their strategy pay off?

Lap 38/66: Antonelli returns to the track just ahead of 5th-place Norris, with Russell ahead in 3rd. Everyone’s on hard tyres now but Hamilton out in front. Leclerc holds 2nd.

Lap 37/66: Hamilton has got the bit between his teeth. He’s already pitted twice and is chipping away at Antonelli’s lead from second. The Italian pits, a lap after Russell.

Lap 36/66: Mercedes call Russell in first for fresh tyres, leaving Antonelli out.

Lap 35/66: Russell and Antonelli continue to do things amicably out in front.

Halfway point

Lap 34/66: The top 10 after the halfway point

1 G Russell (Mercedes)
2 K Antonelli (Mercedes)
3 L Norris (McLaren)
4 L Hamilton (Ferrari)
5 C Leclerc (Ferrari)
6 O Piastri (McLaren)
7 M Verstappen (Red Bull)
8 I Hadjar (Red Bull)
9 L Lawson (Racing Bulls)
10 P Gasly (Alpine)

Lap 33/66: Russell defends Antonelli’s first attack on turn one! The Italian hangs back to prepare himself for another assault. “Let’s not take any risks,” he is told on the Mercedes radio.

Lap 32/66: Antonelli can have a go at Russell now with Sainz out the way in front of them. Leclerc lets a flying Hamilton pass him into 4th.

Lap 31/66: Antonelli has closed the gap to leader Russell to less than just over half a second.

Updated

Lap 30/66: Antonelli is on his last warning for track limits. Verstappen heads into the pits too and comes back out in 7th.

Lap 29/66: Hamilton takes Piastri on the outside to move into 6th, both cars avoiding a loitering Perez in the process.

Lap 28/66: Hamilton slots into 7th on his return to the track, a second or two behind Piastri. There is a very sizable gap back to Hajdar in 8th.

Lap 27/66: Ferrari go for a 3-stop strategy as Hamilton dips into the pits, locking up a bit. He’ll swap to medium tyres. Let’s see how everyone else reacts.

Lap 26/66: Bortoleto heads past Ocon into 14th. Antonelli is almost within striking distance of Hamilton in 2nd.

Lap 25/66: Gasly joins the fight for 9th. Hülkenberg gets a bit sweary on the Audi radio as Lawson holds his ground.

Lap 24/66: Hülkenberg has a go at Lawson for 9th and the Racing Bulls driver defends well.

Lap 23/66: “Leclerc is still very much in our race behind,” Red Bull tell Verstappen, with around 3.5sec the gap which is closing all the time.

Lap 22/66: At least a couple of seconds separate the top 7 and nobody is really under any pressure at the moment. Antonelli is gradually gaining on Hamilton in 2nd with the gap around 3.5sec.

Lap 21/66: Ferrari tell Hamilton “we are on plan C”, which doesn’t sound ideal. He’s still around 2sec behind Russell and has the fastest lap so far. Hajdar goes past Lindblad into 8th.

Lap 20/66: Gasly moves past Colapinto into 12th on Alpine team orders. Bearman goes past Alonso, who is now bringing up the rear.

Lap 19/66: Bearman comes in. Lindblad, Hadjar and Lawson hold the final three points spots. The top 7 are 15sec clear of the rest.

Updated

I was out on the grid and in the pit lane before the race – getting close to the cars on the baking tarmac was uniquely memorable – as was brushing past Novak Djokovic in the scrum around George Russell’s and Lewis Hamilton’s cars at the front of the grid.

Russell has been very quick all weekend and comfortably held off the challenge of Hamilton into turn one. Now it’s a question of tyre management, tyre strategy and the other minor detail of driving the car around 14 turns of the 4.657km circuit. Kimi Antonelli will lead the drivers’ standings no matter what this evening but it would be a major statement from Russell if he can bring it home.

Updated

Lap 18/66: Hadjar deals with Bearman with a minimum of fuss to move into 9th. Russell is, of course, back in the lead. Hamilton is just short of 2sec back.

Lap 17/66: This time Leclerc follows orders and pits, coming back out with a healthy gap on 7th-place Piastri. Both Williams are under investigation for a start-line procedure.

Lap 16/66: Leclerc opts to stay out for another lap but Russell is shaving time off his lead. Hajdar comes in and sneaks ahead of 12th-place Hülkenberg after returning to the track.

Updated

Lap 15/66: “You’ve exposed me to Kimi now,” says Russell but his nerves will be calmed by the sight of Antonelli heading for the pits now too. Leclerc leads the way and, behind him, it’s the same five that led the grid to start with – in the same order.

Lap 14/66: Norris comes in as well. Verstappen has got some mediums on and Hamilton opts for hards. Russell is getting a fit fidgety on the team radio at coming in so early.

Lap 13/66: Russell responds to Ferrari’s strategy by coming into the pits himself to swap his mediums for hards. Antonelli leads the way for the moment.

Lap 12/66: Alonso gets off the mark with a pass on Bottas at the back of the field. That’ll be popular.

Lap 11/66: “I’m wobbling on the straight. It’s quite impressive,” says Verstappen. He and Hamilton both come into the pits.

Updated

Lap 10/66: Hadjar eventually gets past Lindblad into 10th. Leclerc is gaining on Verstappen and is now within half a second.

Lap 9/66: Lindblad holds on to the last points place for the time being against Hadjar. Norris complains that he’s “sliding everywhere” on the McLaren radio – and he’s not alone.

Lap 8/66: Hajdar sets his sights on Lindblad in 10th next.

Lap 7/66: There’s a 3sec gap between Russell and Hamilton. Hadjar goes past a sliding Colapinto into 11th. Leclerc and Piastri battle for sixth and it’s the Ferrari driver who goes past on the outside and holds it.

