Lewis Hamilton has avoided an additional penalty after an investigation into an alleged yellow-flag infringement at the British Grand Prix, allowing him to keep his Silverstone podium.
Hamilton had already been penalised early in his home race for a false start, receiving a five-second time penalty. That initially appeared to end his podium prospects, as he had to serve the penalty at his pit stop and lost ground in the front-running fight.
The race then moved back in Hamilton’s favour when George Russell and Kimi Antonelli both encountered problems. Hamilton also overtook Max Verstappen on track before the Dutchman crashed out at Turn 15.

Verstappen’s incident triggered a late safety car. Hamilton chose to pit during that period and dropped behind Russell, who did not stop, before the race ultimately finished behind the safety car and left the Ferrari driver third.
Hamilton’s podium remained uncertain when he was placed under investigation for an alleged yellow-flag infringement during the neutralised phase after Verstappen’s crash. After the podium celebrations, Hamilton visited the stewards to provide his account of the incident.
The stewards decided that a second penalty of the afternoon was not required. Hamilton did, however, receive a reprimand, meaning his third-place finish remains unchanged while a disciplinary note is still recorded.
The decision ends the uncertainty over Hamilton’s British GP podium after a race shaped by a start penalty, late safety car, and post-race investigation. For Ferrari, the outcome ensures both cars remain strongly placed in the final Silverstone classification heading into the next phase of the Formula 1 season.



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