
George Russell feels goosebumps after taking pole for Canadian Grand Prix
By
For the second straight year, George Russell of Mercedes will start on the pole position for the Canadian Grand Prix on Sunday (2 p.m., CTV, TSN, RDS).
The British driver won the pole for the sixth time in his career with a lap around Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve Saturday timed at one minute, 10.899 seconds, beating Red Bull's Max Verstappen by .160 seconds. McLaren's Oscar Piastri, who leads the driver standings with 186 points, will start from the third position. McLaren teammate Lando Norris, who is second in the driver standings with 176 points, will start from the seventh position.
While Russell started from the pole position last year, it was Verstappen who won the Canadian Grand Prix for the third straight year. Norris finished second and Russell was third.
There was rain on and off throughout the 70-lap race last year, but the forecast for Sunday calls for sunshine and 24C.
'The one thing I know in Montreal, you can't discount the weather or things happening on the track,' Russell said after Saturday's qualifying performance. 'It's a street track. You have to fight until the last lap of the race. Last year was a poor race for me, and I felt it could have run differently. So I'll be doing my best to make up for last year's losses. But it's totally different this year.'
Russell said his final lap in qualifying, which earned him the pole position, was probably the most exhilarating one of his life.
'Around the circuit you got to be so committed,' he said. 'It's not easy. It's quite bumpy and so easy to make a mistake.
'It was just like the car was on rails and it just felt like such a rhythm and crossing the line when you do a lap like that to get pole position afterwards as well was just insane,' he added. 'I had goosebumps in that moment ... I don't think I've ever had goosebumps after a pole position or a good result, and I think that one meant a lot to me.'
Russell will be looking for his fourth career F1 victory after winning the Sao Paulo Grand Prix in 2022, followed by victories last year in Austria and Las Vegas.
Verstappen was handed a 10-second time penalty at the last race, the Spanish Grand Prix, after slamming into Russell in the closing laps of the race that was won by Piastri. Russell finished fourth and Verstappen was 10th. Verstappen was also given three penalty points, putting him just one point away from a one-race suspension.
Lewis Hamilton, looking to win the Canadian Grand Prix for the eighth time in his first year since switching from Mercedes to Ferrari, will start fifth on the grid Sunday. Hamilton and Michael Schumacher share the record with seven Canadian Grand Prix wins each.
Qualifying did not go well Saturday for Montreal native Lance Stroll, who was eliminated after the first session and will start 18th out of 20 cars on the grid.
Hashtags

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


CTV News
3 hours ago
- CTV News
Countdown to the Ironman in Ottawa
Ottawa Watch 2,400 people are set to race in the Ironman Canada-Ottawa race on Sunday. CTV's Dylan Dyson reports on final preparations for the ultimate test.


Winnipeg Free Press
5 hours ago
- Winnipeg Free Press
Lewis Hamilton says he has ‘a lot going on in the background' after another tough race
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — A day after calling himself 'useless,' Lewis Hamilton said he's facing issues 'in the background' after another difficult Formula 1 race. Hamilton finished 12th Sunday, the same place he'd qualified the day before, a result which had prompted him to call himself 'absolutely useless' and suggest Ferrari might consider changing drivers. His race was a world away from teammate Charles Leclerc, who was disappointed with fourth after starting on pole. 'When you have a feeling, you have a feeling. There's a lot going on in the background that is not great,' Hamilton told British broadcaster Sky Sports after the race when asked to explain his comments from a day before. Asked if he'd lost his love of racing, Hamilton said no. In response to a question about seemingly being forced off the track by old rival Max Verstappen, a standout moment in an otherwise largely quiet race for Hamilton, he said: 'I don't really remember it, to be honest.' It was a frustrating day overall for Ferrari as Leclerc lost pace in the second half of the race and went from fighting for the win to dropping off the podium altogether after a hard-fought battle with George Russell of Mercedes. Thursdays Keep up to date on sports with Mike McIntyre's weekly newsletter. In a lengthy radio message, Leclerc suggested Ferrari was not listening to him in an 'incredibly frustrating' situation and that the car had become 'undriveable.' After the race, though, Leclerc said he'd been mistaken. 'I spoke too quickly, I guess,' he told Sky Sports, and said he'd been informed after the race that there had been a problem with his car's chassis. ___ AP auto racing:


Globe and Mail
6 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Lando Norris claims McLaren's 200th F1 win in Hungarian Grand Prix
Lando Norris held off his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri in a tense finish to win the Hungarian Grand Prix on Sunday and boost his Formula 1 title chances heading into the mid-season break. Norris clung on with worn tires as Piastri loomed behind him in the final laps. He claimed McLaren's 200th F1 win by less than a second to cut Piastri's standings lead to nine points from 16. 'I'm dead. It was tough, it was tough,' Norris said. 'The final stint, with Oscar catching, I was pushing flat out.' Norris briefly dropped to fifth on the first lap but made his tires last to stop only once, while Piastri changed tires twice. Piastri steadily cut into Norris' lead in the latter stages of the race but the British driver held on with old tires to take the win. Piastri nearly collided with his teammate while trying to pass on the second-to-last lap. George Russell took third for Mercedes after fighting his way past Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. Leclerc started on pole position with hopes of landing Ferrari its first Grand Prix win of the year, but ended up fourth after blaming the team for decisions he said left his car 'undriveable.'