Sergio Perez claimed a first career pole with a last-gasp effort in a dramatic and heavily disrupted qualifying session in Saudi Arabia. The Mexican snatched top spot from Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in the final seconds, with the pair split by just two hundredths of a second at the conclusion of a wild session on the streets of Jeddah.
“It took me a couple of races! But what a lap man, it was unbelievable!”- said the Mexican after clinching the first career pole.
The biggest disappointment on Saturday comes in the form of Lewis Hamilton as he qualified in P16. Seven-time World Champion missed out in Q1 for the first time since 2017 Brazil GP, where the Brit crashed during the qualifying session.
Red Flags & Mick Schumacher crash
The session had paused for an hour during Q2 after a violent high-speed crash for Haas’ Mick Schumacher, who was extricated to the medical center – where no injuries were revealed – and later to the hospital for precautionary checks.
After the qualifying session, Haas Team Principal Guenther confirms that Mick Schumacher will miss out rest of the weekend. So Haas will be having only one car on the grid for tomorrow’s race.
Nicholas Latifi had also earlier triggered red flags as he swiped the wall in Q1 – a session that saw Lewis Hamilton make a shock exit in 16th.
Hamilton’s teammate George Russell only just squeezed into Q3, but rallied to eventually claim sixth, fractions behind Alpine’s Esteban Ocon. Max Verstappen in the second Red Bull had to settle for fourth, two-tenths down on his teammate.
Ferrari had appeared early favorites by going fastest in both Q1 and Q2, and then setting the early pace in Q3 – first via Sainz, and then Leclerc. But Perez saved his best for his final run to claim a dream first pole at his 215th attempt – the longest wait in F1 history.
Alpine’s Fernando Alonso and Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas claimed a share of the fourth row, just ahead of Pierre Gasly and Kevin Magnussen in the lead AlphaTauri and Haas respectively.
McLaren suffered a double exit in Q2, as late gains for Gasly and Magnussen lifted both drivers out of the drop zone – and bumped Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo to 11th and 12th respectively.
Guanyu Zhou was 13th, with Schumacher’s opening effort in Q2 enough for 14th, ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. Schumacher’s participation in the race will however depend on both full medical clearance and a full car rebuild.
It was Stroll who had effectively eliminated Hamilton – the Briton had momentarily lifted himself to 15th, only for Stroll to immediately reply and seal Hamilton’s fate.
Joining him as those out of Q1 were the Williams pair of Alex Albon and Latifi, in 17th and 19th respectively. They sandwiched Aston Martin super-sub Nico Hulkenberg – while Yuki Tsunoda was effectively forced to watch from the sidelines as a suspected fuel problem left him unable to register a time.