George Russell led an all-Mercedes front row for the British Grand Prix as he beat Formula 1 team-mate Lewis Hamilton to pole by 0.171 seconds.
A thrilling fight for pole eventually boiled down to a duel between the two Mercedes drivers. Neither Hamilton nor Russell had improved on their first sectors, but started to turn up the dial as their laps progressed.
Hamilton logged a 1m25.990s to lay down the gauntlet, one that Russell picked up and set a 1m25.819s to clinch his third F1 pole.
Russell had earlier led an all-British top three after the opening runs of Q3 by just 0.006s over Norris, as Hamilton and Oscar Piastri were both within touching distance in the battle for pole. Max Verstappen was an outside bet, having been hampered by floor damage sustained during his Q1 excursion through the gravel at Copse.
Norris preserved his place in that top three, but couldn’t improve on his final run and ceded one position to Hamilton to lead the second row alongside Verstappen.
Although Verstappen had managed to dislodge Piastri from the top four, he was unable to make any inroads into the top three and was ultimately four tenths adrift of Russell’s pole time.
Piastri beat an impressive Nico Hulkenberg, as the Haas driver claimed sixth thanks to the boost handed to him by his new upgrades. Carlos Sainz was seventh fastest from Lance Stroll, as Alex Albon beat Fernando Alonso to ninth on the grid.
High track evolution characterised Q2 as the circuit continued to dry out, producing an ever-changing order throughout the 15-minute qualifying phase as the drivers fought until the final second to break into Q3.
Max Verstappen and Charles Leclerc looked vulnerable in the final stages of the session, and Leclerc’s move up to seventh in the order sent Verstappen into the drop zone.
But the Dutchman recovered and pulled himself up to sixth to knock Logan Sargeant out of the top 10, and Lance Stroll’s last-ditch effort pushed Leclerc back into the bottom five and cemented the Monegasque’s early bath.
Yuki Tsunoda had spent the majority of the session in the bottom five, and was not able to extricate himself from the drop zone on his final lap – although was just 0.7s shy of Norris’ leading time from Q2.
Zhou Guanyu and Daniel Ricciardo were also knocked out in the middle phase of qualifying, both separated by 0.6s from Tsunoda ahead.
Another big scalp was presented by Sergio Perez, who was dumped out in Q1 after he produced a red flag…
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