There was chaos at the British Grand Prix – but not quite like you might expect.An hour ahead of the famous race at Silverstone, the 22-man grid got a dress rehearsal – in Lego cars.F1 stars caused chaos in their Lego cars at the British Grand PrixGettyBack at the Miami Grand Prix in 2025, teams had one full-size Lego vehicle each and went around the track.It went massively viral as drivers clattered into each other and they decided to run it back at the British Grand Prix.Hilarity ensued once more as FIA president chief Mohammed Ben Sulayem joined them.This time out each driver had their own Lego go-kart themed for their respective teams.View Tweet: https://x.com/hashtag/F1?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5EtfwHowever, the japes were just as before with the drivers bumping, clashing, and cheating their way around the iconic course.And FIA president Ben Sulayem and current championship leader Kimi Antonelli were among the first to make a rookie error.Attempting to cut corners, a host of cars tried to avoid an early turn but instead beached themselves in hilarious scenes in front of the enormous crowd.The drivers, and the chief of the sport then battled to free their cars, apart from Williams star Carlos Sainz, who hopped aboard the McLaren of world champion Lando Norris.The race was won by Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, which is ironic given he will begin the actual race in last position.He was among a pack of three who cut the final corner to beat Ferrari star and Brit hero Lewis Hamilton.View Tweet: https://x.com/hashtag/F1?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5EtfwBen Sulayem joined in the fun but got caught in the gravel trapSky Sports F1Hamilton, though, had spoken previously about not taking part before jumping behind the wheel.Like his former title rival, Max Verstappen was also critical about the parade.“I prefer to play with Lego at home, you know, with the kids. Not on a go-kart here, to be honest,” said Verstappen earlier in the week.“I prefer to stand on a truck, just with everyone together. I think that’s more fun, and I think it also looks more professional.”“At the end of the day, we are Formula One drivers, I think we should not look like kids and clowns trying to ram into each other,” the Dutchman said.“I don’t think that is what Formula One needs, but it is what it is.”