Antonelli makes F1 history as youngest ever pole-sitter in Shanghai; Russell overcomes gremlins to grab last-second P2 for early favorites Mercedes; Hamilton P3, Leclerc P4 for next best Ferrari
In a dramatic final session of Saturday qualifying for the Chinese Grand Prix, newly mighty Mercedes needed to deploy all of their technical and strategic expertise to both salvage their veteran driver’s Sunday starting position and maximize their junior driver’s best efforts. With what is clearly the virgin season’s best car, last week’s race winner George Russell, who was also victorious in the Sprint race earlier in the day, faced Q3 gremlins that threatened to put him at the bottom of the Top 10. But the team brilliantly got him out of the garage and back onto the track with just enough time for one flying lap. Meanwhile, teammate Kimi Antonelli had already laid down a blistering benchmark provisional pole lap immediately prior to Russell emerging from the pits at Shanghai International Circuit, daring his teammate and any other challengers to better it. While Russell couldn’t catch his Silver Arrows stablemate with his last desperate attempt, he did manage a fantastic nail-biting flier that vaulted him from “No Time” to P2 for Sunday’s grid. Meanwhile, Antonelli hung on in the face of Ferrari’s and McLaren’s best efforts to become Formula 1’s youngest ever pole-sitter, the 19-year, 6-month-old Italian besting the great Sebastian Vettel’s previous record of 21-years and two-months set at Monza back in 2008. The acid test for Antonelli, though, will be a clean getaway from that historic pole when the lights go out on Sunday. The young star has struggled mightily in both race starts under the new format, with another extremely slow start in the Sprint, where he started from second but finished in P6 as a direct result of bogging down again.
Despite looking feisty all race weekend, Ferrari found themselves in the familiar for 2026 runners up role to the Mercs, with Lewis Hamilton besting teammate Charles Leclerc P3 to P4. McLaren have clearly been working very hard and showed improvement since the opener in Melbourne, closing the gap even while still trailing the top two teams. Oscar Piastri claimed P5 on the grid for the Papayas ahead of P6 Lando Norris. The Alpine of Pierre Gasly made his own statement by bettering both Red Bulls and slotting into P7, an impressive effort that relegated Max Verstappen to P8 and Isack Hadjar to P9. Those lowly quali positions show that the Red Bull braintrust have a lot of improvements to unlock to get to terms with both this new car and their new Ford engines. Haas’s Oliver Bearman took P10 with a fine effort for the competitive American midfield team.
Top 10 qualifiers for the Chinese GP:
| Driver | Grid | Qual time | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
A.K. Antonelli
Mercedes
· #12
|
1
|
1:32.064
|
|
|
|
G. Russell
Mercedes
· #63
|
2
|
1:32.286
|
|
|
|
L. Hamilton
Ferrari
· #44
|
3
|
1:32.415
|
|
|
|
C. Leclerc
Ferrari
· #16
|
4
|
1:32.428
|
|
|
|
O. Piastri
McLaren
· #81
|
5
|
1:32.550
|
|
![]() |
L. Norris
McLaren
· #1
|
6
|
1:32.608
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
![]() |
P. Gasly
Alpine
· #10
|
7
|
1:32.873
|
|
![]() |
M. Verstappen
Red Bull
· #3
|
8
|
1:33.002
|
|
![]() |
I. Hadjar
Red Bull
· #6
|
9
|
1:33.121
|
|
![]() |
O. Bearman
Haas
· #87
|
10
|
1:33.292
|
Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.
Sunday’s race airs live beginning at 1 AM Eastern exclusively on Apple TV here in the States. Whether you pull the all-nighter or catch up with the race with an Apple TV replay on demand after a good night’s sleep, Round 2 of Formula 1’s new era will surely be worth a watch to see how the teams are improving and getting to grips with these very tricky and brand new hybrid machines. Hope to see you then to find out how it all shakes out!



