ABU DHABI. – Red Bull’s Max Verstappen secured the final pole position of the Formula One season on Saturday with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc joining the triple world champion on the front row at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina circuit.
McLaren’s Australian rookie Oscar Piastri qualified third for McLaren, after a nervous wait for stewards to clear him of allegedly impeding Alpine’s Pierre Gasly, with Mercedes’s George Russell fourth.
McLaren’s Lando Norris dropped from a provisional second after the first flying laps to an eventual fifth when he clipped a kerb on his final effort.
“The whole weekend so far has been a bit of a struggle so we definitely improved the car for qualifying,” said Verstappen, who can end the year with a record-extending 19th win in 22 races.
“From lap one it all seemed a bit more together and we could definitely push more.”
Red Bull has won 20 of the 21 races so far, another F1 record, and Verstappen has won in Abu Dhabi for the past three years. Both titles have already been clinched.
The 26-year-old Dutch driver, whose teammate Sergio Perez qualified in ninth place, had complained in practice about his car jumping around “like a kangaroo”.
Russell had been fastest in two of the practice sessions and Leclerc in the other, raising doubts even within Red Bull about Verstappen’s chances of pole.
“Well done mate. You’ve just won me 500 euros off (Red Bull motorsport consultant) Helmut (Marko) which is like getting blood out of a stone,” a jubilant team boss Christian Horner told Verstappen over the team radio.
“Helmut lost a bet? What world are we living in?,” replied Verstappen.
“The bet was for you to be in the front row, mate,” said Horner.
The pole was Verstappen’s 12th of the season and 32nd of his career, putting him level with 1992 world champion Nigel Mansell in the all-time lists.
McLaren also looked a good bet to retain fourth place overall, with rivals Aston Martin having only Fernando Alonso qualify in the top 10, the Spaniard lining up seventh and behind AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda. — Reuters