British GP Qualifying: George Russell beats Lewis Hamilton, Lando Norris to Silverstone pole as Red Bull hit trouble | F1 News

British GP Qualifying: George Russell beats Lewis Hamilton, Lando Norris to Silverstone pole as Red Bull hit trouble | F1 News



George Russell edged out Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton and McLaren’s Lando Norris to pole position for the British GP as the race’s three home drivers waged an intense fight to head Sunday’s Silverstone grid.

For the first-time ever in the history of the British GP, and the first time anywhere in F1 since 1968, the front three positions on the grid will be taken up by a trio of British drivers.

Russell, who won last week’s Austrian GP after profiting from the collision between Norris and Max Verstappen, took his second pole in four races by a 0.171s margin from Hamilton after a final lap of 1:25.819.

On a difficult and disappointing day world championship leaders Red Bull, Verstappen qualified only fourth after his pace was compromised by floor damage sustained when an error sent him through the gravel at Copse corner amid on-off rain during a frantic Q1 session.

Sergio Perez spins and beaches his car in the gravel bringing out the red flag and he is out in Q1!

But qualifying was again far worse for team-mate Sergio Perez whose recent woes deepened after he spun out at the same turn, beached his car in the gravel and qualified on the back row in 19th place.

With the Red Bulls out of the pole picture, Russell, Hamilton and Norris took centre stage in front of the passionate home Silverstone crowd and turned the battle for pole in to an exclusive all-British fight.

Karun Chandhok analyses George Russell and Lewis Hamilton’s fastest laps during qualifying of the British GP.

Oscar Piastri was fifth in the second McLaren with Nico Hulkenberg again impressing in qualifying to take sixth, ahead of both Ferraris as the Scuderia suffered fresh disappointment.

Carlos Sainz was only seventh while Charles Leclerc was knocked out in Q2 and will start from 11th.

More to follow…

British GP Qualifying: Top 10

1) George Russell, Mercedes

2) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes

3) Lando Norris, McLaren

4) Max Verstappen, Red Bull

5) Oscar Piastri, McLaren

6) Nico Hulkenberg, Haas

7) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari

8) Lance Stroll, Aston Martin

9) Alex Albon, Williams

10) Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin

Sky Sports F1’s live British GP schedule (all F1 sessions on Sky Showcase)

Here’s what you can look forward to during coverage of this weekend’s British Grand Prix.

Sunday July 7
8:15am: F3 Feature Race
9:50am: F2 Feature Race
11:50am: Porsche Supercup
1:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – British GP build-up
3pm: The BRITISH GRAND PRIX
5pm: Chequered Flag: British GP reaction
6pm: Ted’s Notebook

F1’s summer triple-header concludes with the big one, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Watch every session live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Showcase, with Sunday’s race at 3pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Austrian GP: Lando Norris ‘excited’ to challenge Max Verstappen after Red Bull driver takes pole | F1 News

Austrian GP: Lando Norris ‘excited’ to challenge Max Verstappen after Red Bull driver takes pole | F1 News



Lando Norris says he is “excited” to see if McLaren can mount a challenge against Max Verstappen in Sunday’s Austrian Grand Prix by maintaining their strong recent race pace.

As had been the case in Sprint Qualifying on Friday, Norris qualified second behind Red Bull’s Verstappen on Saturday, but the 0.4s margin between the top two was far greater than it had been 24 hours earlier.

Setup changes made by Red Bull, after Verstappen had held off a strong challenge from Norris and McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri in the 23-lap Sprint race, appeared to have a hugely positive impact as the Dutchman dominated.

Despite admitting Verstappen’s performance was somewhat ominous, Norris held on to the hope that McLaren can maintain their recent trend of being stronger on Sunday than Saturday.

Highlights of qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix

“It’s another day,” Norris said. “Things can change and conditions are going to be very warm again.

“The races have been very good to us lately, one of our strengths relative to qualifying, so I’m excited to see what we can do.”

