Hamilton blisters track record for pole at Suzuka, Bottas back on form in P2; Vettel third quickest as grid shuffled by penalties
Making emphatic amends for never having scored a pole at the legendary Suzuka circuit, Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton shattered Michael Schumacher’s 11-year-old lap record by over 1.6 seconds en route to the 71st pole of the Englishman’s sparkling career. Better yet for the Silver Arrows, Hamilton’s wingman Valtteri Bottas returned to form after a run of mediocre qualifying results and qualified P2. That stout effort by Bottas pipped the Ferrari of Sebastian Vettel, Hamilton’s only real competition for the Drivers’ title, but the Mercedes #2 has a gearbox penalty to serve and so was pushed back to P6 with Vettel inheriting the second spot on the grid beside Hamilton. After Vettel’s wonder drive in Malaysia a week ago where he came from last to finish a remarkable fourth the German 4-time World Champion must be salivating at the prospect of starting from P2 and being able to go mano a mano with Hamilton right from then get go.
However, Vettel may have to go it alone, as his Scuderia teammate Kimi Raikkonen had another difficult day a week after his car failed to start the Malaysian GP due to turbo problems. The Finnish vet got it wrong in free practice 3, smashing into the armco at the Degner curves and damaging his suspension and gearbox in the process. His mechanics did yeoman’s work to get the car ready for qualifying but Raikkonen couldn’t find the speed and ended up a lowly P7. With his and others’ penalties factored in Raikkonen got pushed back to P10. He’ll just be hoping that his car can get to race after last week’s disaster at Sepang Circuit. But when you start mid-pack the chances of bad things happening on the opening lap increase exponentially so I think it’s even money whether the sometimes accident prone Raikkonen can make it to the finish.
The two Red Bulls of Daniel Ricciardo and Max Vertstappen qualified P4 and P5 respectively but both will move up one spot and line up side by side on the second row. With their strong performance in Malaysia fresh in their minds where Verstappen got the win and Ricciardo was P3 they could once again be better in race trim. So watch out for at least one of the Red Bull duo to perhaps challenge the front runners for victory tomorrow. Esteban Ocon out-qualified his Force India teammate and arch rival Sergio Perez P7 to P8 and Ocon will start P5 come Sunday due to Bottas’ demotion. Williams Felipe Massa set the 9th fastest time and will move up to P8 on the grid, while Fernando Alonso got his McLaren into Q3 at Honda’shome track. But the Spaniard also faces a host of penalties for parts changes on his car that will drop him all the way to last position. That ironically benefitted his slower teammate, Stoffel Vandoorne, who could only muster the 11th fastest time in Q2 but will see himself elevated all the way up to P9 on the grid come race day.
Top 10 qualifiers for the Japanese GP:
POS | DRIVER | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1:29.047 | 1:27.819 | 1:27.319 | |
2 | 1:29.332 | 1:28.543 | 1:27.651 | |
3 | 1:29.352 | 1:28.225 | 1:27.791 | |
4 | 1:29.475 | 1:28.935 | 1:28.306 | |
5 | 1:29.181 | 1:28.747 | 1:28.332 | |
6 | 1:29.163 | 1:29.079 | 1:28.498 | |
7 | 1:30.115 | 1:29.199 | 1:29.111 | |
8 | 1:29.696 | 1:29.343 | 1:29.260 | |
9 | 1:30.352 | 1:29.687 | 1:29.480 | |
10 | 1:30.525 | 1:29.749 | 1:30.687 |
And the adjusted front grid after all penalties are factored in:
POS | DRIVER | CAR | TIME | GAP |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 1m27.319s | – |
2 | Sebastian Vettel | Ferrari | 1m27.791s | 0.472s |
3 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull/Renault | 1m28.306s | 0.987s |
4 | Max Verstappen | Red Bull/Renault | 1m28.332s | 1.013s |
5 | Esteban Ocon | Force India/Mercedes | 1m29.111s | 1.792s |
6 | Valtteri Bottas | Mercedes | 1m27.651s | 0.332s |
7 | Sergio Perez | Force India/Mercedes | 1m29.260s | 1.941s |
8 | Felipe Massa | Williams/Mercedes | 1m29.480s | 2.161s |
9 | Stoffel Vandoorne | McLaren/Honda | 1m29.778s | 2.459s |
10 | Kimi Raikkonen | Ferrari | 1m28.498s | 1.179s |
Complete qualifying results available via Formula1.com.
Tomorrow’s Japanese Grand Prix airs live on NBC Sports starting at 1AM here in the States. So stay up late singing karaoke and then enjoy the race with a cold glass of sake to see if anyone has anything for Hamilton or if he will simply leave them all in his dust. Hope to see you then to find out!