Sunday Tribune

Hamilton equals Schumacher’s pole record

-

SPA-FRANCORCHA­MPS: Triple world champion Lewis Hamilton yesterday equalled Formula One great Michael Schumacher’s all-time record of 68 pole positions with a dominant performanc­e in Belgian Grand Prix qualifying.

The Mercedes driver, who will be starting his 200th race today, was fastest in every phase of the hour-long session to take pole with a time of one minute 42.553 seconds, a track record.

Ferrari’s championsh­ip leader Sebastian Vettel, who is 14 points ahead of the Briton with nine races remaining, joined his title rival on the front row after pulling out a late flying lap of 1:42.795.

Finland’s Valtteri Bottas qualified third for Mercedes with Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen, a four-times winner in Belgium who helped Vettel by giving him an aerodynami­c ‘tow’ when it mattered, taking the fourth slot.

Schumacher, whose 91 race wins and seven championsh­ips will still take some beating, set his pole record at Magny-cours in France in July 2006.

The German has not been seen in public since he suffered severe head injuries in a skiing accident in France in 2013 but a message from the family was delivered to Hamilton by former Ferrari technical head Ross Brawn.

“They want to congratula­te you on equalling Michael’s record and, as Michael always said, records are there to be beaten,” said Brawn, former Mercedes principal and now a managing director for Formula One.

Hamilton was clearly moved by both his achievemen­t and the message.

“I think and pray for Michael all the time. I’ve had the privilege of racing with him and always admired him and still do,” he told the crowd.

“I’m just honoured to be up there with him now in the poles but he will still be one of the greatest of all time.”

Hamilton took over from Schumacher, who had retired from Ferrari in 2006 but returned with Mercedes in 2010, after joining from Mclaren in 2013.

The Briton’s lap was more than four seconds quicker than last year’s pole, set by now-retired champion Nico Rosberg, and Hamilton said Mercedes had done an amazing job.

“To be up here ahead of the Ferrari is an amazing feeling. This is one of my favourite circuits so to come here and put a lap together like that is a dream,” he said.

Dutch 19-year-old Max Verstappen, who started on the front row last season, will start fifth for Red Bull in front of an army of orange-shirted fans making the short trip across the border.

His Australian team-mate Daniel Ricciardo was sixth, ahead of Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg whose team-mate Jolyon Palmer was faster until a gearbox problem sidelined him in the final session.

Belgian driver Stoffel Vandoorne will start his first home grand prix in last place after qualifying 15th for Mclaren but with a 65-place grid penalty.

Honda’s Motogp champion Marc Marquez yesterday took his fourth pole position in a row in qualifying for today's British Grand Prix at Silverston­e, with Yamaha rival Valentino Rossi alongside on the front row.

Britain’s Cal Crutchlow, who was on pole last year and finished second, took the final front-row slot on the non-works LCR Honda.

Yamaha’s Maverick Vinales, the 2016 race winner on a Suzuki, starts fourth.

Marquez leads Italian Andrea Dovizioso, who qualified sixth for Ducati, by 16 points in the standings with Rossi fourth and 33 points behind the Spaniard.

Rossi’s time was a mere 0.084 slower than Marquez, whose lap of one minute 59.941 seconds was a record by a Motogp rider at the circuit.

Today’s race starts at 1.30pm (SA time), avoiding a clash with the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix at Spa-francorcha­mps which gets under way at 12 noon (SA time). – Reuters

 ??  ?? ALAN BALDWIN
ALAN BALDWIN
 ??  ?? POLES APART: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain after yesterday’s qualifying session for today’s Belgian Grand Prix in Spa-francorcha­mps.
POLES APART: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain after yesterday’s qualifying session for today’s Belgian Grand Prix in Spa-francorcha­mps.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa