Hamilton takes pole in sweltering Spain to lead another Mercedes front row lockout, Bottas P2; Verstappen third quickest
Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton laid the foundation to restore the narrative of Silver Arrows supremacy by streaking to a dominant pole position during Saturday qualifying for tomorrow’s Spanish Grand Prix. A week after he and the team were bested by a clever Red Bull and Max Verstappen for the victory at the 70th Anniversary GP at the second consecutive Silverstone race, normally Hamilton’s personal playground, the English points leader made himself at home at the familiar Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya by setting the fastest overall time and claim the all-important top spot on the grid, where pole position has converted to victory in 15 of the last 19 contests held here. His teammate Valtteri Bottas could never quite hook up the final sector of this twisty track and had to settle for P2, albeit less than a tenth adrift of Ham the Man. Verstappen was third fastest but will not be able to pull the strategic coup that led to his dominant victory last weekend, as the Dutchman will be starting on the same Soft Pirelli tires as the two Mercs in front of him for this sixth round constest. However, the extreme heat in Catalonia may cause issues for the Silver Arrows, as it did during a hot race in Spielberg, Austria earlier in the season, so look for Verstappen to pounce on any potential unreliability or tire issues should they occur. The possibility of rain on Sunday could also shake things up.
Sergio Perez was back after his two week COVID quarantine and celebrated by whipping his Racing Point up to P4 on the grid, while regular teammate Lance Stroll qualified just behind the Mexican veteran in P5. Verstappen’s Red Bull teammate was one again underwhelming in quali and could do no better than sixth fastest. Perhaps there is something about being Max’s teammate that psyches these talented up and comers out? Or perhaps it is simply that Vertsappen is that superior to them in the identical equipment. McLaren’s resurgence continued with Carlos Sainz qualifying P7 and Lando Norris P8, proving the team’s solid pace so far in 2020 is no fluke. Meanwhile, Ferrari’s sad decline also continued, as Charles Leclerc languished down in P9, while Sebastian Vettel’s new chassis did not seem to help the bewildered German 4-time champ that much. He was only able to set the eleventh best lap and was once again bounced out in Q2. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, one of those ex-Verstappen teammates who failed to keep the pace when up with the big team, did well on his own terms to take 10th spot on the grid for Red Bull’s junior squad. The young Frenchman will be desperate to score some points come race day tomorrow after starting from P7 last weekend and then coming up empty.
Top 10 qualifiers for the Spanish GP:
POS | DRIVER | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1:16.872 | 1:16.013 | 1:15.584 | |
2 | 1:17.243 | 1:16.152 | 1:15.643 | |
3 | 1:17.213 | 1:16.518 | 1:16.292 | |
4 | 1:17.117 | 1:16.936 | 1:16.482 | |
5 | 1:17.316 | 1:16.666 | 1:16.589 | |
6 | 1:17.419 | 1:17.163 | 1:17.029 | |
7 | 1:17.438 | 1:16.876 | 1:17.044 | |
8 | 1:17.577 | 1:17.166 | 1:17.084 | |
9 | 1:17.256 | 1:16.953 | 1:17.087 | |
10 | 1:17.356 | 1:16.800 | 1:17.136 |
Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.
Tomorrow’s race airs live on ESPN beginning at 9AM Eastern here is the States. Hope to see you then to find out if anyone has anything for Hamilton — perhaps the heat will once again play havoc with Mercedes reliability? — or at least if Verstappen can best Bottas!