Hamilton storms to 80th pole in Japan, Vettel ninth
Send a link to a friend
[October 06, 2018]
By Abhishek Takle
SUZUKA, Japan (Reuters) - Formula One
leader Lewis Hamilton seized a record-extending 80th pole position
at the Japanese Grand Prix on Saturday, timing his sole flying lap
to perfection while Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel managed only ninth.
The Mercedes driver, in dominant form all weekend at the Suzuka
circuit, pumped in a one minute 27.760 second lap on the super-soft
tyres while it was still only just spitting with rain.
Vettel and Ferrari team-mate Kimi Raikkonen, who went out on
intermediate tyres in the final part of qualifying with the track
still dry, lost time coming back in to fit the super-soft tyres.
The German then made another mistake on his first flying lap and was
unable to get another one in as the intermittent drizzle turned into
a full-blown shower that drenched the track.
Meanwhile, Hamilton -- who along with team mate Valtteri Bottas had
gone out straight away on the super-soft tyres to beat the rain --
was lighting up the timing screens.
"The team have done an amazing job this weekend, and the call that
we made for Q3 was probably the most difficult," said the Briton,
joined by Bottas on the front row after the Finn completed a second
successive Mercedes front row lockout.
"It's so difficult when the pressure is on to make the right call
but that's the big difference between us this year and that's why
we're the best and the team deserve it," added Hamilton.
Vettel trails his fellow four times champion by 50 points in the
standings with just four races left after Japan. His hopes are
fading fast and he needs a huge stroke of luck now to reignite his
challenge.
"Obviously it's not the position we deserve to be in," said the
31-year-old. "I think we have better speed than ninth but we'll
start there and see how it goes.
"Anything can happen tomorrow. Tomorrow is a new day."
RICCIARDO FUMES
Vettel's misfortune allowed 21-year-old Dutch driver Max Verstappen
to qualify third for Red Bull.
"We have a bigger chance now to be on the podium," said Verstappen,
doubting that he would need to worry too much about the others'
title battle: "Is it still a battle? I'm not sure," he said.
While the Dutchman celebrated, team mate Daniel Ricciardo was left
hoarse with anger after a power unit problem sidelined him during
the second phase of qualifying before he had set a time.
[to top of second column] |
Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton celebrates pole position for the Japanese
Grand Prix after qualifying REUTERS/Toru Hanai
The Australian, as a consequence, is set to start 15th.
"I just can't catch a break," said Ricciardo, who is leaving Red
Bull for Renault at the end of the year.
Toro Rosso starred in what is a home race for engine-supplier Honda
with New Zealander Brendon Hartley sixth ahead of French team mate
Pierre Gasly in seventh.
"I'm stoked with that. I was actually a bit emotional on the
in-lap," said Hartley, who has had a tough time this year and faces
an uncertain future.
Rivals McLaren, who dumped Honda for Renault after three frustrating
years, meanwhile could do no better than 18th and 19th.
The retiring Fernando Alonso beat Stoffel Vandoorne but neither
driver made it past the opening 18-minute part of the session.
Sweden's Marcus Ericsson briefly brought out the red flags when he
crashed his Sauber at the fast left-handed Dunlop curve early in the
session.
Renault's German Nico Hulkenberg, who crashed in the final practice
session ahead of qualifying, made it back out on track but was also
knocked out in the first phase having set the 16th quickest time.
That could be bad news for the fourth-placed French team, with their
closest rivals Haas having Romain Grosjean qualify fifth.
Hamilton has won five of the last six races and is already in a
position where he does not need to win again this year to clinch the
title. The Briton won from pole in Japan last year.
(Editing by Alan Baldwin and Amlan Chakraborty)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|