Norris displayed promising early pace in the Sprint as he overtook Verstappen for the lead, but lost concentration to allow the Red Bull straight back through along with Piastri.

Max Verstappen somehow held off a charging Lando Norris to maintain the lead during the early stages of the Sprint

Asked what his plan is for the start of Sunday’s race, Norris said: “Kind of the same, but not.

“Just tidying up a few things from before. I know what I did wrong, it was obviously very clear.

“From the pace advantage Max had today, that’s probably going to carry into something tomorrow as well.”

Verstappen hopes ‘improved balance’ translates to race

Having ended a streak of three races without a pole position, Verstappen was hopeful that the clear improvements Red Bull made after the Sprint will carry over into the race.

“That’s of course something that I hope is going to be good as well,” he said.

Max Verstappen looks ahead to his front-row battle with Lando Norris at the Austrian Grand Prix, saying it’ll be a long race with many factors

“I will find out tomorrow. I felt like the car just improved a bit balance-wise, which hopefully will help the tyres tomorrow as well because it’s still going to be a hot and long race.

“So you really have to look after the tyres, and that’s what we’ll try to do.”

Having helped him dominate the sport for much of the last two years, Verstappen has been uncomfortable in the RB20 in recent weeks despite battling his way to some impressive results.

Anthony Davidson was at the SkyPad to analyse how Red Bull’s Max Verstappen comfortably beat McLaren’s Lando Norris to start on pole for Sunday’s race in Austria

Asked how the team have been able to optimise the car at the Red Bull Ring, he added: “Just a more stable balance, a bit more connected front to rear. And that worked out well.

“I think we made the right changes. And then you can see that it’s little things that sometimes can actually make quite a bit of a difference in lap time.

So I’m, of course, very happy with that because, like I said before, we haven’t had the easiest of runs, and I think pure pace has been a bit harder for us compared to the last two years. So this is definitely very positive for everyone.”

Russell confident of podium chance

While the front row is reverse from last week’s starting order in Barcelona, third place remains the same, with Mercedes’ George Russell having benefitted from Piastri being demoted due to a track limits violation.

Russell produced a stunning start in Spain to take the lead around the outside of the first corner, but admits that he is more likely to be focused on the cars behind him this time around.

George Russell admitted his battle isn’t with Lando Norris, but with keeping the Ferrari’s and McLaren’s Oscar Piastri behind

The second and third rows will both be Mercedes-Ferrari, with Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc starting alongside Russell and team-mate Lewis Hamilton, respectively.

Despite his lack of expectation in terms of troubling Verstappen and Norris, Russell is confident of holding off the Ferraris and a potentially charging Piastri from seventh for the final podium spot.

“Lando and Oscar seem a little bit quicker than us,” Russell said. “Obviously Max is down the road at the moment.

Highlights of the Sprint from the Austrian Grand Prix

“I’m confident Lewis and I can probably beat the Ferraris tomorrow and probably hold up Oscar’s progress, but it’s a long race, high degradation, anything could happen.

“I think it’s a bit more challenging here. These guys always get their elbows out. So maybe this time sit back and watch it all take place. Last week I lost a lot time battling with Lando and probably focused too much on the guys ahead of me and ultimately that cost me a position to Lewis. I think the race is behind tomorrow.”

Sky Sports F1’s live Austrian GP schedule

Sunday June 30
7.25am: F3 Feature Race
8.55am: F2 Feature Race
12:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Austrian GP build-up*
2pm: The AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX*
4pm: Chequered Flag: Austrian GP reaction*
5pm: Ted’s Notebook

*also live on Sky Sports Main Event

F1’s triple-header continues with the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring. Watch every session live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s big race at 2pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Austrian GP: Max Verstappen beats Lando Norris and George Russell to pole at Red Bull Ring | F1 News

Austrian GP: Max Verstappen beats Lando Norris and George Russell to pole at Red Bull Ring | F1 News



Max Verstappen claimed his 40th F1 pole position by beating Lando Norris in qualifying for the Austrian Grand Prix.

