Verstappen takes pole at Japan GP
for third year in a row
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[April 06, 2024]
By John Geddie
SUZUKA, Japan (Reuters) - Formula One world champion Max Verstappen
took pole position for a third straight year at the Japanese Grand
Prix on Saturday, with Sergio Perez qualifying a close second to
ensure a Red Bull front-row lockout.
Verstappen set the pace with a lap of one minute 28.197 seconds -
0.066 seconds clear of Perez - becoming the first driver to take
pole in the opening four races of a season since Lewis Hamilton nine
years ago.
But with McLaren's Lando Norris, Ferrari's Carlos Sainz and Aston
Martin's Fernando Alonso in the other top five spots and all within
half a second of Verstappen, Sunday's race promises to be a closer
affair than the Dutchman's 2023 procession.
"It was very close in the end," said Verstappen, looking to bounce
back from a mechanical issue that prevented him from finishing the
race last time out in Melbourne. "Nevertheless most importantly to
be on pole - of course you want every lap to be perfect but at a
track like this it isn't always the case".
Norris, who finished second in Suzuka last year, will start Sunday's
race third on the grid, qualifying 0.292 seconds behind Verstappen.
"We had a good car today, we could fight," said Norris. "We are
trying to catch up to the Red Bulls, but they are doing a good job
so hats off to them."
While Sainz, who won the last race in Australia after Verstappen's
withdrawal, qualified in fourth, his team mate Charles Leclerc had a
difficult drive, which will put him back in eighth for Sunday's
start.
"That's the best I can do. Honestly, I don't get it," a frustrated
Leclerc said over the team radio towards the end of qualifying.
Aston Martin's Alonso and McLaren's Oscar Piastri, celebrating his
23rd birthday, finished in fifth and sixth respectively.
Seven-times world champion Hamilton and George Russell, both of
Mercedes, finished in seventh and ninth, but Hamilton sounded
optimistic that a season beset by technical problems may be turning
a corner.
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Formula One F1 - Japanese Grand Prix - Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka, Japan
- April 6, 2024 Red Bull's Max Verstappen after qualifying in pole
position along with second placed Red Bull's Sergio Perez REUTERS/Androniki
Christodoulou
"It’s actually the first weekend I have not gone
crazy with setup... It's been really enjoyable driving. It's just
the guys are just a little bit faster," the Briton said.
Mercedes incurred a 5,000-euro ($5,400) fine in qualifying for an
unsafe incident after Russell nearly collided with Piastri in the
pit lane when exiting his garage.
Local hero Yuki Tsunoda got one of the biggest cheers of the day
when he snuck into the final round of qualifying and will start 10th
on Sunday.
He once again finished ahead of his more experienced team mate at RB,
Daniel Ricciardo, heaping pressure on the Australian driver, whose
seat is at risk with the highly regarded reserve driver Liam Lawson
waiting in the wings.
"I’m kind of relieved that I'm able to go through to Q3 in front of
Japanese fans because I felt slightly more pressure compared to the
past three years," said Tsunoda.
"I super enjoyed being in front of the Japanese crowd."
Alonso's Aston Martin team mate Lance Stroll struggled meanwhile and
was knocked out in the first round of qualifying. He will start near
the back of the grid in 16th.
($1 = 0.9229 euros)
(Reporting by Aadi Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by William Mallard and
Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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