What time is the Belgian Grand Prix? Dates, schedule, sprint and qualifying results and where to watch

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Lando Norris will aim to build off his spectacular win at the British Grand Prix as the circuit heads to Belgium this weekend.The McLaren star claimed the victory over teammate Oscar Piastri and Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg.Norris is right in the race for the Drivers’ ChampionshipGettyIt was Norris’ first win at Silverstone, and the gap between himself and Piastri at the top of the Drivers’ Championship has been narrowed to eight points.Meanwhile, it was stunning result for Hulkenberg as he claimed a spot on the podium for the first time in his career and he’ll hope for more points in Belgium.Last year, Lewis Hamilton claimed his final win for Mercedes at this circuit, and he is still waiting to taste that first victory in a Ferrari.The British legend has yet to get on the podium, but he has recorded back-to-back fourth place finishes, suggesting he and Ferrari are improving.When is the Belgian Grand Prix?The 2025 Belgian Grand Prix will take place between Friday, July 25 and Sunday, July 27.It is being held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in Spa.It is the third Sprint Race of the season, which will take place on Saturday before qualifying.The Sprint will get underway at 11am before qualifying at 3pm.Lights Out for the race itself is then set for 2pm on Sunday.talkSPORT and talkSPORT.com will have all the latest news, build-up and live updates of the race.To tune in to talkSPORT or talkSPORT 2 through the website, click HERE for the live stream. You can also listen via the talkSPORT app, on DAB digital radio, through your smart speaker and on 1089 or 1053 AM.Sky Sports will broadcast the race weekend too.Belgian Grand Prix scheduleFriday, July 257.55am: F3 Practice9.05am: F2 Practice11am: Belgian GP Practice One (session starts at 11.30am)12.55pm: F3 Qualifying1.50pm: F2 Qualifying3pm: Belgian GP Sprint Qualifying (session starts at 3.30pm)Saturday, July 268.10am: F3 Sprint10am: Belgian GP Sprint (lights out at 11am)12.20pm: Ted’s Sprint Notebook12.40pm: F2 Sprint2pm: Belgian GP Qualifying (session starts at 3pm)5pm: Ted’s Qualifying NotebookSunday, July 277.25am: F3 Feature Race8.55am: F2 Feature Race10.40am: Porsche Supercup Race12.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Belgian GP build-up*2pm: THE BELGIAN GRAND PRIXHamilton was awarded the win in the Belgian Grand Prix last eyars after George Russell was disqualifiedBelgian Grand Prix: What has been said?Red Bull will compete in their first race since Christian Horner was sacked as team principle in Belgium.Laurent Mekies has stepped up to replace Horner, and all eyes will be on how they do.McLaren’s CEO Zak Brown wasn’t surprised to see Horner sacked by Red Bull after power struggles at the company for the last few years.He said: “I’m maybe [surprised by] the timing, but not the result.“I think there’s been a lot of drama there the last couple of years, and it doesn’t seem like that drama has been calming down – maybe been getting worse.“So, I’m not surprised, anytime in the middle of the season. But we’re head down on our championship. They’ve got Max [Verstappen] still knocking on the door, so we’ve got to pay attention to that. But, yeah, tremendous amount of success they’ve had.”But Brown can predict a return to motorracing for Horner.“Given his age and his history in motor racing, I’d be surprised if he didn’t show up somewhere in motor racing.“But I don’t know his other interests, whether he wants to go run a football team or what have you. So, we’ll see.”Horner’s time at Red Bull was nothing but a success even if it was controversialF1 2025: Drivers’ standingsOscar Piastri (McLaren) – 234 5 wins, 10 podiumsLando Norris (McLaren) – 226, 4 wins, 8 podiumsMax Verstappen (Red Bull) – 165, 2 win, 5 podiumsGeorge Russell (Mercedes) – 147, 1 win, 5 podiumsCharles Leclerc (Ferrari) – 119, 0 wins, 4 podiumsLewis Hamilton (Ferrari) – 103Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) – 63, 0 wins, 1 podiumAlex Albon (Williams) – 46Nico Hulkenberg (Kick Sauber) – 37, 0 wins, 1 podiumEsteban Ocon (Haas) – 23Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls) – 21Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) – 20Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) – 16Carlos Sainz (Williams) – 13Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls) – 12Pierre Gasly (Alpine) – 11Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull) – 10Oliver Bearman (Haas) – 6Gabriel Bortoleto (Kick Sauber) – 0Franco Colapinto (Alpine) – 0Jack Doohan (Alpine) – 0 OUT