Verstappen, who won the Sprint earlier on Saturday, has been on top form all weekend and took pole by 0.404s from Norris on the shortest track on the calendar in terms of lap time.

Oscar Piastri had gone third fastest in qualifying but had his lap time deleted for track limits at Turn Six, so George Russell was promoted to third, with Carlos Sainz in fourth.

Piastri dropped four places to seventh, behind Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc, who nearly crashed at the end of Q3 at the penultimate corner.

Sergio Perez qualified eighth, with Nico Hulkenberg in ninth but under investigation for two pit lane infringements, and Esteban Ocon was 10th.

More to follow…

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Sky Sports F1’s live Austrian GP schedule

Saturday June 29
12.25pm: F2 Sprint
2pm: Austrian GP Qualifying build-up
3pm: Austrian GP Qualifying
5pm: Ted’s Qualifying Notebook

Sunday June 30
7.25am: F3 Feature Race
8.55am: F2 Feature Race
12:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Austrian GP build-up*
2pm: The AUSTRIAN GRAND PRIX*
4pm: Chequered Flag: Austrian GP reaction*
5pm: Ted’s Notebook

*also live on Sky Sports Main Event

F1’s triple-header continues with the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring. Watch every session live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s big race at 2pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Spanish GP: Lando Norris reveals how McLaren fire changed preparations before ‘perfect’ pole lap | F1 News

Spanish GP: Lando Norris reveals how McLaren fire changed preparations before ‘perfect’ pole lap | F1 News



Lando Norris says his pole position lap for the Spanish Grand Prix was a “work of art” after he came out on top in a thrilling qualifying, just hours after a fire at McLaren’s hospitality.

Norris pipped Max Verstappen by 0.020s to claim the second pole position of his F1 career, with both drivers showing their class in an extremely competitive weekend at the front of the field.

Verstappen benefitted from a slipstream as Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez helped him but Norris tactically got a tow from Alpine’s Esteban Ocon on his last Q3 lap.

“We planned for it (the tow from Esteban Ocon). I knew Max was going to do it. Oscar and I lost out on a one-two in Imola Qualifying because of the slipstream that Max did,” Norris told Sky Sports F1.

“It has been clear all weekend that we needed to get a slipstream so we planned to get a slipstream. It was quite simple.

Lando Norris believes his pole position at the Spanish Grand Prix in his McLaren as his ‘best lap ever’.

“It was in the plan the whole time. It didn’t gain me as much as you think, it gained me maybe five or six hundredths. Max also got a slipstream so I didn’t gain more on him because of that.

“It was just that my lap was beautiful. Today felt like a work of art. Every corner just flowed and my body moved in the right way.

“You know when you don’t have to think about it. It is the one lap I didn’t think and things just flowed perfectly.”

Zak Brown felt Lando Norris’ pole lap was ‘fantastic’ after McLaren suffered a fire in the motor home prior to P3.

Norris’ only previous pole came in September 2021 at the Russian Grand Prix and he earned his first win last month in Miami.

The 24-year-old narrowly missed out on pole in Imola and Montreal by less than a tenth, but was on the right side of the line this time around with a brilliant lap.

“I am disappointed that I am only two hundredths ahead on pole from Max because it felt like I should be even more,” continued Norris.

“But then I think that makes it sweeter because, for me to have done such a perfect lap, and have still beaten Max shows that they were clearly quicker all day today and had the quicker car but we still managed to beat them, so that is a nice thing.

Onboard Lando Norris’ pole lap at the Spanish Grand Prix.

“You are just more in your subconscious mind. You are just looking where you are going and letting your hands do the rest.

“I am not good at describing it like (Lewis and Senna) that I leave my body or my mind. I have got no idea but in any sport, that is the level you have got to be at where things just flow.

