Charles Leclerc scores Italian GP pole as qualifying ends in farce

Char🦂les Leclerc led Ferrari to pole position for the Italian Grand Prix after edging out Mercedes rival Lewis Hamilton in a qualifying session that ended in farcical fashion.

Leclerc managed to take provisional pole for Ferrari with a lap of 1m19.307s on his first run in Q3, edging out Hamilto🧸n and Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas by less than half a tenth of a second.

But eight of the 10 drivers൩ who made Q3 missed the chequered flag at the end of the session as the field bunched together, trying to get the tow from others, unwilling to be the first in the queue.

Leclerc scores Italian GP pole as qualifying ends in farce

Charles Leclerc led Ferrari to pole position for the Italian Grand Prix after edging out Merc🃏edes rival Lewis Hamilton in a qualifying session that ended in farcical fashion.

Leclerc managed to ta🥀ke provisional pole for Ferrari with a lap of 1m19.307s on his first r🔯un in Q3, edging out Hamilton and Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas by less than half a tenth of a second.

But eight of the 10 drivers who made Q3 missed the chequered flag at the end of the session as the field bunched together, try♔ing to get th🌟e tow from others, unwilling to be the first in the queue.

The clock counted down to zero with only Leclerc and McLaren's Carlos Sainz getting acroꦕss the line before the 🍎session ended, leaving the rest of the field to stick with their initial times.

The stewards quickly conf☂irmꦛed that the final qualifying lap was under investigation, having warned drivers about minimum speeds before the session began.

Leclerc did not improve his time, keeping pole ahead of Hamilton and Bottas, with Ferrari teammate Sebastian Vettel finishing f🧜ourth, 0.150s behind.

Renault drivers Daniel Ricciardo and Nico Hulkenberg 💜locked out the third row in fifth and sixth, while Sainz only managed seventh for McLaren on his final run. Alexander Albon and Lance Stroll both failed to set a time in Q3, leaving them eighth and ninth respectively.

Kimi Raikkonen suffered his second Parabolica crash of the weeken🌌d in Q3, losing his car mid-corner and spinning into the barrier to bring out a red flag. Th🎶e shunt left Raikkonen P10, and his car with significant damage his Alfa Romeo team will need to repair ahead of Sunday’s race.

Raikkonen’s Alfa Romeo teammate Antonio Giovinazzi missed out on a place in Q3 by just two-thousandths of a second, leaving him 11th on the grid ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen. Daniil Kvyat could only manage P13 for Toro Rosso, calling the session a “mess” over team radio, while Lando Norris and P🐠ierre Gasly opted against proper runs in Q2 due to their grid penalties that meant they would start at the back of the grid regardless.

Haas driver Romain Grosjean was eliminated in Q1 for the first time since the French Grand Prix in June, qualifying 16th despite only lapping six-tenths of a second slower than session pace-setter Leclerc, with fine margins separating th๊e field.

Sergio Perez was outquali꧒fied by Racing Point teammate Stroll for the first time this yꦜear as he finished 17th, albeit by default after an issue forced him to park up at the side of the track at Curva Grande with four minutes left in Q1.

Perez wasn’t the only driver to hit trouble in the opening session, with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen also reporting an issue. Verstappen was due to start last anyone due to an engine penalty, but failed to set a time at all in Q1 after going out late and reporting a loss of power on his ca🎃r.

Williams drivers George Russell and 🔥Robert Kubica finished❀ 18th and 19th in Q1. Both drivers will gain two places due to grid penalties for Norris and Gasly.

The Ita💙liaꦚn Grand Prix gets underway at 1510 local timey7 on Sunday (1410 BST).

Read More