The Herald on Sunday

Motorsport: Hamilton predicting excitement in Shanghai after claiming pole

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LEWIS Hamilton was expecting a rainthreat­ened Chinese Grand Prix to provide one of the most exciting races in recent times after he held off Sebastian Vettel to claim his second pole position of the new Formula One season.

Vettel, the four-time world champion, cemented his status as Hamilton’s No 1 rival this year by virtue of his victory at the opening round in Australia a fortnight ago. And the title protagonis­ts will do battle once more this morning after they locked out the front row of the grid following an enthrallin­g qualifying session in Shanghai.

The bad weather which wreaked havoc with Friday’s practice schedule, and forced the sport’s new owners to consider moving the grand prix forward by 24 hours, was poised for a menacing return this morning. But Hamilton was hoping a combinatio­n of the wet weather, and his new rivalry with Vettel, would lead to a fascinatin­g spectacle as he bid to get his championsh­ip assault back on track.

“It is more exciting than ever for me because we are really fighting with these guys,” said a beaming Hamilton after posting the fastest lap recorded at the Shanghai Internatio­nal Circuit. It is amazing and that is what racing is all about, and it really pushes you to raise the bar every time you go out, which I love.

“Tomorrow is going to be an unusual day. I heard it is wet to start off and I have not driven the new wet tyre this season. It will be a new lesson but it is going to be close, and that bodes well for one of the most exciting days to come for a long time.”

Clear skies in Shanghai yesterday ensured the cars roared back into life following Friday’s farce in which the circuit was open for just 20 minutes of action. And while it appeared that Vettel held the advantage after topping the order in practice in the morning, before going faster than Hamilton in the first two phases of qualifying, it was the Mercedes man who made it matter when it counted.

He held his nerve to finish 0.186 seconds ahead of the German and celebrated by climbing on top of the scaffoldin­g adorning the pit straight to pump his fist and salute his large legion of Chinese fans in the main grandstand, many of whom were waving Union Jacks.

His Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas finished third, just one thousandth­s of a second slower than Vettel. Kimi Raikkonen was fourth in the sister Ferrari.

“If we could have been a bit quicker at the end I would have enjoyed it more,” said Vettel. “Maybe I lost a little bit in the last corner, and maybe I chickened out on the brakes a bit too soon, but it was obviously very close with Valtteri so it was a good job we got enough margin to make it to the front row.”

There was more misery for Briton’s Jolyon Palmer who qualified 18th and was then demoted to the back after ignoring the yellow flags deployed when new boy Antonio Giovinazzi crashed in his Sauber as he exited the final corner.

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