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Ferrari’s victory drought in Formula 1 ended in emphatic fashion at the British Grand Prix, with Charles Leclerc taking the win just three weeks after Lewis Hamilton’s first triumph in the SF-26. The Maranello squad’s success was partly down to their car’s genuine pace and a cascade of misfortune elsewhere on the grid. Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli, the championship leader, looked set to claim his first Grand Prix victory only for his charge to be derailed by a front-left wheel shield failure during the closing laps. The teenage Italian’s points lead is now under serious threat through no fault of his own—this follows a similar mechanical issue in Barcelona that cost him dearly. Antonelli had dominated the weekend up to that point. He secured pole position in Saturday’s sprint race, becoming the first Italian to qualify on the front row at Silverstone since Alberto Ascari in 1953.

However, his racecraft betrayed him once again. Despite a strong launch off the grid, his Mercedes lost ground in the second phase of the opening lap as both Ferraris sliced past him into Abbey, the first corner. Ferrari’s hopes of a 1-2 finish were dashed when Hamilton was handed a five-second penalty for a false start. The defining moment of the race arrived on Lap 41 of 52. Antonelli began struggling to turn into corners, radioing the pit wall to report that his car ‘couldn’t turn in anymore.’ The issue stemmed from a wheel shield on his front-left tire, which folded inward and jammed the suspension arms. Mercedes suspected the part failed after Antonelli clipped the exit curb of Turn 9.

He pitted immediately, but the damage was terminal. Undeterred, the Italian fought back to salvage points, ultimately finishing 15th. Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff admitted post-race to Sky Sports F1, ‘It’s on us. A car should not break—and I don’t think the ride was worse than any laps before. He couldn’t turn it anymore.’ Before the failure, Antonelli was rapidly closing the gap to Leclerc, exploiting a significant tire offset. A Mercedes win at the centennial British Grand Prix wasn’t guaranteed.

The race took another dramatic twist on Lap 46 when Max Verstappen crashed out after suffering a rear wing failure—an identical issue to the one that ended his qualifying session in Austria just a week prior. The safety car was deployed, but the race was never restarted despite race control initially signaling it would be withdrawn before the final lap. According to ESPN, the FIA later attributed the confusion to a software glitch in the message system. The race concluded under caution, with Leclerc declared the winner and Ferrari securing their 250th Formula 1 victory. George Russell’s second-place finish trimmed Antonelli’s championship lead to just 25 points. The weekend also etched another historic milestone into the record books, with Leclerc’s win marking Ferrari’s landmark 250th triumph in the sport.
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Source: Jalopnik (Auto Culture & Tuning) (jalopnik.com)