Hamilton leads Mercedes to front row lockout with pole, Bottas P2; Vettel good enough for P3 for Ferrari
After lucking into a win at Baku two weeks ago at the expense of his teammate, Lewis Hamilton beat Valtteri Bottas to the pole at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on Saturday the old fashioned way: he earned it. The reigning World Champ mustered just enough speed at Barcelona, the track that every F1 driver knows better than any other, to best Bottas for the top spot on the grid by a mere .04 seconds. Hamilton’s 1:16.173 lap shattered the old track record and Mercedes appeared to sandbag Ferrari after the legendary Scuderia started strong in the earlier parts of qualifying, appearing for all the world that they would put a Prancing Horse on pole. But in Q3 it was clear that the Silver Arrows still had supreme pace at this most familiar circuit, which all the teams use for pre-season testing and at which Mercedes has now won the pole for the last seven years straight. In the end Sebastian Vettel could do no better than P3 with his teammate Kimi Raikkonen just behind him in P4. It was Mercedes’ first front row lockout of the year and should make for a very interesting opening lap to the Spanish Grand Prix on Sunday as both Ferraris will be lined up directly behind. This is a very difficult track to overtake on so look for a frantic start.
Red Bull ran its customary third fastest pace, at one point putting a scare into Ferrari by leading them in the early part of Q3 but then settling into P5 and P6, with Max Verstappen just pipping Daniel Ricciardo for those third row honors. Let’s hope they can keep from taking each other out like they did in Azerbaijan while they fight for intra-team glory and perhaps a sneaky podium if misfortune should befall one or more of the Mercs and Ferraris.
Further back in the field, Haas had a very good qualifying session with the aggressive Kevin Magnusson setting the pace over his more inconsistent teammate, Romain Grosjean, P7 to P10. Fernando Alonso also performed well in front of his home crowd to push his McLaren up into a P8 starting spot. Fellow Spaniard Carlos Sainz was the lone Renault in Q3 after Nico Hulkenberg couldn’t get out of the first session with fuel pickup issues and he did decently to set the ninth fastest time.
Toro Rosso’s Brendan Hartley had a scary shunt in Free Practice 3, losing his car at high speed going into Turn 9 after putting a wheel on the grass. He bashed into the SAFER-style barrier rear end-first and did tremendous damage to his chassis. While there was no way the team could get the car repaired in time for quali the Kiwi was thankfully unharmed. The error did not do any favors for Hartley’s chances of keeping his F1 seat with Toro Rosso, however, when rumors had already been swirling about his possibly being replaced mid-season.
Top 10 qualifiers for the Spanish GP:
POS | DRIVER | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1:17.633 | 1:17.166 | 1:16.173 | |
2 | 1:17.674 | 1:17.111 | 1:16.213 | |
3 | 1:17.031 | 1:16.802 | 1:16.305 | |
4 | 1:17.483 | 1:17.071 | 1:16.612 | |
5 | 1:17.411 | 1:17.266 | 1:16.816 | |
6 | 1:17.623 | 1:17.638 | 1:16.818 | |
7 | 1:18.169 | 1:17.618 | 1:17.676 | |
8 | 1:18.276 | 1:18.100 | 1:17.721 | |
9 | 1:18.480 | 1:17.803 | 1:17.790 | |
10 | 1:18.305 | 1:17.699 | 1:17.835 |
Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.
Tomorrow’s race airs live on EPSPN2 starting at 9AM Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out if mighty Mercedes can maintain their momentum or if Ferrari (or perhaps even Red Bull) can spoil their fiesta!