“You know what to do so you don’t have to consciously think about it which is what felt so good. I am happy I found that because it has been a long, long time since I have been in that rhythm.

“All weekend I have been able to be more in that state, more in the flow, and it has paid off.”

How McLaren fire impacted Norris

Earlier on Saturday, ahead of final practice, McLaren’s hospitality suite caught fire and the team were forced to evacuate the building.

A team member was sent to hospital for precautionary checks, but was discharged later on Saturday. The hospitality can’t be used for the rest of the weekend in Barcelona.

Norris and Oscar Piastri were not able to use their drivers’ rooms but the British driver says he has “no real issues”, other than not being able to relax by himself.

An evacuation was called in the paddock after a fire broke out in the McLaren hospitality suite ahead of Practice 3 and Qualifying.

“The best thing is everyone is safe and doing well. That’s the best news. A scare for the whole team and never a nice thing,” said Norris.

“It was just more of a stressful day than I would have liked. I lost my shoes but that was as bad as it got for me.

“Just different. I’ve not been in my normal room, so wasn’t able to relax as much as I normally do. A lot of the teams have been very nice to us to help out. A shame we can’t use it for the rest of the weekend.”

Sky Sports F1’s live Spanish GP schedule

Spanish GP Qualifying Timesheet

Driver Team Time
1) George Russell Mercedes 1:12.000
2) Max Verstappen Red Bull +0.000
3) Lando Norris McLaren +0.021
4) Oscar Piastri McLaren +0.103
5) Daniel Ricciardo RB +0.178
6) Fernando Alonso Aston Martin +0.228
7) Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +0.280
8) Yuki Tsunoda RB +0.414
9) Lance Stroll Aston Martin +0.701
10) Alex Albon Williams +0.796
Knocked out in Q2
11) Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:12.691
12) Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:12.728
13) Logan Sargeant Williams 1:12.736
14) Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:12.916
15) Pierre Gasly Alpine 1:12.940
Knocked out in Q1
16) Sergio Perez Red Bull 1:13.326
17) Valtteri Bottas Sauber 1:13.366
18) Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:13.435
19) Nico Hulkenberg Haas 1:13.978
20) Zhou Guanyu Sauber 1:14.292

Sunday June 23
7.45am: F1 Academy Race 2
9am: F3 Feature Race
10.30am: F2 Feature Race
12:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Spanish GP build-up
2pm: The SPANISH GRAND PRIX
4pm: Chequered Flag: Spanish GP reaction

Formula 1 heads back to Europe as the championship moves on to Barcelona for the Spanish Grand Prix and the start of a triple-header. Watch every session at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya this weekend, live on Sky Sports F1. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Spanish GP Qualifying: Lando Norris produces last-gasp pole lap to beat Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton | F1 News

Spanish GP Qualifying: Lando Norris produces last-gasp pole lap to beat Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton | F1 News



Lando Norris produced a sensational final lap to defeat Max Verstappen and secure just his second Formula 1 pole position in a thrillingly competitive Spanish GP qualifying.

In a session that underlined McLaren’s growing strength and the ever-increasing competition at the front of F1 after two years of Verstappen-Red Bull dominance, Norris delivered under pressure when it mattered around the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya with a final lap of 1:11.383.

Verstappen had held provisional pole after the first Q3 laps and improved by two tenths more on his final attempt, but Norris made the difference seconds later by a mere 0.020s.

Mercedes will start from a second-row lockout after their own improvement continued in a competitive hour when they were a factor throughout.

For just the second time in 10 races this season, Lewis Hamilton out-qualified team-mate George Russell and will start a season-best third.

George Russell was unhappy with team-mate Lewis Hamilton’s pace during qualifying at the Spanish Grand Prix.

Mercedes outpaced Ferrari, with Charles Leclerc and home favourite Carlos Sainz to start fifth and sixth respectively.

Incredibly, just 0.035s separated those four cars.

