Bottas pips Hamilton for pole at Nurburgring; Verstappen qualifies P3
Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes’ number two driver, followed up his gift win in Russia two weeks ago by wresting pole from his more heralded and points-leading teammate Lewis Hamilton during Saturday qualifying for the German Grand Prix. On a green track with very limited practice time for the entire field due to adverse weather conditions, all was sunny for the Finn at the famed Nurburgring when it counted, as he put together three purple sectors late in Q3 to pip Hamilton’s best effort and take the top starting spot for tomorrow’s race. Bottas is looking to keep his slim championship hopes alive with the races ticking down and grabbing pole at this legendary venue after back-to-back self-inflicted errors by Hamilton balked his previously unstoppable momentum is at least a hopeful sign. For the Silver Arrows, it was yet another front row lockout in 2020, no matter that Hamilton will feel he left some time on the table during his final fast lap. The English six-time F1 champ will be looking to put his mistakes at Monza and Sochi behind him and will certainly be trying to jump his teammate at the start tomorrow to reclaim the sense of inevitability that previously surrounded his title aspirations.
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen looked like giving the Mercedes boys a run for pole but struggled for grip late in Q3 and could only post the third fastest lap when it really mattered, albeit just a few hundredths behind Hamilton. Still the Dutchman’s effort put him the usual half-second ahead of his teammate, Alexander Albon, and the Red Bulls were actually split by a sterling effort from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who will slot in alongside Verstappen in P4 on the grid, a spot ahead of Albon’s P5. Once again, Leclerc badly outclassed his more seasoned teammate, Sebastian Vettel, whose dismal year continued when the German four-time champion could only muster a time good enough for P11 and was bounced in Q2. The Renault’s of Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon qualified P6 and P7 respectively, while Lando Norris was P8 and Carlos Sainz P10 for McLaren. Racing Point’s Sergio Perez rounded out the top ten qualifiers and will start P9. However, his teammate Lance Stroll fell ill and Nico Hulkenberg nearly had to be parachuted in on extra-short notice to take the young Canadian’s spot for the both quali and the race. With such extremely limited seat time, however, the veteran German struggled mightily and will start from twentieth, last on the grid.
Top 10 qualifiers for the German GP:
POS | DRIVER | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1:26.573 | 1:25.971 | 1:25.269 | |
2 | 1:26.620 | 1:25.390 | 1:25.525 | |
3 | 1:26.319 | 1:25.467 | 1:25.562 | |
4 | 1:26.857 | 1:26.240 | 1:26.035 | |
5 | 1:27.126 | 1:26.285 | 1:26.047 | |
6 | 1:26.836 | 1:26.096 | 1:26.223 | |
7 | 1:27.086 | 1:26.364 | 1:26.242 | |
8 | 1:26.829 | 1:26.316 | 1:26.458 | |
9 | 1:27.120 | 1:26.330 | 1:26.704 | |
10 | 1:27.378 | 1:26.361 | 1:26.709 |
Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.
Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN2 beginning at 8AM Eastern here in the States. Hope to see you then to find out whether Bottas can really make this a title race down the stretch, Hamilton will reassert his dominance or Verstappen will find something to spoil the Mercedes party!