Piastri pips Verstappen, takes pole at Imola
Championship leader Oscar Piastri calmly delivered a near-flawless lap under acute pressure on Saturday to claim pole position for McLaren ahead of Red Bull's Max Verstappen at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.
The 24-year-old Australian clocked a best lap in one minute and 14.670 seconds shrugging aside a cluster of slower drivers at the final corner, to beat the four-time world champion by 0.34 seconds.
In a delayed and incident-hit qualifying session of two red-flag interruptions, it was his third pole position this year and his career.
Team-mate Lando Norris, who is 16 points behind him in the drivers' title race, was fourth behind Mercedes' George Russell, ahead of two-time champion Fernando Alonso of Aston Martin in fifth place.
Carlos Sainz of Williams was sixth ahead of team-mate Alex Albon, Lance Stroll in the second Aston Martin, Racing Bulls' rookie Isack Hadjar and Pierre Gasly of Alpine.
The Ferraris of Charles Leclerc and seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton failed to make the cut to Q3 and qualified 11th and 12th ahead of local hero Kimi Antonelli in the second Mercedes.
Imola, an old-style circuit with a tragic past as the track where Ayrton Senna died in 1994 and also expected to drop off the calendar next year, is Ferrari's home race and marks the start of the European season.
'It was a great session, very tough with the delays and red flags and the tricky tyres,' said Piastri.
'The team did a great job and got the car in a nice window, we've been trying a few different things this weekend and we got into a nice place for qualifying.'
Verstappen was satisfied despite missing out on his third consecutive pole.
'It was a good day for us,' he said, a sentiment repeated by Russell. 'We could not have achieved much more here today,' said the British driver.
The session began in spectacular fashion in glorious spring sunshine when Yuki Tsunoda walked away from an alarming high-speed crash.
He lost control of his Red Bull car when he rode the kerbs at the Variante Villeneuve and it lifted and flew sideways before turning upside down into a single barrel roll before skewing into the barriers.
The action resumed after a 12-minute interval to repair the circuit before another red flag in the final seconds of Q1 when returning rookie Franco Colapinto, replacing Jack Doohan for Alpine, crashed on the exit of Tamburello.
His car was badly damaged as he spun into the barriers nose-first, but he was unhurt and walked clear of the wreckage.
Verstappen topped the Q1 times ahead of Piastri and Alonso with Liam Lawson, of Racing Bulls, Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg and the two Haas cars of Esteban Ocon and Oliver Bearman eliminated along with Tsunoda.
Bearman's late cancelled time was declared to be 'under review' as Q2 was delayed, a decision that suggested he might be reinstated to replace Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto. Both sat in their cars waiting before the Brazilian drove alone to pit lane in anticipation. Two minutes later, Bearman conceded his place in Q2 and climbed out.
The first run saw McLaren back on top, two-tenths clear of Verstappen, before in a dramatic second Sainz went top and Aston Martin's duo secured top-ten spots by eliminating both Ferraris.
Agencies
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Al Etihad
11 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Football: PSG and Inter Milan set for UEFA Champions League final showdown
31 May 2025 15:07 MUNICH (AFP)Paris Saint-Germain and Inter Milan lock horns in Saturday's Champions League final with the French side hoping to win European club football's biggest prize for the first time and the Italians eyeing their fourth match, which kicks off at Bayern Munich's 75,000-capacity Allianz Arena at 1900 GMT, pits an experienced Inter against a PSG team appearing in their second final since the transformative Qatari takeover of the club in wins will succeed Real Madrid as champions, and excitement is notably at fever pitch back in 40,000 people will watch on giant screens at PSG's Parc des Princes, and over 5,000 police officers will be deployed around the city in an attempt to prevent match will be a mouthwatering clash of opposing styles and ideas of how to build a team, a contest between one of the continent's old guard and one of the state-owned modern enormous spending, PSG have never won the Champions League, coming closest when they reached the final in 2020. That was during the pandemic, when they lost to Bayern behind closed doors in Lisbon, despite the presence of Kylian Mbappe and Neymar up addition of Lionel Messi in 2021 did not help them in their quest to claim the trophy, and their brilliant run to Munich has come in the season after Mbappe followed the South American duo out of the exit door. 'Glorious opportunity' "There have been great times, difficult times, but we have a glorious opportunity to do something remarkable and historic for this club," captain Marquinhos said on coach Luis Enrique, an exciting young Paris side has taken Europe by storm in recent months, with a comeback win in January against 2023 champions Manchester City the have since knocked out three more Premier League sides -- Liverpool, Aston Villa and Arsenal -- en route to the final, and completed a French league and cup Dembele has been their star player with 33 goals, but others like ex-Inter full-back Achraf Hakimi and Italy goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma have also been superb."My biggest motivation is to make history for Paris and give the city and club something to celebrate," said Luis Enrique, who is looking to win his second Champions League, 10 years after leading Barcelona to for PSG would make them just the second French winners of the competition -- Marseille's 1993 triumph also came in Munich, at the old Olympic Stadium, against Inter's city rivals AC Milan. Italian ExperienceInter were the last Italian winners, when Jose Mourinho's side defeated Bayern in 2010. They also won it twice in successive years in the 1960s. Coach Simone Inzaghi was already in charge when the Nerazzurri got to the final two years ago and lost to many as eight of the team that started then in Istanbul could do so again here, and an experienced line-up should feature three players aged 36 or side beat Bayern in the quarter-finals and Barcelona in an epic tie in the last four."Last time against Manchester City we produced a top-class performance but didn't win, so this time we hope to be a bit more switched on," said midfielder Nicolo Barella."These matches come down to fine margins, but we will try to bring home the trophy, that is the dream for all of us," added Barella, whose side just missed out to Napoli for the Serie A title."We have earned respect in this competition," added skipper Lautaro Martinez."We have worked hard to get here and now we have the chance to reach this target that Inter have been chasing for 15 years." First Encounter It is, remarkably, the first competitive encounter between the wins will walk away with over 100 million euros ($113.5m) in prize money from supporters flood into the German city, back in Paris fanzones have been set up at three locations beyond PSG's stadium. In Milan, meanwhile, tens of thousands will also watch the game at Inter's San Siro stadium.