Pierre Gasly was a stunning sixth on a morale-boosting weekend for Alpine, which also saw Esteban Ocon make Q3 in ninth.

Sergio Perez, who gave team-mate Verstappen a tow on his final lap, was only eighth and will drop to 11th on Sunday’s grid owing to a three-place penalty carried over from Canada.

More to follow…

Sky Sports F1’s live Spanish GP schedule

Sunday June 23
7.45am: F1 Academy Race 2
9am: F3 Feature Race
10.30am: F2 Feature Race
12:30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Spanish GP build-up
2pm: The SPANISH GRAND PRIX
4pm: Chequered Flag: Spanish GP reaction

Formula 1 heads back to Europe as the championship moves on to Barcelona for the Spanish Grand Prix and the start of a triple-header. Watch every session at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya this weekend, live on Sky Sports F1. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Jamie Chadwick: British driver to start on pole position for Indy NXT race at Road America live on Sky Sports | F1 News

Jamie Chadwick: British driver to start on pole position for Indy NXT race at Road America live on Sky Sports | F1 News



Britain’s Jamie Chadwick will start on pole position for the Indy NXT race at Road America, which is live on Sky Sports Mix on Sunday at 6.05pm.

Chadwick was claiming her maiden pole position in Indy NXT, which is a feeder series to IndyCar, and is just the third woman to achieve that feat.

In May, the 26-year-old became the first woman to stand on the podium in Indy NXT when she took third place at Indianapolis.

She will look to stand on the top step of the podium after Sunday’s 20-lap race, which begins at 6.05 on Sky Sports Mix. Viewers with a Sky box can tune into Sky Sports Mix for free and can watch the IndyCar race at Road America at 8.30pm on the same channel.

“I’m so happy. We struggled a little bit this weekend chasing balance. When [team-mate) Louis [Foster] did the lap he did, I knew we would have a good car,” said Chadwick.

“Track conditions improving, this is our shot in our group, as well. I really thought we could make the most of this opportunity. It’s going to be a tough race, but I’m confident in what we can do.”

Chadwick also launched a new initiative in an attempt to increase female participation in grassroots motorsport earlier this year.

The three-time W Series champion partnered with Daytona Motorsport in a year-long commitment to provide free karting and mentorship for girls.

She is the UK’s most decorated active female motorsport driver, having dominated all three years of the W Series before crossing over to the fiercely-competitive Indy NXT series.

Chadwick is also part of F1 team Williams’ driver academy, and is taking on a mentoring role with their F1 representative Lia Block this season in F1 Academy.

Sky Sports Mix’s live Road America schedule

Sunday June 9
6.05pm: Indy NXT
8.30pm: IndyCar Race

Sky Sports F1’s live Canadian GP

Sunday June 9
5.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – Canadian GP build-up
7pm: THE CANADIAN GRAND PRIX
9pm: Chequered Flag – Canadian GP reaction
10pm: Ted’s Notebook

Formula 1 is on Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix this weekend live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s race at 7pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Canadian GP: Mercedes back on F1 pole position as George Russell says result ‘start of something’ for 2024 season | F1 News

Canadian GP: Mercedes back on F1 pole position as George Russell says result ‘start of something’ for 2024 season | F1 News



George Russell believes his superb pole position for Mercedes at the Canadian Grand Prix is the “start of something for our season” while Toto Wolff is optimistic the team are finally “going in the right direction” in F1’s current era of rules.

For just the third time since the end of the 2021 season that yielded their record-extending eighth consecutive constructors’ title, Mercedes will start a race on pole position, having unexpectedly proved the car to beat around the demanding Circuit Gilles Villeneuve so far.

Russell set the same best Q3 lap of 1:12.000 as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen at the end of a dramatic qualifying hour but the Mercedes driver will start Sunday’s 7pm race on pole as he set the time first.

Russell’s pole is just his second in F1 and Mercedes’ first since Lewis Hamilton’s in Hungary last July.

