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Hamilton grabs Canadian GP pole, ties Senna on all-time list

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MONTREAL: Lewis Hamilton held the bright yellow helmet over his head for the cheering crowd to see, and gave it a kiss as if he had already won the weekend’s biggest prize.

The souvenir: A helmet worn by Ayrton Senna , whose family sent it in anticipati­on of one three-time Formula One champion matching another by claiming his 65th career pole position on Saturday at the Canadian Grand Prix.

“This is the most special thing I have, above all my trophies and everything,” Hamilton said after setting a record at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve with a qualifying lap of 1 minute, 11.459 seconds . “I’m shaken, speechless. Ayrton, he was why I wanted to be here today.”

Hamilton remains three poles behind Michael Schumacher’s career record of 68. But it was Senna, Hamilton’s favorite driver, who was the target.

And seeing the yellow helmet brought back memories of his childhood in Britain, where he would pop in videotapes of Senna’s races and say, “That’s my driver.”

“That’s what kids notice, the yellow helmet,” Hamilton said. “As a kid, I would come home and I would go, ‘If I’m really lucky and can get to Formula One, I want to emulate Ayrton.’“A fivetime winner at the Canadian GP, which celebrates its 50th anniversar­y, Hamilton already led qualifying — but by just four one-thousandth­s of a second over Sebastien Vettel — when he made his final trip around the circuit.

It was the fastest qualifying lap ever at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, almost 1.5 seconds faster than the pace that won him last year’s pole and even one second better than Vettel ran in his Ferrari during Saturday morning’s practice.

“It was a sexy lap,” Hamilton said. Vettel was still on the track, with another chance to catch Hamilton. But the F1 leader lost time in Turn 2 and could not make up the time. He finished three-hundredths behind, followed by Valtteri Bottas in the other Mercedes and Kimi Raikkonen in the other Ferrari.

“He was the better man today,” Vettel said. “But the car is really good. It should be really good in the race.” Vettel holds a 129-104 lead over Hamilton in the standings as Mercedes and Ferrari have dueled in one of the most competitiv­e seasons in recent memory.

“I’m expecting it to be very close in the race with Ferrari,” Bottas said. “It’s all about tomorrow.”

Hamilton was seventh in Monaco in the last race , his lowest finish this year and his second time missing the podium in six races. But a return to Canada, where he earned his first victory in 2007 and is the two-time defending champion, gives Mercedes a chance to close the gap in the standings.

“I really do love this track,” he said. “Today we showed that we can have an answer (to Ferrari) if we put the work in.” Red Bull drivers Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo were fifth and sixth in qualifying, and Felipe Massa was seventh in what has come to be known as

the “best of the rest.”

 ??  ?? Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, of Great Britain, holds up a racing helmet of former F1 driver Ayrton Senna after winning pole position at the F1 Canadian Grand Prix auto race Saturday in Montreal. (AP)
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, of Great Britain, holds up a racing helmet of former F1 driver Ayrton Senna after winning pole position at the F1 Canadian Grand Prix auto race Saturday in Montreal. (AP)

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