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Why Red Bull and Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Formula 1
British GP
Why Red Bull and Verstappen struggled at Silverstone – and expect the same at Spa

Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

MotoGP
German GP
Steiner explains why teams are forgoing a profit share with MotoGP

How Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

Formula 1
British GP
How Leclerc has changed his steering wheel software for the first time since joining Ferrari

Why Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Feature
Formula 1
British GP
Why Vasseur's steady hand is exactly what fervent Ferrari needs right now

Top 10 F1 drivers of the 2000s

Feature
Formula 1
Top 10 F1 drivers of the 2000s

How the more technical F1 2026 regulations hinder customer teams

Formula 1
British GP
How the more technical F1 2026 regulations hinder customer teams

FIA looking into Red Bull and Ferrari's rotating F1 wings after Verstappen crashes

Formula 1
British GP
FIA looking into Red Bull and Ferrari's rotating F1 wings after Verstappen crashes

The pre-race tweak that hampered Hamilton's British GP

Formula 1
British GP
The pre-race tweak that hampered Hamilton's British GP

McLaren: Alonso not rattled by Hamilton

McLaren have played down any talk that world champion Fernando Alonso is getting rattled by the speed and interest surrounding his teammate Lewis Hamilton

There were suggestions after last weekend's Bahrain Grand Prix that Hamilton may be gaining the upper hand psychologically, with Alonso beginning to express frustration in post-race interviews about the constant focus surrounding his rookie teammate.

But McLaren's F1 CEO Martin Whitmarsh is confident there is going to be no repeat of the problems Alonso has had in the past when he has been beaten by teammates - and thinks any hurt Alonso feels by being outpaced by Hamilton in Bahrain is only natural.

"I think that the two guys are very open and honest with each other and the team," said Whitmarsh, whose team lead the constructors' championship with Alonso and Hamilton tied at the top of the drivers' title chase.

"They both want to beat each other. And providing that is in a constructive manner, which it is and has been so far, then that is positive. If a racing driver doesn't want to beat his teammate then there has to be something wrong with that.

"Our guys are really true competitors. But I think Fernando has tremendous resilience, self-belief and confidence. He will recognise that he has come out of the first three races as co-leader of the championship and he will fancy his chances of getting the job done."

McLaren boss Ron Dennis made it clear earlier this week that the team would ensure both his drivers were treated equally - especially now that Hamilton is a title contender.

"We have the young pretender and the double world champion - and we owe it to both drivers to give them equal opportunity," he said. "The only thing that would make life difficult would be if they started bouncing into each other. But the reality is, it is not in their character (to do that)."

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