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What we learned from the 2026 F1 British GP sprint race and qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
What we learned from the 2026 F1 British GP sprint race and qualifying

Wolff: "Emotional" Vasseur misunderstood comments on Ferrari

Formula 1
British GP
Wolff: "Emotional" Vasseur misunderstood comments on Ferrari

F1 British GP: Antonelli takes pole position, Russell down in fourth

Formula 1
British GP
F1 British GP: Antonelli takes pole position, Russell down in fourth

DTM Norisring: Thiim takes Aston Martin's maiden win after horror crash

DTM
Norisring
DTM Norisring: Thiim takes Aston Martin's maiden win after horror crash

F1 drivers criticise ‘dangerous’ yo-yo racing in British GP sprint race

Formula 1
British GP
F1 drivers criticise ‘dangerous’ yo-yo racing in British GP sprint race

Russell and Hamilton contract renewals reveal the Verstappen-McLaren rumours to be nonsense

Formula 1
British GP
Russell and Hamilton contract renewals reveal the Verstappen-McLaren rumours to be nonsense

F1 British GP: Antonelli overtakes Hamilton to win Silverstone sprint race

Formula 1
British GP
F1 British GP: Antonelli overtakes Hamilton to win Silverstone sprint race

LIVE: F1 British GP commentary and updates – Antonelli claims pole position

Formula 1
British GP
LIVE: F1 British GP commentary and updates – Antonelli claims pole position

Formula 1 teams face final call on FRIC ahead of German GP

Formula 1 is braced for a crunch day on the FRIC suspension system controversy, as teams face a final call on whether or not to keep it on their cars

With F1 race director Charlie Whiting having indicated last week that he believed the legality of FRIC could be questioned, any outfit running with it at the German Grand Prix risks being protested by a rival.

And while Mercedes on Thursday became the latest team to confirm that it will be removing it from its car to avoid any potential trouble, the prospect is there for other outfits to challenge Whiting's verdict.

MASS DAMPER AFFAIR RECALLED

With some teams not willing to confirm yet whether they will keep FRIC or not, there is the chance that a clarification could be requested from the race stewards as to its actual legality.

Whiting's position means he can only ever offer an opinion on the legality of a concept.

The final say on whether or not things are within the rules must be made by race stewards at an event.

TECH ANALYSIS: The implications of a FRIC ban

It is possible therefore that the German GP race stewards could rule that FRIC does comply with the regulations, which would clear the way for teams to run with it.

Back in 2006, ahead of the German Grand Prix, Whiting indicated that he believed the mass damper system run by Renault was in breach of the rules.

Renault, however, challenged that verdict at the German GP when it kept the system on its spare car for scrutineering, and it was ruled legal by the stewards.

The FIA appealed its own stewards over the matter, however, and eventually the move to ban mass dampers was upheld by the International Court of Appeal.

While no one wants the FRIC controversy to go through such a drawn out process, the door remains open until the end of Thursday for teams to try to seek clarity if they would prefer to keep the complicated suspension systems on their cars.

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