CHARLES LECLERC ON POLE FOR AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX - FORMULA 1

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Saturday, April 9, 2022

CHARLES LECLERC ON POLE FOR AUSTRALIAN GRAND PRIX

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc beat Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen by almost three tenths of a second to take his second pole position of the season in an Australian Grand Prix qualifying session that was disrupted by two red flag periods. Sergio Pérez qualified third but the Mexican driver was due to visit the stewards after the session to discuss a possible yellow flag infringement during Q2.
Q1 began with both Ferraris heading out on track soon after the pit lane opened and Leclerc immediately moved to P1. McLaren’s Lando Norris slotted into second just under four tenths off the Ferrari driver.

Leclerc’s team-mate Carlos Sainz Jr. took over at the top as Verstappen and Pérez began their first flying laps. The Mexican’s effort took him to P2, while Max moved to fourth place, a tenth off his team-mate.

Leclerc was finding time on his second run and he climbed to the top of the order. Verstappen was also on another push lap and with a purple final sector he took second place 0.044s behind Leclerc.

Norris, meanwhile, improved to demote Pérez to fifth place and the Red Bull driver dropped another two positions when Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas took fourth and fifth respectively.
With six minutes left Verstappen found more pace to claim P1. Pérez posted a lap for second place ahead of Leclerc. The top six then retired to the pit lane as the battle to escape the Q1 drop intensified.

However, with two minutes remaining the session was halted when Nicholas Latifi collided with Lance Stroll. Latifi, on a slow lap, pulled over to let Stroll past, but his fellow Canadian was on a cool down lap.

The Williams man went to pass the Aston Martin driver on the right on the run to Turn 5 but Stroll was already moving across the track and the pair touched, with Latifi’s car wrecked in the heavy collision.

The session was red-flagged for 15 minutes and the delay gave the Aston Martin mechanics enough time to complete repairs to Sebastian Vettel’s car which had been damaged in a crash in final practice.

The German pushed hard to post a solid time on a crowded track but in the end he could only find his way P18 and he was eliminated along with Williams’ Alex Albon and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in P16 and P17 respectively and the unfortunate Stroll and Latifi.
In Q2 Verstappen was first out on track, with Pérez not far behind. Verstppen crossed the line to take top spot, with his team-mate second. Alonso then split the Red Bulls as Leclerc made his way to fourth ahead of Norris.

On his second run Verstappen was unable to find more time, but Pérez did better and his lap took him 0.271 clear of his team-mate at the top of the timesheet. The Mexican’s lap was under scrutiny, however, with stewards noting that he may not have slowed for yellow flags when Mercedes AMG’ George Russell was forced to use the escape road at Turn 11. The incident was due for investigation after the session.

Sainz Jr. went for his final run of the segment and his lap boosted him to third place behind Verstappen. Leclerc then split the Red Bulls. Sainz Jr., though, improved again and when the flag fell he rose to second just over a tenth of a second behind Pérez and ahead of Leclerc and fourth-placed Verstappen.

AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was the first man eliminated at the end of Q2 ahead of Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas, Yuki Tsunoda in the second AlphaTauri, Zhou Guanyu in the second Alfa Romeo and Haas’ Mick Schumacher.
Verstappen was again on track early in Q3 but the Dutchman’s opening run featured a small lock up in the penultimate corner and he crossed the line in 1:18.399. Pérez then took top spot just 0.001s behind his team-mate.

Leclerc was running quickly though and his lap was good enough for provisional pole. The session was then red-flagged when Alonso crashed at Turn 11. The Alpine driver reported that he had lost hydraulics and could not change gear as he went into the right-hander. The timing of the crash was not good for Sainz Jr.

The Ferrari driver caught the red flag just as he crossed the line and his first flyer of the top-10 shootout was lost.

When the session resumed for the final runs, Pérez put in a good lap but he missed out on beating Leclerc’s first-run benchmark, again by 0.001s. Verstappen made a good gain and took top spot.

Leclerc was one of the last on track, though, and the Ferrari driver was able to find more pace than all his rivals and he claimed his second pole position of the season. Fourth place went to Norris. Lewis Hamilton took fifth for Mercedes AMG, a tenth of a second ahead of team-mate George Russell.

Daniel Ricciardo was seventh in the second McLaren. Esteban Ocon took eight place for Alpine but there was disappointment for Sainz Jr. who ran wide in Turn 6 on his final lap. The Spaniard finished the session in ninth place ahead of Alonso.

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