Hungarian Grand Prix live updates: Oscar Piastri's damning prediction
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc stunned the paddock when he claimed pole position ahead of McLaren duo Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris.
The stunning moment capped off a qualifying session for the ages with only 0.543 seconds separating the top 10, making it the closest qualifying finish in F1 history.
It was Leclerc's first pole at the Hungaroring, his first this year and first since last year's Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku as well as the 27th of his career.
With a track not known for overtaking, the start will be even more crucial as will team strategy throughout the 70-lap race.
Don't miss a second of the action when the lights go out from 11pm (AEST).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
5 hours ago
- News.com.au
‘Tensions growing' inside McLaren garage as Oscar Piastri drama addressed
McLaren team boss Zak Brown has admitted there will be growing tensions inside the team garage as Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris battle for the world championship. The McLaren chief executive has given rare insight into how the team is doing everything in its power to avoid a falling-out between the two drivers - amid the inevitable confrontation of their battle for the Formula 1 drivers' championship. Fox Sports, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every practice, qualifying session and race in the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship™ LIVE in 4K. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. The enthralling head-to-head battle took another twist on Sunday night when Norris benefited from a superior team strategy to win the Hungarian Grand Prix. Norris held off Piastri in dramatic fashion in the final few laps with the Aussie locking up his breaks after a manoeuvre that almost wiped his teammate out. Piastri's lead in the drivers' championship has been cut to just nine points with 10 races remaining this year. Experienced motorsport boss Brown admits he expects his drivers to 'swap paint again at some point', but believes it won't get ugly between his two drivers, who are both signed to long-term contracts. He said he has directly addressed the situation with Norris, 25, and Piastri, 24. 'So there's competitiveness brewing,' he told the BBC. 'We're not feeling any tension. As the championship builds I'm sure that tension will grow, but like Montreal — I'm glad we got it out of the way, because it was a non-event, Lando owned it, Oscar understood, it was a mistake.' Norris famously took Piastri out at the Canadian Grand Prix. The British driver took full responsibility. The team's ability to put the fire out after the Montreal race is what gives Brown confidence the team can stop the scrap getting out of hand before a champion is crowned in December. 'If something bubbles up, we'll deal with it,' he said. 'And how we operate, which is [in] an open, transparent, deal with it right away [manner]. 'It seems like from the outside looking in, when you've seen battles between other teammates, you've kind of seen it brewing, and you kind of go like 'have they jumped on that, or are they just kind of letting it build up?' 'We'll take the air out of the balloon right away, if we feel like anything's bubbling up, but we've not seen any of it.' Bitter Piastri pill we should have seen coming VIEW GALLERY Brown added: 'I don't think they'll properly fall out because of the communication, trust and respect we all have, and they have for each other. 'We're very fortunate to have the two personalities that we have. We love the challenge. I'm looking forward to them racing each other.' He said he and team principal Andrea Stella will soon be having another conversation with the drivers to address the stone cold truth that one of them will likely win a world championship and the other will miss out. 'They both can smell the championship, and only one can win it, so I'm sure it'll be hard on the one that doesn't win the championship, assuming the other one does,' he told the BBC. 'We'll just sit down and actually have a conversation, and go: 'Right, one of you is going to win, and it's going to be the best day of your life, one of you is going to lose, and you're going to be [devastated], how do you want us to handle that, how do you want us to act? 'We'll be very considerate about that approach, because that's the way we think, it comes back to thinking about our people.' Piastri's frosty radio exchanges with the team at the Hungaroring track show things are already headed toward drama. With Ferrari's Charles Leclerc leading the race and McLaren uncertain of its pit stop strategy, the Melburnian's response to race engineer Tom Stallard said it all. 'I don't really care about Leclerc.' Piastri said. 'I just want the best chance to try and beat Lando. That's the most important thing at the moment.' After taking the win, Norris also made some eye-opening comments, saying he isn't planning on getting aggressive with his teammate as the title fight heats up. 'I don't enjoy that. In 200 years, no one is going to care. We'll all be dead. am trying to have a good time. I still care about it, and that's why I get upset sometimes and I get disappointed and I get angry at myself,' Norris said. 'And I think that shows just how much I care about winning and losing. But that doesn't mean I need to take it out on Oscar.' McLaren now lead Ferrari by 299 points in the constructors' championship with the grid not set to return to action until the Dutch Grand Prix on August 31.

