Charles Leclerc's Friday night revelation: the breakthrough behind British GP win

F1
Mark Hughes
July 6, 2026

Lewis Hamilton can't catch a break when it comes to late-race safety cars, but his Ferrari team-mate re-found his form in spectacular fashion to win the 2026 British Grand Prix. Mark Hughes on Charles Leclerc's overnight transformation

Charles Leclerc with winning trophy on the podium after the 2026 F1 British Grand Prix

Leclerc overcame his early-season struggles to finally unlock the pace of his Ferrari

Ferrari

Mark Hughes
July 6, 2026

The challenging timing of the last of several random incidents – another suspected rear wing problem for Max Verstappen’s Red Bull – brought out the safety car with less than five laps to go and what ensued is, of course, what should have happened in Abu Dhabi 2021 if the rules had been followed. This time they were and the race finished under the safety car – yet still it worked against Lewis Hamilton, in third on new tyres, waiting to ambush the sitting duck of an old-tyred George Russell. That battle would likely have allowed Charles Leclerc (also on new softs) to have won regardless. He’d been 20sec in front of Hamilton before the safety car.

But rewind seven laps from there and Leclerc was about to be devoured by a much newer-tyred Kimi Antonelli until the Merc suffered a major problem on the left-front and pitted.

Amid the classic Silverstone jeopardy on a sunny, gusty day, with home hero Hamilton in the thick of the action all weekend, amid the mechanical glitches, punctures and safety cars (virtual or actual) and restart confusion, the underlying pattern of performance was quite clear: Mercedes. And within Mercedes: Antonelli. Circumstances gifted Russell second on a day when he might have been a very distant fourth, beaten not only by his team-mate but by two slower Ferraris too.  He’s in a troubled place right now and leaves Silverstone admitting he hasn’t really got the answers.

But they will come. Just as they did for Leclerc here. His breakthrough after a difficult few races came on Friday night as they reviewed the data and spotted something. The electrically-enhanced torque delivery of the ’26 PUs, combined with his traditionally-preferred differential settings, was making the car snappy when he tried to drive it the way he always has – with plenty of overlap between the braking and cornering phases. Whether it was detuning the diff or the power delivery (or both), he wasn’t revealing. But in that gap, he finally found the answer to the challenge of driving this Lewis Hamilton-influenced car in his natural way.

Ferrari of Charles Leclerc in 2026 F1 British Grand Prix

A driver transformed: Leclerc was 0.327sec off Hamilton on in sprint qualifying on Friday, but 0.172sec ahead in Saturday’s GP qualifying

Grand Prix Photo

He knew he’d cracked it even before he took to the track for GP qualifying on Saturday and the feeling in the car just confirmed it. He duly went half-a-second quicker than in Sprint qualifying the day before – and 0.172sec faster than Hamilton’s sprint pole. It was good enough for the front row, albeit 0.175sec slower than Antonelli’s GP pole.  He was back. Like he always knew he would be eventually. You don’t go from maybe the fastest guy over a lap to being 0.2sec off your team-mate even if that team-mate is an on-form Hamilton. That was Leclerc’s central core of belief and like the elite athlete he is, that’s what he worked around. Russell can take inspiration from his former F3 team-mate’s breakthrough here. But he needs to make the equivalent discovery, hidden somewhere in the data. Regardless of the brilliance of Antonelli.

Hamilton rued the setting changes he’d made after losing the sprint from pole to a cool, composed Antonelli.  “I took way too much [front] wing out,” he said afterwards, “and had massive understeer in the first stint… Charles added more wing but with the diff setting I had I took it out. But too much. Diff changes in the second stint helped, but there was a big gap by then.”

The Ferraris had vaulted into 1-2 formation, Leclerc ahead, right from the start, with Antonelli reprising his sprint race in tracking Hamilton closely until the Ferrari’s tyres began to surrender earlier, then making an easy drive-by 500 horsepower offset pass. And yes, the overtaking was artificial and silly around here, the worst it’s been since Melbourne. Yes, of course there’s judgement involved in making the other guy use up his battery and then deploying yourself by with twice the power. But it’s not a driving contest.

Charles Leclerc leads at the start of the 2026 F1 British Grand Prix

Leclerc and Hamilton pass Antonelli at the start of the GP

Grand Prix Photo

Anyway, that was lap 11 and it put him 4.2sec behind leader Leclerc. Antonelli again calmly bided his time, looked after his tyres and caught the Ferrari bit-by-bit. He was within 1.5sec by lap 28 and this was the undercut threat Ferrari responded to by bringing Leclerc in. Antonelli, setting a pace on old medium tyres only a little slower than those of Leclerc on new hards, stayed out for ages so as to maximise his grip advantage over Leclerc in the second stint.

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It was only going to be about this pair. The understeering Hamilton had been badly dropped in that first stint and had fallen back into the clutches of Russell and Verstappen. Besides which, he’d been awarded a 5sec penalty for moving before the lights so was always going to be passed by that pair at the first stops (which duly transpired). Russell later punctured and pitted and was back behind Hamilton. So he stayed out at the Verstappen safety car as the Ferraris pitted to emerge back ahead but apparently doomed on his old mediums.

Ferrari though was WAY better than anyone – including itself – had been expecting off the back of its lacklustre, under-powered Austria performance. On such a power track surely it’d struggle here, went the thinking. But no. Hindsight tells us that the power shortfall in Austria was about the conservative way it had to be run because of the overheating of the electricals in the thin altitude – and the big opening out of the bodywork to disperse the excess heat hurting rear downforce enough to destroy the rear tyres.

Each race fills in the puzzle a little better but as Leclerc said, “On the Thursday meeting here, they were telling us we were going to be five- or six-tenths off. We were much better than expected.” So this was the first true reading of the upgraded PU and it was indeed a significant upgrade. Still not quite as strong as the Mercedes but with the greater momentum the car could take into some key corners, there was less deployment needed.

But it wasn’t Antonelli Mercedes fast. In the eight laps between Leclerc’s switch to new tyres and Antonelli coming in, the Merc lost only around 4sec. He rejoined on lap 38 (with 14 laps to go) 7sec behind and lapping at a completely different rate to the leader. But no sooner had Leclerc said, “It’s not looking good, is it?” than Antonelli was heading for the pits with a severe lack of front grip. A front wheel shield had come adrift and was directing the air upwards. Leclerc was off the hook and it played out the way it did.

Ferraris lead at the start of the 2026 F1 British Grand Prix

Ferrari’s early lead looked vulnerable to Antonelli’s pace

Steven Tee/Getty Images

Verstappen’s rear wing – with its bendy pylon (introduced in Austria) and huge Macarena gap – didn’t re-attach its airflow fast enough into Stowe (just as in Austria qualifying) and his trip to the gravel brought out the safety car with just over five laps to go. With a tractor and marshals busy at the scene it always seemed likely there weren’t going to be enough laps to go through the correct procedure (just as in Abu Dhabi ’21) but this time they followed the sporting regulations to the letter. It was unsatisfactory but correct, though a red flag and a restart would have been equally valid. Unsurprisingly, Hamilton was reluctant to be drawn on the parallels afterwards.

Two fast Ferraris, a troubled Red Bull and Verstappen (“Unbelievable, this car,” he said in a way which must make the Red Bull management nervous about the prospects of keeping him), a flying Antonelli in a slightly delicate Mercedes and a team-mate looking for answers. There’s a lot still to come in this story.