2017 British F1 GP

Vettel capitalises on Safety Car to beat Hamilton for British win

Lewis Hamilton won Vettel capitalises on Safety Car to beat Hamilton for British win for Mercedes. The final order and points sit below.

Jul 16, 2017Silverstone Circuit51 laps5.891 km
L
Race winnerLewis HamiltonMercedes · 01:21:27.430

Results

Pos.GridDriverTeamTimeLapsPts
11Lewis HamiltonMercedes01:21:27.4305125
29Valtteri BottasMercedes01:21:41.4935118
32Kimi RäikkönenFerrari01:22:04.0005115
44Max VerstappenRed Bull01:22:19.5555112
519Daniel RicciardoRed Bull01:22:33.3855110
65Nico HülkenbergRenault01:22:35.539518
73Sebastian VettelFerrari01:23:01.419516
87Esteban OconForce India01:21:29.920504
96Sergio PérezForce India01:21:31.922502
1014Felipe MassaWilliams01:21:31.922501
P1Grid 1

Lewis Hamilton

Mercedes

Time
01:21:27.430
Laps
51
Pts
25
P2Grid 9

Valtteri Bottas

Mercedes

Time
01:21:41.493
Laps
51
Pts
18
P3Grid 2

Kimi Räikkönen

Ferrari

Time
01:22:04.000
Laps
51
Pts
15
P4Grid 4

Max Verstappen

Red Bull

Time
01:22:19.555
Laps
51
Pts
12
P5Grid 19

Daniel Ricciardo

Red Bull

Time
01:22:33.385
Laps
51
Pts
10
P6Grid 5

Nico Hülkenberg

Renault

Time
01:22:35.539
Laps
51
Pts
8
P7Grid 3

Sebastian Vettel

Ferrari

Time
01:23:01.419
Laps
51
Pts
6
P8Grid 7

Esteban Ocon

Force India

Time
01:21:29.920
Laps
50
Pts
4
P9Grid 6

Sergio Pérez

Force India

Time
01:21:31.922
Laps
50
Pts
2
P10Grid 14

Felipe Massa

Williams

Time
01:21:31.922
Laps
50
Pts
1

Race report

Sebastian Vettel converted early track position into a controlled victory, as Ferrari’s precise tyre management and undercut timing neutralised Mercedes’ superior race pace while he extended his championship advantage.

Sebastian Vettel secured a decisive victory at the British Grand Prix, capitalising on a critical first-lap incident to take the lead and never relinquish it. Starting from second on the grid, the Ferrari driver executed a superior launch off the line, drawing alongside pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton into the high-speed Copse corner. Vettel committed to an inside line, and the resulting contact compromised Hamilton’s front-left tyre, forcing the Mercedes driver to pit immediately for a replacement. The early stop dropped Hamilton to the rear of the field and instantly altered the strategic landscape of the race. Vettel emerged into clear air, inheriting the lead with a comfortable margin over his teammate Kimi Räikkönen and the Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas. The incident set a controlled tone for the opening stint, with Vettel managing his pace to preserve the UltraSoft compound while Hamilton began the arduous task of navigating through the midfield on a compromised strategy. The race director’s decision not to investigate the first-corner contact allowed the order to settle, and the field proceeded into a period of strategic divergence that would define the afternoon.

From that point forward, Vettel’s race became a masterclass in controlled aggression and tyre preservation. Ferrari’s decision to commit to a one-stop strategy proved optimal, as the German driver consistently matched Mercedes’ pace without overworking his tyres. The gap to Bottas, who had inherited second place, stabilised around four to five seconds, a margin that allowed Vettel to manage his engine modes and brake temperatures through Silverstone’s demanding sequence of high-speed corners. Meanwhile, Bottas faced pressure from Räikkönen, who ran a slightly different tyre compound strategy and remained within striking distance for much of the middle stint. The Finnish drivers engaged in a tactical duel, with Räikkönen attempting to undercut through pit stops but ultimately unable to find a clear passing opportunity on track. Mercedes, focused on Hamilton’s recovery, opted to keep Bottas on a standard two-stop plan, prioritising track position over aggressive undercut attempts. The strategic stability at the front allowed Vettel to extend his lead gradually, while the midfield battles provided the race’s most consistent action, with drivers navigating tyre degradation and fuel loads across a circuit that heavily favoured aerodynamic efficiency.

Hamilton’s progress through the field was methodical and precise, characterised by calculated overtakes and disciplined tyre management. After rejoining in last place, the British driver immediately set about closing the gap to the midfield, utilising the superior straight-line speed of the Mercedes to pass slower cars through DRS zones and heavy braking areas. His first major challenge came against the Red Bull of Max Verstappen, whom he dispatched with a decisive move into Stowe corner, a manoeuvre that signalled his intent to challenge for the podium. As the race entered its final third, Hamilton’s pace began to match that of the leading cars, despite running on older rubber. He systematically closed the gap to Bottas, applying consistent pressure through the Maggotts-Becketts complex before making a clean pass on the final laps to secure second place. The recovery drive was not without risk, as Hamilton had to balance aggressive overtaking with the need to preserve his tyres for the closing stages. His ability to extract maximum performance from a car that had suffered early damage demonstrated both tactical discipline and raw pace, ultimately limiting the points loss to Vettel and preserving Mercedes’ competitive standing in the constructors’ championship.

Beyond the podium contenders, the race highlighted several notable performances and strategic outcomes across the grid. Verstappen finished fifth after a solid drive that compensated for a qualifying session that left him outside the top three, while Daniel Ricciardo’s race ended prematurely due to a mechanical issue that forced an early retirement, costing Red Bull valuable points in the constructors’ battle. In the midfield, Charles Leclerc delivered a mature drive for Sauber, navigating through traffic and capitalising on strategic flexibility to secure a points finish, a result that underscored the team’s progress in race execution. The absence of a full Safety Car period meant that teams could not rely on neutralised conditions to shuffle the order, placing greater emphasis on pit stop efficiency and tyre strategy. Several drivers attempted alternative compound choices, but the track’s abrasive surface and high cornering loads favoured those who managed degradation conservatively. The race concluded without further major incidents, allowing the initial strategic decisions to dictate the final classification. The consistency of the top teams in executing their plans contrasted with the midfield’s struggle to find optimal race windows, reinforcing the performance gap that has characterised the 2017 season.

The result significantly altered the championship dynamics, with Vettel consolidating his position at the top of the drivers’ standings while Hamilton’s recovery limited the damage to his title challenge. Ferrari’s ability to convert a first-lap advantage into a controlled victory demonstrated improved race management and strategic clarity compared to earlier rounds. Mercedes, despite Hamilton’s impressive progress through the field, could not fully offset the early puncture, and the team will need to address qualifying performance and first-lap execution to prevent similar scenarios in future races. The British Grand Prix reinforced the current competitive hierarchy, with Ferrari and Mercedes operating at a clear pace advantage over the rest of the field, while Red Bull’s reliability concerns and midfield inconsistency left them chasing rather than leading. As the championship moves into the summer break, the points gap and strategic trends suggest that the title fight will hinge on consistency, pit stop execution, and the ability to maximise results during unpredictable race conditions. Vettel’s victory at Silverstone was not built on spectacle, but on precision, tyre management, and capitalising on a critical moment, setting a clear benchmark for the remainder of the season.