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QUALIFYING: Hamilton beats Verstappen to take 100th career pole in Spain
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Lewis Hamilton has become the first driver in the history of Formula 1 to make it to 100 pole positions, triumphing over the Red Bull of Max Verstappen by just 0.036s in qualifying for the Spanish Grand Prix, as his Mercedes team mate Valtteri Bottas claimed P3.
Hamilton set a blistering 1m 16.741s on his first lap in Q3, with Verstappen narrowly behind. But with all eyes trained on the fight at the front in the final minutes of qualifying, neither Hamilton, Verstappen nor Bottas could improve on their second runs, meaning Hamilton claimed his record-extending 100th pole position – with the Mercedes driver yelling exuberantly on team radio after a phenomenal milestone in the history of Formula 1 was reached.
It wasn’t all bad for Verstappen, however, who after showing strong pace in Q2 to lead the segment, claimed his first ever front row start at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, ahead of Bottas.
FORMULA 1 ARAMCO GRAN PREMIO DE ESPAÑA 2021Spain 2021
Qualifying results
Position | Team Name | Time |
---|---|---|
1 | HAMMercedes | 1:16.741 |
2 | VERRed Bull Racing | 1:16.777 |
3 | BOTMercedes | 1:16.873 |
4 | LECFerrari | 1:17.510 |
5 | OCOAlpine | 1:17.580 |
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc confirmed the Scuderia’s turn of speed this weekend with P4, as Alpine’s Esteban Ocon continued the team’s form from Portimao with fifth. Home hero Carlos Sainz was sixth in the second Ferrari, ahead of McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, who had just one lap in Q3 but managed to get ahead of his ninth placed team mate Lando Norris – who’d led the way in Q1.
The second Red Bull of Sergio Perez could only manage P8 after a difficult weekend so far for the Mexican, with the second home driver Fernando Alonso in P10.
So that was the top 10 – but all the accolades today are for Lewis Hamilton, the first driver to make it triple figures in pole positions in F1 history.
Qualifying Highlights: 2021 Spanish Grand Prix
AS IT HAPPENED
Q1 – Norris fastest as Tsunoda makes shock exit
Following a 10-minute delay to the start of the session as a Tecpro barrier was put back in place after a support race crash, the drivers headed out onto a hot Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya, with track temperatures up in the mid-40s – and air temperatures in the mid-20s.
Yuki Tsunoda would be the shock casualty from the first segment, the Japanese driver running wide on his final flying effort going through Turn 9 and crossing the line a mere 0.735s off the fastest Q1 lap – but with that enough to see him out of the segment for the second time in his four F1 race weekends. “I can’t ******g believe this car,” he screamed frustratedly over the radio.
2021 Spanish GP Qualifying: Angry Tsunoda reacts after Q1 knockout
Tsunoda in 16th was joined in the drop zone by the Alfa Romeo of Kimi Raikkonen, the Haas of Mick Schumacher, Williams’ Nicholas Latifi (who smashed his left-hand mirror after going over the bumps at Turn 9) and the second Haas of Nikita Mazepin – Haas outqualifying another team on pure pace for the first time in 2021.
WATCH: Latifi mirror cracks going over kerb
Up at the front, though, and having encountered a traffic jam at the Turn 13-14-15 complex on his first push lap, McLaren’s Lando Norris was the shock fastest runner in Q1 after his second effort, setting a 1m 17.821s to pip Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas, who was 0.184s slower in P2 on medium tyres.
Charles Leclerc again demonstrated the pace of Ferrari this weekend by going P3, narrowly ahead of Red Bull’s Verstappen, as the second AlphaTauri of Pierre Gasly showed that there was pace in the AT02 by going P5, 0.369s adrift.
Knocked out: Tsunoda, Raikkonen, Schumacher, Latifi, Mazepin
2021 Spanish GP Qualifying: Norris hits traffic jam on flying lap
Q2 – Verstappen lays down a marker as both Aston Martins drop out
George Russell and Antonio Giovinazzi had never made it into Q2 at Barcelona before this year. But although both would make it to the second segment of qualifying in 2021, Q2 was as far as either driver would go, Williams having opted to burn up all of Russell’s soft tyres in Q1 to help him reach Q2.
Over at Aston Martin, meanwhile, the time sheets made for unhappy reading in Q2. With both cars using the team’s new update this race, neither driver could progress into Q3, Lance Stroll going 11th fastest and missing out by just 0.008s, as Sebastian Vettel took P13 – while last year as Racing Point, the team had taken fourth and fifth on the grid...
Gasly continued AlphaTauri’s unfortunate day, taking P12 and failing to make it to Q3 for the first time in seven races, as Giovinazzi and Russell took 14th and 15th.
At the head of the field, and having bided his time in Q1, Verstappen flashed the speed of his RB16B in Q2, becoming the first driver into the 1m 16s this weekend with a 1m 16.922s, two-tenths ahead of Bottas and Hamilton as Sainz took P4 – while having been sitting in P12 after the first runs, Sergio Perez was up to P5 on his second run to join his team mate in the final qualifying shoot-out.
All the runners who made it through to Q3 did so on soft tyres, meanwhile, meaning the top 10 will all start on the red-walled tyres on race day.
Knocked out: Stroll, Gasly, Vettel, Giovinazzi, Russell
Q3 – Hamilton takes pole #100 by just 0.036s from Verstappen
Mercedes were on the back foot heading into Q3, with Verstappen having been comfortably ahead in Q2. But if we’ve learned anything from Lewis Hamilton’s 99 pole positions to date, it’s that he should never be ruled out when there’s a sniff of a result on a Saturday.
Hamilton duly set the pace on his first lap with a 1m 16.741s, with Verstappen just 0.036s off that time in P2, with Bottas a further tenth adrift in third.
With the seconds counting down in Q3, the drivers headed out for their final laps. Hamilton was up in his first sector, but couldn’t improve in sectors 2 and 3, failing to trump his best effort.
Verstappen and Bottas looked like the drivers most likely to dethrone Hamilton… but ultimately they too would fall short on their own second laps, as Hamilton claimed a record-stretching 100th pole position, to confirm his position as one of the greatest qualifiers in the history of F1.
Charles Leclerc did improve, however, jumping from P7 to P4 to push Alpine’s Esteban Ocon down to P5 as Sainz claimed sixth on home turf.
The Spanish fans actually had two drivers to cheer on in the top 10, Alonso taking 10th, with Ricciardo, Perez and Norris in between in P7, P8 and P9 – an under-the-weather Perez likely to have been disappointed especially, given that he was a full 0.924s off his team mate Verstappen, having spun violently at Turn 13 on his first flying lap.
But after all that, the plaudits went to Hamilton on a historic day, as he became F1’s first ever pole position centurion.
Lewis Hamilton takes his 100th pole position in F1
The key quote
“I can’t believe we are at 100. It’s down to the men and women back at the factory continuously raising the bar and just never giving up. The support that I have, it’s been a dream for me to work with these guys. And the journey we’ve been on has been immense.
"Who would have thought in 2013 or the end of 2012 when we made the decision to partner we would have been qualifying at 100? So I feel very humble. I am ecstatic. It’s like my first” – Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
What’s next?
The 2021 Spanish Grand Prix kicks off at 1500 local time, which is 1300 UTC. Lewis Hamilton has won the last four races at Barcelona, and five races here in total – but can anyone end his reign this weekend? Tune into our live coverage of the race on F1.com to find out.
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