Guernsey Press

World champion Max Verstappen qualifies on pole for Qatar Grand Prix

The Dutchman edged out George Russell.

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Max Verstappen celebrated his fourth world championship by putting his Red Bull on pole position for the Qatar Grand Prix.

Verstappen started sixth and finished only eighth in the earlier sprint race won by Oscar Piastri as McLaren edged closer to their first constructors’ title in 26 years.

But the Dutch driver returned to form for qualifying for Sunday’s 57-lap main event by seeing off Mercedes’ George Russell by just 0.055 seconds to take both his and Red Bull’s first pole since Austria exactly five months ago.

Lando Norris, who handed team-mate Piastri victory in the sprint race earlier on Saturday – with McLaren securing a one-two finish to move 30 points clear of Ferrari – took third, 0.252sec back.

Piastri finished fourth to ensure both McLarens will start the main event ahead of Ferrari, with Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz fifth and seventh respectively for the Italian team. Lewis Hamilton qualified sixth, four tenths adrift of team-mate Russell.

Norris controlled Saturday’s 19-lap dash to the chequered flag before moving aside for Piastri at the final corner, the British driver returning the favour after they traded positions in Sao Paulo with Norris then still harbouring ambitions of claiming the drivers’ crown.

But, with the individual title off the table after Verstappen wrapped up another crown in Las Vegas a week ago, Norris’ sole focus is on delivering a ninth world title for McLaren to put them level with Williams in second place.

Ferrari lead the way with 16 titles, but the Italian team are also on something of a drought with their last triumph back in 2008.

Norris aborted both his first and second laps in Q3 and then did not have the speed to match Verstappen and Russell, with the former pipping the Mercedes man to top spot.

However, it remains advantage McLaren and they will secure the constructors’ crown on Sunday with one round remaining if they outscore Ferrari by 15 points.

Verstappen has won in just one of his 12 previous appearances and would not have expected to be in the fight for pole after he staggered to eighth in the sprint.

“It is a crazy turnaround,” said Verstappen. “I didn’t expect that. Well done to the team for giving me a car that is more connected which allows me to push out there.

“We changed a bit on the car, but I never thought it would make a swing in performance so that is encouraging and I hope it continues into the race. I am happy to be on pole. It has been a while.”

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