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Qualifying report

French GP: Verstappen beats Hamilton, Bottas to pole

Max Verstappen beat Lewis Hamilton to pole position for Formula 1's 2021 French Grand Prix at Paul Ricard, with Valtteri Bottas third ahead of Sergio Perez.

After he'd topped FP3 by over 0.7s, Verstappen led the way again after the first runs in Q3, with a 0.386s advantage over Hamilton.

The world champion found enough time on his final run to out-do Verstappen's first flying effort in the final segment of qualifying, but the Dutchman had already put the P1 benchmark out of reach as he led the top four runners to the line, as they ran at the rear of the pack on the final laps.

Although Hamilton ultimately came away with the best time in the first sector, purple sectors for Verstappen in the second two thirds of the lap, after he'd put in his own personal best in the opening sector, resulted in a 1m29.990s.

Hamilton ended up 0.258s adrift, but beat his Mercedes teammate Bottas for the first time in the weekend, as the Finn finished 0.386s down on Verstappen after topping Q2.

Perez was followed by Carlos Sainz, who led the way in qualifying for Ferrari for the second time in 2021, with Pierre Gasly and Charles Leclerc taking sixth and seventh – Gasly needing to deliver on his final Q3 run after losing his first time for running too wide through Turn 6.

Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo were separated by Fernando Alonso's ninth-placed Alpine, as the trio rounded out the top 10.

All of the top 10 runners will start the race on the medium tyres, after traversing the middle segment on the harder rubber, which is expected to perform much better than the softs in race conditions on Sunday.

In Q2, Esteban Ocon set a personal best on his final lap in the middle segment but was knocked out by 0.121s behind Ricciardo – who had switched to run the softs on his final Q2 lap, which he abandoned when it was clear he was through to ensure he will start the race on the preferred medium starting strategy.

Sebastian Vettel's final run in Q2 was nearly a slower than his personal best as he ended up P12, ahead of Alfa Romeo's Antonio Giovinazzi and Williams driver George Russell.

The latter pair ran contra tyre strategies for the Q2 runs, with Giovinazzi copying the rest in taking the mediums at the start of the segment, while Russell went for the softs.

When they swapped compounds for their final laps, Russell nipped ahead into P13 as he ran the mediums, but the soft-shod Giovinazzi got back ahead at the chequered flag fell to end the middle segment, and both drivers will be free to pick any starting compound for the race.

Mick Schumacher made it through to Q2 for the first time in his F1 career, but only after he had ended Q1 25 seconds early when he crashed at Turn 6, the long right-hander that feeds into the Turn 7 left kink and the Mistral Straight early in the lap.

The rear of the Haas came around midway through the corner as he went to complete on final Q1 run and he went off backwards at high-speed, facing the wrong way across the runoff before hitting the barriers backwards on the outside, which damaged his rear end and the left-front was knocked off as the car snapped back around in the impact.

That stopped any late improvements, and kept Schumacher in a Q2 berth he could not take up, finishing P15 in qualifying's provisional classification, with Nicholas Latifi leading the eliminated drivers in P16 – the Williams driver knocked out by just 0.002s behind Russell, who had been set to complete a much faster late Q1 time before having to abandon the lap when the red flags came out.

Kimi Raikkonen and Nikita Mazepin were trapped in 17th and 18th, while Lance Stroll ended up 19th with no competitive time set.

Stroll had lost a time that would have got him through Q1 in the top 10 for running too wide through Turn 6 earlier in the opening segment and getting his lap deleted.

He had enough time to complete two runs before the scheduled end to Q1, but after abandoning the first lap and setting up for one final run, he was caught out by the late red flag and unable to set a time under two-minutes as the session was not restarted.

The opening segment had already been disrupted by a red flag after just three minutes, when Yuki Tsunoda spun off backwards into the tyre barrier behind Turn 2.

The AlphaTauri driver had clipped the kerbs on the inside of Turn 1 as he started his first flying lap, which unsettled his car and sent its rear quickly swinging around as he went off the track backwards before reaching the second corner.

The AlphaTauri's rear suspension wing were already oscillating wildly as the car went backwards off the track, before being damaged against the barriers, from which Tsunoda was unable to get engage a car and drive away.

He eventually climbed out of the board and will start last, with Q1 suspended for 10 minutes, after which the first times of qualifying were finally set.

Cla Driver Chassis Time Gap
1 Netherlands Max Verstappen
Red Bull 1'29.990
2 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes 1'30.248 0.258
3 Finland Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes 1'30.376 0.386
4 Mexico Sergio Perez
Red Bull 1'30.445 0.455
5 Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.
Ferrari 1'30.840 0.850
6 France Pierre Gasly
AlphaTauri 1'30.868 0.878
7 Monaco Charles Leclerc
Ferrari 1'30.987 0.997
8 United Kingdom Lando Norris
McLaren 1'31.252 1.262
9 Spain Fernando Alonso
Alpine 1'31.340 1.350
10 Australia Daniel Ricciardo
McLaren 1'31.382 1.392
11 France Esteban Ocon
Alpine 1'31.736 1.746
12 Germany Sebastian Vettel
Aston Martin 1'31.767 1.777
13 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Alfa Romeo 1'31.813 1.823
14 United Kingdom George Russell
Williams 1'32.065 2.075
15 Germany Mick Schumacher
Haas
16 Canada Nicholas Latifi
Williams 1'33.062 3.072
17 Finland Kimi Raikkonen
Alfa Romeo 1'33.354 3.364
18 Russian Federation Nikita Mazepin
Haas 1'33.554 3.564
19 Canada Lance Stroll
Aston Martin 2'12.584 42.594
20 Japan Yuki Tsunoda
AlphaTauri

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