Leclerc overcomes spin to beat Verstappen to Spanish GP pole

Formula 1 championship leader Charles Leclerc overcame a spin in the final segment of qualifying to claim pole position for the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona

Leclerc overcomes spin to beat Verstappen to Spanish GP pole

Formula 1 championship leader Charles Leclerc overcame a spin in the final segment of qualifying to claim pole position for the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona.

Leclerc looped his Ferrari F1-75 around coming out of the final chicane on his first attempt in the pole shoot-out, meaning he was left with just one chance to come good on the promise shown by his clean sweep through the three practice sessions.

But it proved enough, as Leclerc fired in a 1m18.750s to secure first place by over three tenths, his laptime followed by a yelp of relief on team radio.

Verstappen, who had sat on provisional pole on the opening runs, was thwarted by an apparent DRS failure on his final attempt.

Nonetheless, he was safe on front row, with the second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz coming up a tenth short of deposing him.

George Russell led Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton in Q1, Q2 and the first runs of Q3, before pressing home his advantage with his final effort that placed him fourth on the grid – with Hamilton sixth.

Russell was 0.643s off pole, Mercedes’ closest margin to first in Q3 sessions all season – albeit with Hamilton having been just a few hundredths behind that in the season opener in Bahrain.

Verstappen’s team-mate Sergio Perez wound up fifth, sandwiched by the two Mercedes drivers.

Valtteri Bottas (Alfa Romeo), Kevin Magnussen (Haas), Daniel Ricciardo (McLaren) and Mick Schumacher (Haas) completed the top 10, Schumacher having managed to overcome the rear right brake fire that left him sidelined for virtually all of FP3.

Lando Norris was set to make it two McLarens in Q3, at the expense of Schumacher, but had his best Q2 lap deleted for a microscopic Turn 12 track limits infringement, relegating him to 11th.

Esteban Ocon led Alpine’s effort in 12th, ahead of AlphaTauri duo Yuki Tsunoda and Pierre Gasly – with the latter having, like Schumacher, sat out nearly all of FP3 and receiving a “sorry for the car, Pierre” message at the end of his qualifying from his race engineer Pierre Hamelin.

Alfa Romeo rookie Guanyu Zhou was half a second slower in Q2 than he had been in Q1, and thus had to settle for 15th.

The revised Aston Martins, which have caused a stir this weekend due to their visual resemblance to the RB18’s design, were knocked out in the opening qualifying segment – with Sebastian Vettel 16th and Lance Stroll 18th. Vettel’s Q1 elimination prompted a “you must be kidding!” from the German when he was informed on team radio, while Stroll is subject to a post-session investigation over his potential unsafe release into the path of Norris in the pitlane.

Home hero Fernando Alonso slotted in between the Astons, having trailled Alpine team-mate Ocon by just under two tenths in what was his first Q1 exit since the 2021 Mexico weekend. He had started his final lap way too close to Norris’s McLaren up ahead.

The two Williams cars were cut adrift of the rest, with Alex Albon leading Nicholas Latifi by around three tenths.

Qualifying Results

Pos Name Car Q1 Q2 Q3
1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1m19.861s 1m19.969s 1m18.75s
2 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1m20.091s 1m19.219s 1m19.073s
3 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1m19.892s 1m19.453s 1m19.166s
4 George Russell Mercedes 1m20.218s 1m19.47s 1m19.393s
5 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1m20.447s 1m19.83s 1m19.42s
6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m20.252s 1m19.794s 1m19.512s
7 Valtteri Bottas Alfa Romeo-Ferrari 1m20.355s 1m20.053s 1m19.608s
8 Kevin Magnussen Haas-Ferrari 1m20.227s 1m19.81s 1m19.682s
9 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren-Mercedes 1m20.549s 1m20.287s 1m20.297s
10 Mick Schumacher Haas-Ferrari 1m20.683s 1m20.436s 1m20.368s
11 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes 1m20.838s 1m20.471s
12 Esteban Ocon Alpine-Renault 1m20.88s 1m20.638s
13 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri-Red Bull 1m20.707s 1m20.639s
14 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri-Red Bull 1m20.719s 1m20.861s
15 Guanyu Zhou Alfa Romeo-Ferrari 1m20.476s 1m21.094s
16 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin-Mercedes 1m20.954s
17 Fernando Alonso Alpine-Renault 1m21.043s
18 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Mercedes 1m21.418s
19 Alex Albon Williams-Mercedes 1m21.645s
20 Nicholas Latifi Williams-Mercedes 1m21.915s