Lewis Hamilton took a record-breaking ninth British Grand Prix in a chaotic wet-dry race at Silverstone. The seven-time champion fended off a fast-finishing Max Verstappen in the final laps to claim victory by 1.5s, his first in the 945 days since the 2021 Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

“Thank you so much, guys,” an emotional Hamilton said over team radio as he was handed a British flag by a trackside marshal. “It means a lot to me this one.”

“This one means a lot to us all,” his engineer, Peter Bonnington, said.

“I love you, Bono,” Hamilton replied.

Hamilton’s route to an unprecedented ninth victory at one grand prix was tortuous in challenging mixed conditions, beginning with a launch that had him slot behind pole-getting teammate George Russell off the line.

The Mercedes drivers led the first phase of the race, with Max Verstappen fighting for the podium behind, slicing down Lando Norris’s inside at Village and relieving him of third place around the outside of Loop.

The top five, with Oscar Piastri bringing up the rear, remained tightly grouped in the opening part of the race defined by constant radio chatter about impending rain, which was forecast to lash the circuit in two bands, the second harder than the first.

The first lot of drizzle arrived on lap 15, and the suddenly massively variable grip levels shuffled the order at the front. The McLaren drivers, typically fastest at the end of a stint, came alive on the slippery surface. Norris took back third from Verstappen with DRS assistance into to Stowe on lap 15, and Piastri followed him through into fourth on the following tour.