POWER RANKINGS: Who impressed our judges at the British Grand Prix?
Find out who topped the Power Rankings table after the British Grand Prix weekend.

Charles Leclerc returned to winning ways in spectacular style at the British Grand Prix, the Monegasque sealing his ninth career victory and first at Silverstone. But who else impressed our Power Rankings judges over the weekend? Check out the latest scores and overall leaderboard below...
How it works
- Our five-judge panel assess each driver after every Grand Prix and score them out of 10 according to their performance across the weekend – taking machinery out of the equation
- Our experts’ scores are then averaged out to produce a race score – with those scores then tallied up across the season on our overall Power Rankings Leaderboard (at the bottom of the page)

After a string of difficult weekends, Leclerc could not have asked for a greater turnaround at Silverstone. While he was only fifth in the Sprint, the Ferrari driver grabbed P2 on the grid in Qualifying and from there bolted into the lead at the first corner during Sunday’s race, going on to secure his first win since 2024.

Racing Bulls’ impressive run continued at the British Grand Prix, with another notable performance from Liam Lawson. The New Zealander claimed the final point on offer in Saturday’s Sprint – resisting pressure from a chasing Isack Hadjar – and survived first-lap contact with Oscar Piastri on Sunday to cross the line in P6.

It was a weekend of highs and lows for Kimi Antonelli, who scored a commanding first Sprint win before seizing another pole position in Qualifying for the Grand Prix. After losing the lead to Leclerc at the start of Sunday’s race, the Mercedes driver was catching later on – but his challenge came undone due to an issue on his car along with a five-second time penalty for exceeding track limits.

Arvid Lindblad helped Racing Bulls to earn their fourth consecutive double points finish in a row, taking home P7 in a result that saw him become the youngest-ever British driver to score in a British Grand Prix at 18 years and 331 days.

After just missing out on points with three P11 finishes prior to Silverstone, Gabriel Bortoleto finally got some reward for his efforts at the British Grand Prix. The Brazilian again started from 11th place on Sunday, but managed to climb up to P8 to snatch some valuable points for Audi.

A record 10th British Grand Prix victory was not to be for Lewis Hamilton, but the seven-time World Champion still gave his home fans plenty to cheer about, including when he earned pole for the Sprint on Friday. After taking P2 in the 100km dash, the Ferrari man battled with the likes of Max Verstappen in the Grand Prix and eventually looked on course for another second place, but a pit stop under the late Safety Car dropped him down to P3.

On a weekend where McLaren were off the pace of their rivals, Lando Norris put in a solid performance and capitalised on any opportunity to gain positions, the Briton coming away with third in the Sprint as well as a P4 finish in Sunday’s race.

Despite some struggles with the Red Bull RB22, Verstappen managed to put himself in contention for a podium at the British Grand Prix, having enjoyed battles with the likes of Hamilton and George Russell along the way. The charge came to a halt however when a rear wing issue caused him to spin off track and out of the race just a few laps from the end, though he was still classified in P20.

On the other side of the Red Bull garage, Isack Hadjar made up for the disappointment of just missing out on points in the Sprint to end Sunday’s race in P5, a result that the Frenchman was satisfied with despite feeling that more was possible.

Russell did not appear to have the pace of team mate Antonelli at Silverstone, and his afternoon looked even more challenging on Sunday when he suffered a slow puncture and had to make a second pit stop. However, the Briton benefitted from Verstappen’s crash and Ferrari’s decision to pit Hamilton as he managed to climb up to P2, marking his first home podium.

As three drivers are tied for ninth place, this week’s rankings feature an extra addition. With Racing Bulls rapidly closing in on them in the fight for P5 of the Teams’ Championship, Alpine collected an important double points finish at the British Grand Prix which was led by Franco Colapinto in P9 – a particularly impressive result given that the Argentinian had started the race back in P19.
Missing out
Just missing out on a place in the top rankings this week are Pierre Gasly and Sergio Perez, the former having helped Alpine to secure that aforementioned points haul with a P10 finish, while the latter enjoyed a strong race for Cadillac to P14 as he equalled his best result of the season so far.
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