Dubai Eye
14 hours ago
- Dubai Eye
Alcaraz survives after Sabalenka, Zheng shine at scorching French Open
Carlos Alcaraz made heavy weather of his French Open clash with Damir Dzumhur but moved into the fourth round while world number one Aryna Sabalenka and Olympic champion Zheng Qinwen blazed a trail on a hot Friday at Roland Garros. Defending champion Iga Swiatek continued her bid for a fifth Roland Garros title when the fifth seed stayed calm on a searing afternoon on Court Philippe Chatrier to beat Jaqueline Cristian while Holger Rune edged a brutal five-setter with Quentin Halys. Alcaraz was expected to sizzle in the cool of the evening but the second seed found himself in hot water after his level dipped against Dzumhur before recovering to seal a 6-1 6-3 4-6 6-4 win and book a clash with Ben Shelton. Sabalenka avoided the worst of the heat in the morning but had to stave off the plucky Olga Danilovic to win 6-2 6-3 and continue her bid for a maiden Roland Garros title after major triumphs at the Australian and U.S. Opens. The three-time Grand Slam champion looked in ruthless form while racing ahead 5-0 but Danilovic avoided the bagel by taking the sixth game on serve and pulled a break back. The resurgence did not last long as Sabalenka closed out the opening set with another break and withstood a stern test in the second set to beat her 34th-ranked opponent. Zheng, who won her biggest title at last year's Paris Games, continued her good form on the Roland Garros clay as the Chinese eighth seed made the second week by beating Grand Slam debutant Victoria Mboko 6-3 6-4 at Court Simonne Mathieu. That match was halted briefly when the 18-year-old Mboko was down 5-3 in the second set as a fan needed medical attention but Zheng was not affected when play resumed and quickly dispatched the Canadian. Former semi-finalist Amanda Anisimova required treatment for a blister on her right hand before the American secured a 7-6(4) 6-4 victory over Clara Tauson to reach the last 16 of the major where she announced herself in 2019.

Gulf Today
17 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Piastri bounces back in second practice at Spanish GP
Series leader Oscar Piastri bounced back after being outpaced in opening practice to top the times for McLaren ahead of Mercedes' George Russell in Friday's second session at the Spanish Grand Prix. Piastri clocked a best lap of 1 minute 12.760 seconds to beat Russell by 0.286s after winding up fifth in FP1 when title rival and McLaren team-mate Lando Norris, who trails him by three points in the title race, was fastest. Four-time champion Max Verstappen of Red Bull was third, three-tenths adrift, ahead of Norris, Ferrari's Charles Leclerc and Kimi Antonelli in the second Mercedes. Local hero two-time champion Fernando Alonso was seventh for Aston Martin ahead of Alpine's Pierre Gasly and RB's rookies Isack Hadjar and Liam Lawson. Oscar Piastri looks on during the practice in Montmelo, Barcelona, on Friday. AFP Seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton struggled with his Ferrari to 11th, after taking third place earlier. Neither session offered evidence of any changes in performance, following the introduction of a new rule restricting front wing flexibility. On a hot afternoon at the Circuit de Catalunya, Leclerc was first out on mediums, hoping to maintain Ferrari's improvement in Monaco, but instead found it difficult to stay with the pace-setting McLarens. Mercedes had clearly improved their set-up since a poor showing in FP1 with Russell first and Antonelli fifth after 20 minutes. By contrast, Leclerc was down in eighth and Hamilton 11th having been fourth and third in the earlier session. McLaren's Australian driver Oscar Piastri prepares to drive during the practice at the Circuit de Catalunya in Montmelo, Barcelona, on Friday. AFP Hamilton's largely disappointing form since joining Ferrari was a hot topic again prompted by his former Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg, the 2016 champion, who suggested, on SkyF1, that his age was a factor. 'Even if he's the greatest of all time, at some point you are going to get a little bit slower and that's age related,' said Rosberg. 'And when you are 40, it's going to happen sooner rather than later. 'Even a tenth makes a huge difference in this sport especially if you are up against some of the greatest from the new generation - namely Charles Leclerc, who is one of the absolute best qualifiers.' Hamilton, adrift in 11th, complained his Ferrari was 'not driveable' before the high-fuel runs ended a session of few surprises or incidents. Agencies