The Malta Independent on Sunday

Russell grabs first F1 pole, Verstappen qualifies 10th

-

George Russell stole the show Saturday at the Hungarian Grand Prix by earning his first career pole and first of the season for Mercedes — on the same day F1 champion and current points leader Max Verstappen qualified a season-worst 10th.

Russell screamed in celebratio­n after a fast final qualifying lap helped him beat Ferrari drivers Carlos Sainz Jr. and Charles Leclerc.

"Whooooo, come on! Yes! Hahahaha. You beauty! You beauty!" yelled Russell before jumping into the arms of his engineers.

The Mercedes pace was surprising since Russell claimed Mercedes' second practice was "disastrous" on Friday, when Russell was about a full second slower than Leclerc's leading time.

Verstappen unleashed expletives as his qualifying bid was undone. He struggled with grip then complained of having "no power ... nothing works" on his second attempt.

"I still don't know what it is. I need to talk to the team, but I hope everything is fixable," Verstappen said.

The Hungarorin­g track, nestled amid rolling hills just outside of Budapest, dried out somewhat for afternoon qualifying following a huge downpour during the third practice.

Leclerc — who leads F1 with seven poles this season — crashed while leading the French GP last Sunday to hand Verstappen a win that gave the Dutchman a 63-point lead over Leclerc in the standings.

But now Leclerc has an ideal chance to close the gap on Sunday on one of F1's hardest tracks for passing.

Verstappen's Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez had a disappoint­ing session and starts from 11th place.

Lando Norris of McLaren qualified fourth followed by Esteban Ocon — last year's winner — Alpine teammate Fernando Alonso and Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton, who is F1's record holder with 103 poles.

Russell, who replaced Valtteri Bottas at Mercedes this year, landed his seat in part by overperfor­ming for struggling backmarker Williams last year with an incredible performanc­e in the wet to qualify second for the Belgian GP.

After a first pole, the British driver is eyeing a first win.

Russell has what it takes to reach the top, Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff believes.

"This is one of many milestones to come. George is a champion in the making," Wolff said. "We would never have put him in a Mercedes if he didn't think he could become a world champion."

Hamilton had some bad luck as his drag reduction system stuck.

Sainz called his form "nothing special" and conceded Russell "deserves that pole," while Leclerc said he "struggled massively in Q3" because "the tires were definitely not in the right window."

At least he has Verstappen where he wants him, seven cars back.

"Max might take a few more laps to come to the front," Leclerc said.

WET PRACTICE

Drivers had earlier tackled a difficult rain-drenched third practice.

Aston Martin driver Sebastian Vettel lost the rear tires and went backward into the crash barriers, bringing out a red flag with about 10 minutes to go. The session restarted with four minutes left.

After the intense heat of Friday, rain began thundering down around midday and the Hungarorin­g was drenched by the 1 p.m. start.

The Ferraris were the first to go out and Leclerc slid as he missed a chicane.

As rain got even heavier and visibility worsened, Vettel — who is retiring at the end of the season — missed a turn and AlphaTauri's Pierre Gasly just avoided a crash barrier then later did a 360 spin.

Russell said he was "struggling a lot," Ricciardo spoke of having "absolutely no grip" and Haas driver Mick Schumacher complained his rear tires felt like they were slipping on ice.

Williams driver Nicholas Latifi surprised everyone by posting the fastest time on his final lap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta