Home » Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on pole with Oliver Bearman to start 11th

Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on pole with Oliver Bearman to start 11th

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Saudi Arabian Grand Prix: Max Verstappen on pole with Oliver Bearman to start 11th

Dutchman Verstappen is giving every impression he could win every race this year, looking comfortable in the car and out of reach of his rivals.

This was one of only two races last year in which Perez beat him, but there was never a chance of that this weekend, as Verstappen operated on a separate level from his team-mate on the fast Jeddah street circuit.

“A very good day,” he said. “We improved the car a little bit overnight and that gave me a bit more confidence to attack the high-speed corners.

“You need confidence to go to the limit here – it’s incredible how fast we go around here in qualifying.

“My first lap in Q3, I was very happy with how I did that lap, it felt very like the failed ’21 lap. The car was behaving very well.”

That was a reference to his famous lap that never was in 2021, at the height of his bitter title battle with Lewis Hamilton.

Verstappen’s driving was so impressive that Fernando Alonso stopped an interview in the TV pen to watch it and indicated to Daniel Ricciardo to do the same. But Verstappen did not finish the lap because he hit the wall on the exit of the final corner.

Perez said: “Max has done a tremendous lap – that was not possible for me today. Being on the front row was achievable but we are in the fight for tomorrow.”

Leclerc said: “The first lap in Q3 we tried doing something different, doing a preparation lap and that didn’t work out for us.

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“The second lap I got everything out. It’s a shame we are not as close as we hoped but I hope we can challenge the Red Bulls tomorrow.

“For sure we did a step forward compared to last year. We just have to focus on ourselves.”

Behind Alonso, impressive in the Aston Martin as he was in qualifying a week ago in Bahrain, there was a gap of 0.243secs back to McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, the Australian just 0.043secs ahead of team-mate Lando Norris.

Mercedes were disappointingly off the pace, Russell 0.844secs slower than Verstappen. The consolation for Hamilton, 0.144secs behind him, was that the seven-time champion was at least respectably close to his team-mate after struggling for much of the weekend.

RB’s Yuki Tsunoda and Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll – 0.726secs behind Alonso – completed the top 10.

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