Lap 6/66: Hülkenberg is under investigation for his overtake on Lindblad and possibly leaving the track to gain an advantage. Stroll’s afternoon appears over as he comes into the pits. Hadjar moves past Gasly into 12th.

Lap 5/66: Verstappen’s soft tyres haven’t propelled him forward either, still in fifth and he’s not exactly making ground up on Norris in fourth.

Lap 4/66: An early attack from Hamilton on his soft tyres is yet to materialise as Russell extends his lead bit by bit.

Lap 3/66: Hadjar starts to move back up the field, moving past Sainz with ease. Leclerc was a big mover too, up to 7th from his starting spot of 10th. It’s as you were with the top five.

Lap 2/66: Lindblad had moved as high as 9th on that first lap before Hülkenberg takes the place back. Hadjar has tumbled almost 10 places after a nightmare start.

Lights out!

Russell holds off the challenge from Hamilton on turn one! Antonelli also stays ahead of Norris.

Updated

The drivers head out for their formation lap. It’s a scorching day in Catalonia. Interestingly, Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen are both starting on soft tyres. That’s brave!

George Russell does a grid interview from his scooter: “In these conditions it’s never going to be nice and comfortable. Lewis is on form and Kimi … nothing seems to stop him at the moment. I need to try and make amends.”

Lando Norris’s feet are on the ground for his interview: “We’re here to race. We want to try and win, so I’m going to go for that. But at the same time we’re against some fast cars, so we’ll play it as we should.

The drivers line up for the Spanish national anthem, with a Spain flag and the Catalan senyera unfurled on track. Carlos Sainz is the other home favourite involved today, back in 16th with Williams.

The umbrellas come down, the boiler suits come off. It’s almost time for the formation lap.

The trackside DJ is playing One More Time by Daft Punk, no doubt not a coincidence on what is expected to be Fernando Alonso’s 23rd and final F1 race at Barcelona.

The 44-year-old has won here on two occasions (with Renault in 2006 and Ferrari in 2013), with another five podiums to his name. Just coaxing his Aston Martin home today would be enough, you imagine, but that won’t bother the thousands waving Spanish flags in the stands, including his own grandstand.

I’m not sure about the DJ’s back-up dancers, clad from head to toe in material with a Park Güell-themed stone pattern. Very mysterious.

Updated

“Hi William,” writes a very formal Tomas Barbosa. “What do you think the tyre strategies will be today? I heard rumours of a 3 stop?”

I will bow to the expertise of Pirelli’s head of motorsport, Dario Marrafuschi:

We expect at least a two-stop strategy – at least two stops. In theory, we expect that the best strategy is medium-hard-hard, also because teams have saved the hard tyres and we think they probably wanted to have those tyres as an option for the race.

The common sense lets us think that the two stops with medium-hard-hard could be an option with a first stop between 15 and 21 and the second between 38 and 44.

For someone like Max Verstappen, starting 5th on the grid, a three-stop strategy might be a little bit quicker – but then again you run the risk of overheating those soft tyres when overtaking towards the end of the race. Track temperatures reached around 50C for qualifying yesterday!

‘The worst car and the worst engine’

Fernando Alonso says this will probably be his last F1 race in front of his home fans in Barcelona. The Aston Martin driver starts from the pits today, being outqualified by teammate Lance Stroll for the first time in 42 races.

The Spanish veteran was, er, not happy yesterday:

We knew we have the worst car and the worst engine and we’ve been very clear in every race so far that we have to work.

We repeat the same thing and it’s exhausting. We’re last, we know it, and we have no problem admitting it.

We have the worst engine, very poor energy deployment, gearbox problems and aerodynamic problems. We’re waiting for the second half of the year, and I hope we can improve a bit when the new car arrives.

Updated

A reminder of how qualifying went down yesterday …

Russell was in high spirits:

Really happy to be back in my groove. It’s been a difficult few races, obviously bad luck, and some poor performances in there, but I went back to an approach I knew works for me.

Car setup, mentality … Going back to basics. These cars are so complicated … it’s challenging to get on top of things, especially when I’ve got a guy like this [Antonelli] next to me performing so well … I’m just glad to feel myself again, feel at one with the car again.

Starting grid

Here’s how we line up in Catalonia today:

1 George Russell (Mercedes)
2 Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari)

3 Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes)
4 Lando Norris (McLaren)

5 Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
6 Isack Hadjar (Red Bull)

7 Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
8 Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)

9 Nico Hülkenberg (Audi)
10 Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)

11 Arvid Lindblad (Racing Bulls)
12 Gabriel Bortoleto (Audi)

13 Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
14 Pierre Gasly (Alpine)

15 Ollie Bearman (Haas)
16 Carlos Sainz (Williams)

17 Esteban Ocon (Haas)
18 Alex Albon (Williams)

19 Sergio Pérez (Cadillac)
20 Valtteri Bottas (Cadillac)

21 Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)

Pit-lane Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)

Preamble

Hello, welcome, benvinguts. Is this the day George Russell reignites his title challenge? The Mercedes driver said he felt “like my old self again” after beating Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton to pole at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya yesterday and today is looking to win his first grand prix since the opener in Australia.

Kimi Antonelli, flying the sporting flag for Italy this summer in the absence of the Azzurri at the World Cup, starts third on the grid and leads the drivers’ standings by a whopping 66 points after five race wins on the spin, capped with victory at Monaco last weekend.

It’s lights out in Catalonia at 2pm (BST), so let’s all inject a bit of variety into our lives before another onslaught of football. Whether you’re a bleary-eyed Scot just waking up or an Australian toasting the Socceroos before bed, join me for lap-by-lap coverage and get in touch via email as the action unfolds. Anem

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