F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Verstappen beats Norris to pole in wet Dutch GP qualifying

Max Verstappen always looked in control of the fluctuating conditions at Zandvoort to take pole position for Red Bull in tomorrow's Dutch Grand Prix, ending with a margin of half a second over McLaren's Lando Norris.

Mercedes' George Russell will line up on the second row of the grid alongside Williams driver Alex Albon in a session that started on a wet track but soon started to dry, with Q3 run on slicks but still suffering two red flag stoppages.

Logan Sargeant triggered one after crashing in the Williams, with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc causing the other. Lewis Hamilton will start from P13 after traffic meant he missed out on improving with his crucial final Q2 lap.

Wet and windy weather had made for a lively final practice earlier in the day with plenty of drivers caught out - including but by no means limited to Kevin Magnussen, Zhou Guanyu and new boy Liam Lawson who all triggered brief red flag stoppages. Red Bull's Max Verstappen had been predictably fastest of anyone despite the odd skim across the gravel of his own, but after that the order was pretty much a lottery dependant on what the track conditions were like when they were making their fastest runs. George Russell, Sergio Perez, Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and Alex Albon had all been lucky enough to finish in the top ten, while Ferrari pair Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz both looked to be struggling.

But this was little indication of how the drivers would fare in qualifying. There had been another downpour since final practice which had forced the F2 sprint race to be red flagged, but conditions were drier and brighter as the cars lined up for Q1, with hints of blue skies on display for the orange-clad fans in the grandstands to admire. However the track was still wet - very wet in places - meaning that more incidents were very much on the cards when the lights at the end of pit lane turned green.

Q1: Albon pips Verstappen to top spot in tricky wet conditions

First out on track were the two Williams drivers, Alex Albon and Logan Sargeant. They and those that followed were all on intermediate tyres befitting the wet track, but there was a definite sense that teams were itching to break out the slick compounds if no more rain showed up, the tarmac already steaming off the standing water that had built up.

Albon posted the first time of 1:31.315s, but he had run off on his way. The conditions had already evolved in the few seconds before Sargeant crossed the line, over a second and a half quicker than his team mate. By the time that Valtteri Bottas completed his lap in the Alfa Romeo, the Finn was able to drop the target time to 1:26.000s. But it wasn't easy for anyone, with Verstappen among those to find himself bouncing through the wet gravel.

That temporary absence allowed McLaren to take charge, Lando Norris going top with a time of 1:23.260s which was almost half a second ahead of his team mate Oscar Piastri. Sergio Perez split the papaya pair, and then the two Ferraris went top until Verstappen did finally complete a decent push lap to go quickest although he was immediately deposed by a new lap from Norris, and then Piastri going quicker still. Even Albon had been able to beat Verstappen's initial benchmark.

With concerns that more showers could pop up at any time, no one was letting up. The cycle started again, with Perez splitting the two McLarens for a second time. Then it was George Russell going seven thousandths of a second ahead of Piastri before Norris took charge again with a time of 1:21.434s, six tenths quicker than the Mercedes. Piastri briefly went top once more before Verstappen with a definite sense of inevitability pipped him with a time of 1:21.230s. With four minutes still on the clock, those at risk of elimination were Nico Hulkenberg, AlphaTauri stand-in Liam Lawson, Valtteri Bottas, Kevin Magnussen and Logan Sargeant.

Drivers made quick visits to pit lane for new inters, and there were some near misses as a result including Sainz pulling across the track as he came back out and squeezing Piastri to the edge of the track. Elsewhere Lewis Hamilton complained he had been blocked by Alonso, but the stewards weren't interested in further investigation. Time was now running out - not just on the clocks but in the skies overhead as well, with fans in the grandstands diving for their umbrellas and waterproof jackets when the rain picked up again.

Sainz had been looking at risk of missing the cut but now jumped up to fifth place. Albon also found a sweet spot to go quickest ahead of Verstappen, Piastri and Norris. And Norris was now safely through as were Lance Stroll, Pierre Gasly, Yuki Tsunoda and Fernando Alonso. With the water spray visibly heavier than at the start of the round, Hulkenberg and Hamilton were also safe. Perez had been pushed all the way down to P13 putting him just ahead of a last-gasp effort from Leclerc that left the Ferrari 14th ahead of Sargeant, who had made a vital late improvement to secure his passage to the second round.

Zhou Guanyu put everything into his final run and went for a wild slide out of the final corner as a consequence, but the Alfa Romeo still missed the cut as did his team mate Bottas. Alpine's Esteban Ocon perhaps regretted not putting in much of an appearance in FP3 and also missed out, as did Magnussen. It was entirely understandable that AlphaTauri reserve Lawson was slowest of anyone in his first day in the cockpit of the AT04 sitting in for the injured Daniel Ricciardo.

Q2: Verstappen quickest ahead of Piastri and Albon as Hamilton misses the cut

While light, the rain continued to persist as the teams regrouped for the second round of qualifying. Intermediates remained the unanimous choice of the drivers, but the skies were clearing up and the odd dry line could be seen as sun appeared over the final corner. Even so the teams were worried by a heavy cell of rain lingering close by the circuit, so Verstappen was quick to take charge on 1:20.690s. That was a full second ahead of Sargeant, Leclerc, Stroll and Russell but it was early days: Piastri soon staked a claim on second, and Albon went quicker still to edge within a couple of tenths of Verstappen.