The Australian
15 hours ago
- The Australian
Rugby Australia relaxes 'redundant' limit on foreign-based players
Rugby Australia has signalled that more overseas-based players will be allowed to represent the Wallabies, shifting away from a strict policy that has heavily favoured domestic players. The so-called "Giteau Law" -- named after former fly-half Matt Giteau -- has for years put restrictions on overseas-based players being selected for the Wallabies. But with Test stars such as lock Will Skelton, flanker Tom Hooper and prop Taniela Tupou all joining an exodus to Europe, Rugby Australia has indicated the Giteau Law has been dropped. That gives head coach Joe Schmidt a free selection hand when he names his squad for the Rugby Championship this week. "Joe's got no impediment to select whoever he wants," Rugby Australia head of high performance Peter Horne said. "The Giteau Law, it's kind of redundant right," Horne added in comments reported by Schmidt is due to name his squad Thursday for the Rugby Championship which begins this month. Scrapping the rule would also benefit incoming head coach Les Kiss, who takes over the Wallabies next year tasked with preparing for the Rugby World Cup on home soil in 2027. The Giteau Law was adopted by the Wallabies in 2015, allowing overseas-based players to represent the side only if they had played 60 Tests for Australia and seven seasons of Super Rugby. It enabled players such as Matt Giteau, who was then starring for Toulon, to be picked for the 2015 Rugby World Cup. Before then, Australia had a blanket ban on overseas-based players representing the Wallabies. sft/dh

News.com.au
a day ago
- News.com.au
Formula 1 supremo hits Lewis Hamilton with blunt reality check
Lewis Hamilton has been told to quit F1 and demand his $AUD370 million Ferrari contract is paid in full. The seven-time world champion caused shockwaves at the Hungarian Grand Prix last weekend after admitting he was 'absolutely useless'. Fox Sports, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every practice, qualifying session and race in the 2025 FIA Formula One World Championship™ LIVE in 4K. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Hamilton, 40, finished 12th in qualifying and called for Ferrari to 'change driver' after the result. He was equally as despondent after finishing 12th in the Grand Prix, and now Formula 1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone has told him to quit the sport. 'Lewis is very talented, was and probably still is,' Ecclestone told the Daily Mail. 'But like a lot of leading sports personalities when they reach the top, there is only one way to go, and it's not a good direction. It's only down. 'They get tired. Lewis is tired. He's been doing what he is doing forever. He needs a rest from it for good, a total reset to do something completely different. 'He may not think it but he will soon get used to doing other stuff away from motor racing in retirement. I think he should have done it a while ago. 'The guy is not a cheat. But he would be cheating himself if he goes on. He should stop now. 'If I were looking after him I would negotiate with Ferrari immediately and say, 'If you have someone to replace Lewis, he'll step aside.'' Hamilton has not got off to the best start in his three-year contract with Ferrari, which is worth $A123m a season. His teammate Charles Leclerc qualified on pole in Hungary and has out qualified Hamilton ten times, with the Brit quicker on just two occasions. He has also failed to podium in 14 attempts with his only success this season coming in China when he won the sprint race. Ecclestone shared concern for Hamilton and advised him to retire to avoid the risk of racing. 'I wouldn't want anything bad to happen to Lewis,' he added. 'He's not fighting for a world championship and is at a stage of his life when it wouldn't be worth him spending two years laid up in bed with a broken back or anything else nasty. 'He doesn't need to take the risk any longer. He's won seven world titles and that is quite enough.' The Formula 1 supremo said if Hamilton were to step aside, Ferrari should target Racing Bulls rookie Isack Hadjar or Kick Sauber rookie Gabriel Bortoleto to drive alongside Leclerc.