“We said it in Monaco that we hope this is the start of something for our season, and I think it is,” said Russell, in reference to the encouragement Mercedes felt about their latest upgrade package – including a new front wing – introduced at the last race, which is running again on the W15 in Canada.

“I’ve missed this feeling.”

Team-mate Hamilton had also looked set to join Russell in making a return to the grid’s leading positions but dropped from second to a disappointing seventh on the final run of qualifying.

Having set identical times, Mercedes’ George Russell pipped Max Verstappen to pole position in Canada having completed his lap first.

F1’s teams and drivers have experienced a challenging weekend amid changeable weather conditions in Montreal.

Friday’s practice running was compromised by rain and on Saturday, although drivers were able to run the sessions on slick dry tyres throughout, there was light drizzle at points during qualifying on a newly-re-laid track surface that has proved tough for teams to master.

Red Bull’s Sergio Perez dropped out in Q1, while Monaco victors Ferrari shockingly failed to get either of their cars out of Q2, yet Mercedes barely appeared troubled at any stage of qualifying.

“The car has been so quick this weekend,” acknowledged Russell to Sky Sports F1.

“The team have done an amazing job bringing all these upgrades to the car and finally this hard work is translating into results.

“We have been zig-zagging for quite a while now and slowly those zig-zags have narrowed down and we have really honed in to what we need from this car.

George Russell was delighted with the progress Mercedes have made after securing pole at the Canadian Grand Prix.

“This last upgrade we brought, it was a small change but it’s bringing more performance than we initially expected. So we’re pursuing that direction now. It’s only been two races and definitely unique circuits, but the performance this weekend has just been unreal.”

Wolff explains how Mercedes have finally balanced out their car

Mercedes’ ‘zig-zagging’ has included the adoption of different design concepts since the introduction of the current ground-effect technical regulations in 2022 in the search of an elusive breakthrough.

The team’s third car for the current era, this year’s W15, featured yet more wholesale changes but the team started the year clearly behind Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren.

Highlights of qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix.

They are still yet to finish on the podium in eight races but had already felt before Canada that momentum was belatedly building.

“We’re on pole position and that was amazing. His lap was great,” said a delighted Wolff, Mercedes’ team principal, to Sky Sports F1 after qualifying.

“As we’ve said for a while, we’re going in the right direction. We’ve brought lots of little bits over the last few races, some more visible than others, but definitely heading to a more performant car.

“I think we have a grip now on the car. One swallow doesn’t make a summer. The lap was great but we need to keep both feet on the ground.

Karun Chandhok is at the SkyPad to analyse where George Russell gained time on his Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton as he sealed pole in Canada.

“Three races ago we were really not good enough and now we have a pole position and a good result. Hopefully we can materialise that tomorrow in a race. I think if we’re able to be good on the long runs, you can count more on us on the next few races as well.”

Asked what specifically had improved, Wolff replied: “I think more downforce, more downforce in the right places. We were either fast in the low speed and slow in the high-speed or the other way around.

“We kind of never got the right balance in there. Now the drivers say the car is well balanced.”

Sky Sports F1’s live Canadian GP schedule

A look back at some of the most dramatic moments from the Canadian Grand Prix.

Sunday June 9
5.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – Canadian GP build-up
7pm: THE CANADIAN GRAND PRIX
9pm: Chequered Flag – Canadian GP reaction
10pm: Ted’s Notebook

Formula 1 is on Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix and you can watch every session at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve this weekend live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s race at 7pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes driver bemused by continued qualifying struggles as George Russell takes Canadian GP pole | F1 News

Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes driver bemused by continued qualifying struggles as George Russell takes Canadian GP pole | F1 News



Lewis Hamilton was at a loss to explain why the strong pace he had shown during Canadian Grand Prix practice fell away in qualifying as his Mercedes team-mate George Russell took pole.  