Norris was still looking quick and duly usurped Verstappen from the top with a time of 1:20.629s. Verstappen instantly retaliated and went 0.347s quicker still. The Mercedes drivers had also shown their hands, Hamilton moving into third ahead of Albon with Russell just behind in fifth. Leclerc found temporary sanctuary by taking fifth from Russell before an improved run from Piastri put the Aussie into fourth. All this jockeying for position left Sargeant on the bubble in P10 and Perez, Tsunoda, Hulkenberg, Gasly and Sainz all having to scramble if they were going to make it through to the final round.

The track was continuing to dry up but not in time to allow anyone to try slicks for their final Q2 efforts. Verstappen pushed on in the improving conditions to post a new time of 1:19.652s which was almost a second quicker than the latest from Perez who had jumped to P2 ahead of Norris, Hamilton and Piastri. If that looked like the end of the story, then think again: Albon's next lap was enough to put Williams back on top by a quarter of a second from Verstappen while Tsunoda jumped into third between the the Red Bulls.

Russell was similarly able to edge ahead of Verstappen, although he was not a match for Albon's time. And then Piastri went quickest of anyone with a time of 1:19.392s, seven thousandths quicker than Albon, before Verstappen's inevitable riposte was half a second quicker than anyone else. Behind Alonso, Leclerc clocked in to fifth ahead of Russell while Norris left his final run late and it was only swift enough for seventh ahead of improved times from Perez, Sainz and a brilliant showing from Sargeant to get the American through to the top ten pole shoot-out for the first time.

It all meant that Stroll had just missed the cut as had Gasly, Tsunoda and Hulkenberg. But the big shock was Hamilton losing out and ending up 13th after struggling with traffic congestion throughout his all-important final flying lap attempt.

Q3: Verstappen takes pole from Norris after Leclerc and Sargeant crash out

The weather was transformed during the intermission before the start of Q3, with the emerging sunshine making the Zandvoort dunes look positively beach holiday-ready. A dry line was becoming more evident by the minute and race control enabled DRS for the remaining 12 minutes, a clear indication that slicks were now on the cards.

Sure enough, Russell, Albon and Sargeant were all quick to head out on the soft compound while Piastri put safety first with an exploratory lap on used inters as did Verstappen, Perez and Leclerc. It confirmed that slicks were indeed the way to go, and they came back down pit lane for a change - except for Verstappen who stayed out an extra lap as he and his race engineer once again bickered over tactics.

Albon had just posted a time of 1:15.743s as one of only four completed laps before the session was red-flagged for a big crash for his Williams team mate Sargeant who had strayed wide onto the wet kerb at turn 2 and lost the rear of the car, throwing him into the TechPro barrier. It was an unfortunate way for the rookie to end what had been up to this point his best qualifying performance of the season, at a circuit that was clearly well-suited to the FW45. Fortunately he was able to give the crowd a thumbs-up as he walked over to the medical car to indicate no harm done in terms of injuries at least, just some bruising to the ego.

There was still a little over eight minutes remaining on the stopped clock, and the lengthy delay for barrier repairs meant the track had even more time to dry off before the remaining nine cars still in contention were able to head back out. Sainz was first out, followed by Albon and Alonso. Immediately, the times were a quantum advance on the earlier levels with Norris jumping to the top on a time of 1:12.049s, two tenths ahead of his team mate Piastri with Verstappen only third ahead of Russell.

Leclerc went fifth fastest but then found the barrier at turn 9, the problem now being dust on the track rather than rain causing him to understeer off onto the wet, muddy grass and a one way trip into the tyre wall. Again the clock was stopped while the marshals swept up the mess, and the four minutes now remaining meant everyone still on one piece would have one last chance to improve their times in a one-lap shootout.

Perez, Albon and Alonso led the charge giving themselves the advantage of two warm-up laps before putting their foot down. Verstappen had no need of such things to ensure he went top with a time of 1:10.567s, half a second clear of Norris' best effort which was still sufficient to keep the McLaren man on the front row of the grid ahead of Russell, Albon and Alonso, with Sainz sixth from Perez and Piastri.

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Andrew Lewin

Andrew first became a fan of Formula 1 during the time when Michael Schumacher and Damon Hill were stepping into the limelight after the era of Alain Prost, Nigel Mansell and Aryton Senna. He's been addicted ever since, and has been writing about the sport now for nearly a quarter of a century for a number of online news sites. He's also written professionally about GP2 (now Formula 2), GP3, IndyCar, World Rally Championship, MotoGP and NASCAR. In his other professional life, Andrew is a freelance writer, social media consultant, web developer/programmer, and digital specialist in the fields of accessibility, usability, IA, online communities and public sector procurement. He worked for many years in magazine production at Bauer Media, and for over a decade he was part of the digital media team at the UK government's communications department. Born and raised in Essex, Andrew currently lives and works in south-west London.

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