He's back! Max Verstappen snatches pole ahead of 2025 British Grand Prix
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Max Verstappen snatches pole ahead of 2025 British Grand Prix | Photo Credit: Formula1.com

F1 He's back! Max Verstappen snatches pole ahead of 2025 British Grand Prix

David Ben 22:00 - 05.07.2025

Verstappen has tied Sebastien Vettel's record of 44 pole positions in Formula 1.

Max Verstappen reminded the Formula 1 world exactly why he’s the reigning world champion, seizing pole position for the 2025 British Grand Prix at Silverstone with a breathtaking lap time of 1:24.892.

Red Bulls Dutch maestro edged out McLaren’s elite duo by mere hundredths of a second, to tie F1 legend Sebastien Vettel's record of 44 pole positions in Formula 1.

Verstappen’s performance on Saturday afternoon was a stark reminder that when it matters most, he still delivers. 

Max Verstappen secured pole position ahead of Sunday's British GP | Credit: X(@F1)
Max Verstappen secured pole position ahead of Sunday's British GP | Credit: X(@F1)

Despite persistent car‑handling issues, understeer concerns and swirling Mercedes speculation, the 27-year-old Dutchman rose to the moment .

McLaren's slip up proves pivotal for Verstappen in Qualifying

Red Bull's Max Verstappen (middle) snatched pole in Silverstone ahead of Oscar Piastri (L) and his McLaren teammate Lando Norris | Credit: Formula1.com

Oscar Piastri looked set to dominate Q3 until he “made a slight slide in the last corner”, losing precious hundredths and relegating himself to second.

 Just behind, Lando Norris, fuelled by the revamped “Landostand” home crowd, suffered a minor kerb contact and missed pole by 0.015 seconds.

Despite a stellar qualifying showing, British fans saw their hopes dashed as Mercedes’ George Russell and Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton claimed fourth and fifth, rounding out a formidable top five without a front‑row British driver.

“It was tricky” Verstappen admits

Max Verstappen
Max Verstappen secured pole position ahead of Sunday's British GP | Credit: X(@F1)

Red Bull’s decision to sacrifice grip for top‑speed was vindicated.

 After complaining of understeer throughout practice, Verstappen’s team switched to a low‑downforce setup better suited to Silverstone’s high‑speed corners.

“It was tricky with the wind… but that final lap was good enough,” Verstappen said as per ESPN, crediting both the car tweak and his own commitment.

Mercedes and Ferrari may boast superior corner grip, but Red Bull’s speed on the straights now provides Verstappen a priceless qualifying advantage.

With 13 races remaining, the title chase tightens. 

McLaren’s recent dominance may suggest race pace superiority, especially with tyre strategy, but Sunday’s race could well hinge on whether Verstappen can convert this pole into victory.