Lewis Hamilton’s home British Grand Prix ended with relief rather than a podium celebration hanging in the air.
After a weekend that promised so much following his Sprint Pole and strong early momentum, the Ferrari driver walked away from Silverstone with a third-place finish – and a post-race investigation that briefly threatened to take it all away.
In the end, the stewards decided not to strip Hamilton of his podium, instead issuing a reprimand for a yellow flag infringement. It was a narrow escape in a race where margins, mistakes, and misfortune all collided.
From Friday sparkle to Sunday scrutiny
For a brief moment at the start of the weekend, it looked like Hamilton might once again script something special at Silverstone, a circuit where he has built an almost mythic legacy with nine victories.
But the glow faded as the sessions unfolded, leaving a more complicated picture by Sunday evening.
The seven-time world champion still managed a Sprint P2, yet the raw pace that lit up Friday never truly returned on Sunday. A five-second penalty for a false start already compromised his race, and then came the stewards’ summons after the finish for an alleged separate yellow flag transgression.
Hamilton’s own assessment captured the mood bluntly.
"Congrats to Charles," he said. “He did a great job. All the magic I had on Friday just disappeared through the weekend.
"I'm probably going to get a penalty," he said of his investigation. "The FIA often have to react... I went through a yellow flag and didn't see it. So a jump start, yellow flag [infringement]. When it rains, it pours.
"I've just been to see them but don't have an answer, but I will probably get a penalty, I'm sure," he reckoned.
At that stage, the expectation inside the paddock was that another post-race blow might be coming.
Relief after a chaotic Silverstone finale
Hamilton ultimately crossed the line third after a tense, Safety Car-controlled finish that left several drivers uncertain about final positions. But the real tension came later, when officials reviewed the yellow flag incident involving the stranded Audi of Nico Hülkenberg.
Despite Hamilton’s admission that he had not seen the warning, the stewards opted for leniency, deciding a reprimand was sufficient rather than a time penalty that would have cost him the podium.
The relief was immediate – but so was the honesty about what went wrong during the race itself.
Hamilton also pointed to balance issues that plagued his Ferrari throughout the afternoon, admitting setup choices left him struggling with front-end grip.
The Briton reported understeer on his SF-26 and that it wouldn't turn.
"I was just lacking front end. We massively under-egged it on the front wing. That's my fault and the engineer's fault,” he explained.
Read also: Leclerc ‘incredibly happy’ to end win drought in style at SilverstoneWhile the podium keeps Hamilton firmly in the thick of the championship fight – he remains third in the standings, just seven points behind George Russell and 32 behind leader Kimi Antonelli – the Silverstone weekend felt like a missed opportunity to fully capitalise on early promise.
Instead, it ended in a familiar modern Formula 1 blend: strong result, bruised execution, and a quiet reminder that even at his home circuit, perfection still proves elusive.
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