
Canadian GP: Russell delivers sensational lap to take pole
Mercedes' George Russell delivered a sensational late lap to outpace Red Bull's four-time champion Max Verstappen in the final seconds to claim pole position for Sunday's Canadian Grand Prix.
In a thrilling session on Saturday, the 27-year-old Briton repeated his feat in stealing pole at the end of the action last year to line up again with Verstappen alongside him for Red Bull's 200th front row start.
It is Russell's first pole this year and the sixth of his career and confirmed Mercedes potential for success at the high-speed Circuit Gilles Villeneuve - if unlike 2024 he can this time beat Verstappen.
Russell clocked a best lap in one minute and 10.899 seconds - the only sub 1.11 lap of the day - to outpace the Dutchman by 0.160 seconds.
This late drama lifted the pair, who have been engaged in a tense and verbal rivalry after clashing last year and at the Spanish Grand Prix earlier this month, clear of championship leader Oscar Piastri of McLaren and Kimi Antonelli in the second Mercedes.
Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton was fifth for Ferrari ahead of two-time champion Fernando Alonso of Aston Martin, Lando Norris in the second McLaren and Charles Leclerc in the second Ferrari.
Impressive rookie Isack Hadjar was ninth for RB and Alex Albon 10th for Williams.
'Today was awesome in front of this amazing crowd,' said a delighted Russell.
'To get the pole, to be honest last lap was probably one of the most exhilarating of my life.
'I saw every corner that I was going quicker and to get P1 was a real surprise, but I was so chuffed with it.'
Verstappen said: 'I felt quite good all weekend. The car was in the window. This track is quite cool and it feels like a bit of a big go-kart track on the kerbs, with long straights and heavy braking. I'm happy.'
Piastri, who leads Norris by 10 points in the title race after nine of this year's 24 races, was happy to recover form after a difficult practice.
'To be honest, after how practice went, I am pretty happy. We wanted to keep it safe.'
The first qualifying session came to a halt when Albon's engine cover disintegrated and fell in bits onto the circuit, prompting a red flag stoppage for eight minutes.
Also read | Formula One extends Las Vegas Grand Prix through 2027
There were five minutes and 30 seconds remaining when this happened soon after it was confirmed that the luckless Yuki Tsunoda had been given a 10-place grid penalty for passing Piastri under red flags earlier in FP3.
Albon made it back to the pits leaving a trail of debris before the team bolted on a new engine cover while stewards cleared the track for a final flurry topped by Norris and Piastri ahead of Hamilton.
Out in Q1 were Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto, a frustrated Carlos Sainz of Williams, who was impeded by Hadjar, local hope Lance Stroll of Aston Martin, RB's Liam Lawson and Alpine's Pierre Gasly.
Russell topped Q2 where Tsunoda, Alpine's Franco Colapinto, Nico Hulkenberg of Sauber and the Haas pair Oliver Bearman and Esteban Ocon fell by the wayside.
After their opening Q3 runs, it was Verstappen, Piastri, Russell, Antonelli and Norris, who went again to recover a time while Ferrari slipped back to sixth and seventh ahead of the final flying runs.
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