Formula 1 Racing

Norris takes pole as McLaren locks out front row

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W15

Lando Norris took pole for the Hungarian Grand Prix as McLaren locked out the front row in Formula 1 qualifying, the Briton defeating team-mate Oscar Piastri by 0.022 seconds.

Norris slotted in his eventual pole time, a 1m15.227s, on his first run in Q3 as an effort to extend that advantage was nixed by a late-session red flag caused by Yuki Tsunoda’s Turn 5 crash.

Max Verstappen had thrown down the gauntlet at the start of Q3 with a 1m15.555s on his opening run, although stated that he wanted more front wing for a follow-up lap with new tyres after losing time in the middle sector.

That shortfall was put into perspective as Norris found over three tenths of a second, vaulting to the top of the order to claim provisional pole.

Piastri then eclipsed Verstappen’s first time on his next run, 0.022s shy of Norris’ initial effort, and this also put the Australian clear of Verstappen’s next effort: a 1m15.273s.

Tsunoda then produced a red flag with just over two minutes remaining, getting on the astroturf on the exit of Turn 5 and crunching his RB into the outside wall.

The session was restarted, although Verstappen did not take to the circuit as Red Bull did not believe it could improve its time on used tyres. This proved to be the case for those who did run, enshrining the McLarens’ front-row lockout.

Carlos Sainz will start alongside Verstappen on the second row, while Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc collected fifth and sixth.

The Aston Martins of Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll were seventh and eighth, while Daniel Ricciardo moved up to ninth after improving on his post red-flag lap, leaving Tsunoda in a provisional 10th.

Hamilton narrowly made the cut into Q3, as none of the late laps from the Haas duo and Valtteri Bottas proved enough to dislodge the Mercedes driver from the top 10.

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes F1 W15

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Nico Hulkenberg had managed to get a lap in, despite being tight for time after struggling to find space in the pitlane. Regardless, the German was just 0.01s shy of Hamilton to collect a Q2 elimination with 11th.

Bottas was 12th fastest, stating that the lap was “all I’ve got” as he jumped the Williams duo in the order.

Neither of the Williams drivers were particularly impressed over their laps; the 13th-placed Alex Albon felt he should have gone out later to benefit from track evolution, while Logan Sargeant was displeased by traffic on his final tour. Kevin…

Click Here to Read the Full Original Article at Autosport.com – Formula 1 – Stories…