McLaren drivers lock out front row in Australian GP qualifying

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Lando Norris spearheaded a McLaren domination in qualifying for the 2025 Australian Grand Prix, clinching pole with a 1m 15.096s, just 0.084s ahead of teammate Oscar Piastri.

Max Verstappen settled for third, 0.385s off the pace, while Lewis Hamilton languished in eighth.

The session, bathed in Melbourne’s afternoon glow, showcased McLaren’s edge, though both drivers overcame early Q3 stumbles—Norris losing a lap to track limits at Turn 4 and Piastri overshooting the penultimate corner—before storming to a 1-2 on their final runs.

 

Verstappen briefly topped the times in Q3, but his second effort couldn’t match McLaren’s late surge, particularly their blistering final sectors.

George Russell claimed fourth for Mercedes, followed by a standout Yuki Tsunoda in fifth for Racing Bulls, who pipped Williams’ Alex Albon at the flag.

Charles Leclerc led Ferrari in seventh, with Hamilton, Pierre Gasly, and Carlos Sainz rounding out the top 10, all logging personal bests as the clock hit zero.

Midfield Battles and Rookie Struggles

Q2 saw tight scraps and costly errors. Isack Hadjar’s late improvement for Racing Bulls fell short of Q3, as did Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso and Lance Stroll—the former hampered by floor damage from an early gravel excursion beyond Turn 10.

Jack Doohan climbed to 14th with a clutch final lap for Alpine, set moments after Hamilton’s ungainly Turn 11 spin on worn softs.

Kick Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoleto bowed out in 15th but dazzled with a wild save at Turn 4, marking a promising F1 qualifying debut.

Q1 delivered shocks aplenty. Bortoleto’s last-second leap eliminated Mercedes rookie Andrea Kimi Antonelli, whose car sparked dramatically along the tarmac—later traced to a damaged floor bib.

Red Bull’s Liam Lawson, fresh off an FP3 engine scare, faltered too, abandoning his final lap after multiple errors to slot 18th.

Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg and Haas’ Esteban Ocon bookended Lawson in 17th and 19th, while Haas debutant Ollie Bearman propped up the order in 20th, a gearbox glitch on his outlap compounding a bruising weekend of crashes and setbacks.

McLaren’s Moment, Red Bull’s Recovery

McLaren’s front-row lockout sets the stage for a potential Melbourne masterclass, with Norris and Piastri thriving under pressure.

Verstappen, despite Red Bull’s pace, couldn’t bridge the gap, while Lawson’s woes hint at lingering reliability concerns.

Tsunoda and Albon’s Q3 heroics signal midfield threats, but Bearman’s torrid introduction—capped by FP3’s gravel trap and Q1’s mechanical gremlins—underscores the rookie learning curve.

As Albert Park braces for a possible rain-hit race, qualifying has teed up a Sunday showdown.

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