Sainz Takes Wet Maiden F1 Pole At Silverstone

Calum Gill 16:43 02/07/2022

Ferrari's Carlos Sainz claimed his maiden pole position in grand prix racing in a wet British Grand Prix qualifying at Silverstone.

After mere drops in the day’s preceding W Series race, the rain properly arrived mere minutes before the start of F1 qualifying - with track conditions varying through the three segments but never approaching anything resembling slick-tyre weather. And with teams anticipating a potential shower late on in Q3, it gave extra urgency to the pole shoot-out - which was perhaps reflected in Verstappen looping his Red Bull RB18 around coming out of Stowe on his first push laps. It meant precious little, however, because two laps later Verstappen jumped nearly two seconds clear of then-leader Charles Leclerc. Yet, with the predicted shower failing to materialise in time, the Ferraris kept the pressure up - and while Leclerc spun on his final attempt at the exit of Chapel, bringing out yellow flags that Verstappen had to slow for, Sainz jumped ahead with a 01:40.983.

This gave him pole over Verstappen by a tenth and a half, with Leclerc a close third and Verstappen’s Red Bull team-mate Sergio Pérez completing the top four thanks to a late improvement. “No way!” a laughing Sainz said when informed of pole. “Holy s**t. I didn’t expect that one! I felt terrible out there.” Mercedes duo Lewis Hamilton and George Russell were split by under two tenths, yet Hamilton was fifth and Russell only eighth, with McLaren’s Lando Norris and Alpine’s Fernando Alonso slotting in between them. Rookie Guanyu Zhou led the way for Alfa Romeo in ninth, while Williams’s Nicholas Latifi was 10th after booking his first-ever Q3 appearance - with team-mate Alex Albon, in the new-spec FW44 to Latifi’s old-spec car, eliminated in Q1.


-Full weekend results


The Q2 eliminations were decided with minutes to spare until the chequered flag as rain picked up, leaving those in the drop zone to plug away at hopeless laps that hinted at improvement early on but were immediately rendered uncompetitive by the wetter sections of the track. Pierre Gasly led those dropping out in 11th, albeit that was likely an acceptable outcome given he flirted with elimination in Q1. Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas had to settle for 12th, ahead of Gasly’s AlphaTauri team-mate Yuki Tsunoda, lamenting a mistake on his best lap, and McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, the Aussie ending up two-and-a-half seconds down on team-mate Norris. And Esteban Ocon was nearly as many as three seconds down on the other Alpine of Alonso, qualifying in 15th. The upgraded Williams FW44 of Albon had favourable track position in the frantic closing seconds of Q1, yet could not outpace Latifi - who wound up just under a tenth quicker.

Left in 16th as a result, Albon was thoroughly frustrated at the chequered flag, questioning the team’s decision to go for cooldown laps when he had “no grip” and saying it had tried to be “too smart” with is strategy. Alongside him, the Haas and Aston Martin rosters were eliminated in full. Kevin Magnussen, Mick Schumacher and Lance Stroll all switched to fresh inters late on in Q1 and couldn’t take profit in time, ending up 17th, 19th and 20th respectively. Stroll’s team-mate Sebastian Vettel stayed out on his existing set, but was first to take the chequered flag, therefore missing out on the very best of the conditions. Slotting in between the Haas duo, he reacted with an exasperated “not again” when told he’d been eliminated.

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