San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Ferrari out front for Miami debut

- By Jenna Fryer

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Ferrari stormed to the front of the grid for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix as Formula One championsh­ip leader Charles Leclerc and teammate Carlos Sainz Jr. locked up the front row in Saturday qualifying.

It’s the first time Ferrari will lead the field to green in the United States since Michael Schumacher won the pole at Indianapol­is Motor Speedway in 2006. It’s the first front row this season for Sainz, who has been outqualifi­ed by Leclerc in all five sessions.

Leclerc has won three poles this year headed into Sunday, the first F1 race at the purpose-built circuit around Hard Rock Stadium. The race marks the first of two this year in the U.S. — which has not hosted two F1 races in the same year since 1984.

Leclerc turned to the roaring crowd and waved while being interviewe­d by Danica Patrick, the retired IndyCar and NASCAR driver.

“The fans are crazy. It’s incredible to be here in the U.S. and see how much the support has grown over the last few years,” Leclerc said. “I’ve seen so many people in the grandstand­s. It definitely motivates us.”

Reigning world champion Max Verstappen led the final qualifying segment until the Dutchman made a rare error and both Ferrari’s surged ahead of him in the final seconds. He’ll start third on Sunday; Leclerc and Verstappen have split the first four races, two wins

apiece.

“It’s quite slippery outside of the normal racing line, but we’ll see. A lot of things can happen,” Verstappen said.

Sergio Perez was fourth as Red Bull locked out the second row. Earlier Saturday, Red Bull principal Christian Horner denied a rumor the team plans to sign Fernando Alonso for 2023 and said talks on an extension for Perez would begin during F1’s summer break.

“Checo’s doing a great job. He’s driving at a very high level. He’s more comfortabl­e in the team this year,” Horner said. “We’re happy with the job he’s doing. However, we’ve only seen a sample of four races so it’s still early in the year.“

Valtteri Bottas qualified fifth, one spot ahead of former Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton.

Bottas was replaced this year at Mercedes by George Russell, leading to speculatio­n at Imola two weeks ago that Bottas holds a grudge based on his late-race battle with Russell for position.

“No, it’s points, were chasing points and always just really trying to maximize every opportunit­y, every position you can make,” Bottas said. “The target was more points rather than a person.”

Hamilton qualified sixth in a small improvemen­t for Mercedes, which has struggled since the debut of its new car. He outqualifi­ed Russell, who was fastest in Friday’s second practice but failed to advance out of the second round and was 12th.

“I just don’t think I have the confidence in the car today,” Russell radioed his Mercedes team.

Hamilton had an eventful

opening to the weekend when he arrived at the venue Friday wearing all the jewelry he could fit in protest of the FIA’s new crackdown on wearing bling while competing.

Hamilton said he has piercings he can’t remove and was willing to sign a liability waiver. The FIA, the governing body of F1, claims the jewelry is a safety hazard. On Saturday, it amended the ban to include wristwatch­es.

“It is clear that regulation­s are here to protect the drivers; on the other side, we need to keep the possibilit­y on diversity and the means of expression and expressing yourself,” said Mercedes boss Toto Wolff. “And we know that this is important for Lewis, so without going into detail where the piercing stayed… I’m sure they will come to a good resolution.”

 ?? Darron Cummings / Associated Press ?? Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc of Monaco gives a thumbs up after winning the pole during qualifying Saturday for the Formula One Miami Grand Prix.
Darron Cummings / Associated Press Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc of Monaco gives a thumbs up after winning the pole during qualifying Saturday for the Formula One Miami Grand Prix.

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