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Edition

Australia
Qualifying report

Chinese GP: Hamilton beats Vettel to pole, Verstappen out in Q1

Lewis Hamilton emerged from another tight Formula 1 qualifying battle with Sebastian Vettel to claim pole position for the Chinese Grand Prix.

Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari, polesitter Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 and Valtteri Bottas, Mercedes AMG F1 celebrate in parc ferme

Photo by: Sutton Images

Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari SF70H
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W08
Felipe Massa, Williams FW40, leads Romain Grosjean, Haas F1 Team VF-17
Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13
Nico Hulkenberg, Renault Sport F1 Team RS17
Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari SF70H
Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF70H
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W08
Jolyon Palmer, Renault Sport F1 Team RS17
Romain Grosjean, Haas F1 Team VF-17
Fernando Alonso, McLaren MCL32
Felipe Massa, Williams FW40
Romain Grosjean, Haas F1 Team VF-17
Fernando Alonso, McLaren MCL32
Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes AMG F1 W08

Barely more than two tenths of a second had covered the Mercedes and Ferrari drivers after the first runs in Q2, with Vettel fractionally ahead of Hamilton, followed by Valtteri Bottas and Kimi Raikkonen - who eventually went fastest in that segment by doing second run when the others didn't.

But Hamilton moved into the ascendancy at the start of Q3, leading Vettel by almost two tenths of a second after the first runs despite running wide out of Turn 3 and suffering a snap of oversteer at the exit of Turn 11.

The Mercedes driver improved to a 1m31.678s best on his final run with a cleaner lap, claiming pole by just 0.186 seconds.

Vettel joined Hamilton in the 1m31s on his own final flying lap, but failed to improve in Sector 1 and lost out. When informed by Ferrari he had missed pole by two tenths, Vettel reckoned "I didn't have that" time in the car.

Bottas put in an excellent final lap in Q3, but missed out on beating Vettel to the front row by just one thousandth of a second.

Raikkonen fell away in Q3, ending up fourth, nearly three tenths back from Bottas.

Red Bull reckoned Daniel Ricciardo got everything out of his car in posting the fifth quickest time, nearly 1.5s away from pole but nearly half a second clear of Felipe Massa's Williams.

Nico Hulkenberg was sixth fastest in Q2 and chose to complete his solitary Q3 run at the start of that session instead of the end, but this was still good enough for seventh place for Renault.

Force India's Sergio Perez was eighth fastest, just ahead of Daniil Kvyat's Toro Rosso, while rookie Lance Stroll rounded out the top 10 in the second Williams.

The battle to make it into the top-10 shootout was extremely tight between Stroll, Sergio Perez, the two Toro Rossos, and Kevin Magnussen's Haas.

Carlos Sainz missed the top 10 cut by just 0.060s after failing to improve on his second Q2 run, while Magnussen was only 0.014s further back in 12th.

Fernando Alonso wrung the neck of the McLaren-Honda to make the top 10 in Q1 and eventually qualify 13th fastest, just over two tenths down on the Haas and almost seven tenths clear of Marcus Ericsson's Sauber.

Sauber unexpectedly got both cars through to Q2, thanks to Antonio Giovinazzi crashing heavily at the final corner just as the chequered flag came out at the end of Q1.

The Ferrari third driver took no part in Q2 so was classified 16th, ahead of Romain Grosjean's Haas, Jolyon Palmer's Renault, and Esteban Ocon's Force India, which all had to abort their final flying laps in Q1.

The second McLaren-Honda of Stoffel Vandoorne was unaffected, but his best lap was not good enough to displace Giovinazzi, so Vandoorne missed the cut by just 0.060s.

Melbourne qualifying star Grosjean had earlier spun exiting the final corner, ruining his first Q1 run, so he wound up only 17th fastest, two tenths behind Vandoorne.

Palmer ended up 18th fastest and Ocon last, both sandwiching the Red Bull of Max Verstappen, who struggled with a suspected engine problem throughout the session.

Both Grosjean and Palmer are also under investigation by the FIA, for allegedly failing to slow sufficiently under yellow flags at the end of Q1.

ClaDriverChassisTimeGap
1 united_kingdom Lewis Hamilton  Mercedes 1'31.678  
2 germany Sebastian Vettel  Ferrari 1'31.864 0.186
3 finland Valtteri Bottas  Mercedes 1'31.865 0.187
4 finland Kimi Raikkonen  Ferrari 1'32.140 0.462
5 australia Daniel Ricciardo  Red Bull 1'33.033 1.355
6 brazil Felipe Massa  Williams 1'33.507 1.829
7 germany Nico Hulkenberg  Renault 1'33.580 1.902
8 mexico Sergio Perez  Force India 1'33.706 2.028
9 russia Daniil Kvyat  Toro Rosso 1'33.719 2.041
10 canada Lance Stroll  Williams 1'34.220 2.542
11 spain Carlos Sainz Jr.  Toro Rosso 1'34.150 2.472
12 denmark Kevin Magnussen  Haas 1'34.164 2.486
13 spain Fernando Alonso  McLaren 1'34.372 2.694
14 sweden Marcus Ericsson  Sauber 1'35.046 3.368
15 italy Antonio Giovinazzi  Sauber    
16 belgium Stoffel Vandoorne  McLaren 1'35.023 3.345
17 france Romain Grosjean  Haas 1'35.223 3.545
18 united_kingdom Jolyon Palmer  Renault 1'35.279 3.601
19 netherlands Max Verstappen  Red Bull 1'35.433 3.755
20 france Esteban Ocon  Force India 1'35.496 3.818

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