The seven-time world champion set a stunning pace to top final practice at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve earlier on Saturday and appeared to be joint-favourite with Russell for pole going into the final part of qualifying.

However, after sitting second on the timesheet behind Russell after the first runs in Q3, Hamilton was unable to improve and ended up a hugely disappointing seventh.

“The car was feeling great all weekend and as soon as we got to qualifying, that kind of vanished for me,” Hamilton told Sky Sports F1.

“The grip just disappears for me. P3, I had plenty of pace in me, and then get to qualifying and the tyres won’t work.

“Nothing had changed on the car.”

Highlights of qualifying for the Canadian Grand Prix

Russell now holds an 8-1 advantage over Hamilton in qualifying this season, which is the 39-year-old’s last with the team before he joins Ferrari next year.

Mercedes have been off the pace of Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren during the opening eight rounds of the seasons, but upgrades have finally put them in a position to challenge the leading trio, at least at certain circuits.

Hamilton added: “Congratulations to George for a great job. It’s really great for the team.

“Obviously, everyone has worked so hard to bring upgrades back at the factory, so this will be a real huge boost for everyone back at the factory.”

Wolff: We can’t comprehend it

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff admitted that he was also confused as to why Hamilton struggled at the end of the session.

While Russell also failed to improve on his first Q3 time, hanging on to pole by virtue of having set an identical time to Verstappen before the Dutchman, Hamilton’s drop-off on the second run was far more significant.

Karun Chandhok is at the SkyPad to analyse where George Russell gained time on his Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton as he sealed pole in Canada

“It seemed that Lewis was actually having the upper hand and both cars comfortably beating everyone,” Wolff told Sky Sports F1.

“And then at the end, it got so tight, also for George, and Lewis – the time didn’t show up.

“We can’t comprehend at the moment why it wasn’t a little bit more in our favour.”

Hamilton will start behind the all-McLaren second row of Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri, along with RB’s Daniel Ricciardo in fifth and Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso in sixth.

Sky Sports F1’s live Canadian GP schedule

A look back at some of the most dramatic moments from the Canadian Grand Prix

Sunday June 9
5.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – Canadian GP build-up
7pm: THE CANADIAN GRAND PRIX
9pm: Chequered Flag – Canadian GP reaction
10pm: Ted’s Notebook

Formula 1 is on Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix and you can watch every session at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve this weekend live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s race at 7pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime

Canadian GP: George Russell pips Max Verstappen to Montreal pole position in dramatic qualifying | F1 News

Canadian GP: George Russell pips Max Verstappen to Montreal pole position in dramatic qualifying | F1 News



George Russell took pole position from Max Verstappen for the Canadian Grand Prix despite the pair setting identical times in a thrilling qualifying.

Russell set his 1:12.000 before Verstappen to take his second career pole in F1 and Mercedes’ first since last year’s Hungarian Grand Prix.

Lando Norris was just 0.021s away from pole as he took third from McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri, while Lewis Hamilton had to settle for seventh, having shown great speed in final practice.

It was a dramatic qualifying at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve as both Ferraris of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz were knocked out in Q2 and Sergio Perez was eliminated in Q1.

Daniel Ricciardo recorded his best qualifying of the season in fifth, in front of Fernando Alonso and Hamilton.

Yuki Tsunoda, who was confirmed to stay at RB for 2025 earlier on Saturday, took eighth, from home driver Lance Stroll and Williams’ Alex Albon.

More to follow…

Sky Sports F1’s live Canadian GP schedule

A look back at some of the most dramatic moments from the Canadian Grand Prix

Sunday June 9
5.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday – Canadian GP build-up
7pm: THE CANADIAN GRAND PRIX
9pm: Chequered Flag – Canadian GP reaction
10pm: Ted’s Notebook

Formula 1 is on Montreal for the Canadian Grand Prix and you can watch every session at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve this weekend live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s race at 7pm. Stream every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership – No contract, cancel anytime