Motorsports
Verstappen Leads Silverstone Grid

Max Verstappen will start from pole position at the British Grand Prix, after a strong qualifying session at Silverstone on Saturday. He’ll be joined on the front row by McLaren’s Oscar Piastri.

Right behind them on the second row are two British drivers: Lando Norris of McLaren and George Russell of Mercedes. It’s a big opportunity for both to shine in front of the home crowd.

The third row is an all-Ferrari affair, with seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton starting fifth and Charles Leclerc beside him in sixth.

Veterans Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) and Pierre Gasly (Alpine) make up the fourth row, while Carlos Sainz, now driving for Williams, starts ninth next to Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli in tenth.

Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) and Isack Hadjar (RB) line up on row six. Alex Albon (Williams) and Esteban Ocon (Haas) follow on row seven.

New Zealand’s Liam Lawson (RB) and Brazil’s Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) form row eight, while Canada’s Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) is alongside Oliver Bearman (Haas) on row nine. Bearman received a 10-place grid penalty for a red flag incident.
Rounding out the grid are Nico Hulkenberg (Sauber) and Argentina’s Franco Colapinto (Alpine-Renault) on the last row.
Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli also received a three-place grid drop but still starts in the top 10.
F1: British Grand Prix grid
Silverstone, United Kingdom
Starting grid for the British Grand Prix after qualifying at Silverstone on Saturday:
(Oliver Bearman given 10-place grid penalty for red flag infringement. Kimi Antonelli hit with three-place penalty)
Front row
Max Verstappen (NED/Red Bull), Oscar Piastri (AUS/McLaren)
2nd row
Lando Norris (GBR/McLaren), George Russell (GBR/Mercedes)
3rd row
Lewis Hamilton (GBR/Ferrari), Charles Leclerc (MON/Ferrari)
4th row
Fernando Alonso (ESP/Aston Martin), Pierre Gasly (FRA/Alpine)
5th row
Carlos Sainz (ESP/Williams), Kimi Antonelli (ITA/Mercedes)
6th row
Yuki Tsunoda (JPN/Red Bull), Isack Hadjar (FRA/RB)
7th row
Alex Albon (THA/Williams), Esteban Ocon (FRA/Haas)
8th row
Liam Lawson (NZL/RB), Gabriel Bortoleto (BRA/Sauber)
9th row
Lance Stroll (CAN/Aston Martin), Oliver Bearman (GBR/Haas)
10th row
Nico Hulkenberg (GER/Sauber), Franco Colapinto (ARG/Alpine-Renault)
Motorsports
Marquez Hunts First Spielberg Win

Spielberg, Austria | Marc Marquez returned from MotoGP’s mid-season break showing no signs of slowing down, setting the pace in Friday’s practice sessions at the Red Bull Ring.
The six-time MotoGP champion, who has already racked up five straight victories this season, is chasing more than just another win. Marquez has never triumphed in Austria, a rare blank spot in his decorated career.

“I’ve been super close here many years,” Marquez said. “I always lose against the red bikes—but now I’m on the red bike, so let’s see if we can finally do it.”

Now riding for Ducati’s factory team, Marquez has looked nearly untouchable, completing five consecutive weekends with both sprint and race wins. He leads the championship by a commanding 120 points over his younger brother Alex Marquez, who races with Ducati’s Gresini satellite outfit.

Alex sits second in the standings, holding a 48-point cushion over Francesco Bagnaia, last year’s champion and a specialist in Austria with three consecutive wins at Spielberg. But the younger Marquez faces an uphill task this Sunday after being handed a long-lap penalty for his collision with Honda’s Joan Mir in Brno.

“The challenge will be to do a perfect weekend and lose the least time on the long lap,” Alex admitted. “We need to qualify well and try to make up ground before the penalty.”

Friday’s action confirmed Marc’s dominance, topping the morning session by three-tenths of a second over Bagnaia, and edging KTM’s Pedro Acosta by two-tenths in the afternoon. Qualifying takes place Saturday, followed by a 14-lap sprint. The main 28-lap race happens Sunday.
Meanwhile, Honda LCR’s Somkiat Chantra will sit out both Austria and Hungary. The Thai rider underwent surgery for ligament damage in his right knee, an injury sustained during training after the Dutch round. He has already missed races in Germany and Brno.
Motorsports
Fast and Fearless Bo Turbo Scooter Aims for 160 km/h Record

“Imagine a scooter faster than your car—160 km/h on EDSA. Would you ride it, or would you run from it?”
If this hits our roads, it’s either the coolest thing you’ll see this year… or the quickest way to trend on Facebook for all the wrong reasons.
UK-based Bo is building the Bo M Turbo, an electric scooter aiming to break the world speed record at over 160 km/h. That’s faster than most cars in Metro Manila traffic—if you can even reach full throttle before hitting a jeepney.

The Turbo packs a 24kW dual-motor system, a 1.8kWh battery, Formula 1-inspired cooling, and quad-piston disc brakes. It even has a power-to-weight ratio higher than a Bugatti Veyron.

Bo’s team includes former Formula 1 and Bloodhound Land Speed Record engineers. They’re taking the Turbo to Bonneville Speed Week in Utah to prove it’s the fastest scooter in the world.

Built for Speed, Priced for the Rich
- Top speed: 160+ km/h
- Range: Up to 241 km at cruising speed (28 km/h)
- Price: Around $29,500 (~₱1.7M)
Not exactly a GrabBike replacement—this is for someone with a Mercedes-AMG in the garage who wants a smaller toy.

The Cheaper Option
Bo also sells the Model M for about ₱94,000, with a 35 km/h top speed and 48 km range. Good for city commutes without scaring pedestrians.
Would you ride a 160 km/h scooter in Manila, or should it stay on the race track?
Motorsports
Palou Seals Third Straight IndyCar Crown

Spain’s Alex Palou clinched his third consecutive IndyCar season title — and fourth in five years — after finishing third at the Portland Grand Prix on Sunday. The race win went to Australia’s Will Power, with Denmark’s Christian Lundgaard in second.

Palou joins Ted Horn, Sébastien Bourdais, and Dario Franchitti as the only drivers in series history to win three straight championships. The 28-year-old now sits third on the all-time title list, behind A.J. Foyt’s 10 and Scott Dixon’s six.

“This has been an amazing season, an amazing five years with Chip Ganassi Racing,” Palou said. “I couldn’t be happier. I tried everything to overtake Lundgaard but couldn’t make it today.”
With 626 points — 151 clear of Pato O’Ward — Palou secured the title with two races left. O’Ward’s hopes ended early after an electrical failure on lap 21 left him eight laps down, forcing him to settle for 25th place, his worst finish of the season.

Palou’s 2025 campaign has delivered eight wins, including the Indianapolis 500, and he still has a chance to match the single-season record of 10 victories with Milwaukee and Nashville remaining.
Power’s triumph was his second straight and 45th career win. “It’s a big win for the team. We’ve had a rough year, but this one was hard-fought,” he said.