
Oscar Piastri edged out McLaren team-mate Lando Norris to secure pole position for Sunday’s Dutch Grand Prix, underlining McLaren’s ongoing dominance on this weekend’s F1 event.
The Australian denied Norris by just 0.012s in a tense Q3 shoot-out, with neither driver able to improve on their final attempts as the seaside crowd enjoyed sunny skies and a dry track following overnight rain.
Norris had been the form man through practice, topping all three sessions, but when it mattered most, Piastri produced a blistering 1m08.662s. The lap was built on marginal gains in the first and third sectors, enough to outpace his team-mate and title rival.
The result means Piastri now leads Norris five to four in the season’s pole tally, a subtle but significant edge in their tightly fought championship battle. Norris trails by nine points heading into Sunday’s race.
Q1 sets the tone
The first phase was also topped by McLaren, with Piastri taking his first session win of the weekend. Russell narrowly outpaced Verstappen for third, both trailing by three tenths.

Further back, Tsunoda escaped another Q1 exit by a fine margin, but Alpine’s Franco Colapinto fell short of the cut by less than a tenth.
Rookie Bortoleto once again outpaced team-mate Nico Hulkenberg, the Brazilian beating the veteran for a fifth consecutive qualifying. Hulkenberg ended up 17th, ahead of Haas pair Esteban Ocon and Oliver Bearman.
Lance Stroll’s difficult weekend worsened with a crash at Turn 13. Having dipped a wheel onto the grass at the corner’s entry, the Aston Martin driver spun into the barriers and failed to set a lap.
Tight margins in Q2
Q2 brought drama in spades, with Norris leading Piastri and Verstappen at the front, but the fight for survival behind went down to the wire.
Alonso needed just 0.005s to scrape through and duly delivered, while Lawson also made the cut at the expense of Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Yuki Tsunoda.

Antonelli missed out on Q3 by just 0.019s to Sainz, while Tsunoda’s late effort was not enough to save him. Gabriel Bortoleto, Pierre Gasly and a visibly frustrated Alex Albon were also eliminated, Albon lamenting Williams’ tyre preparation.
Verstappen denied by papaya wall
In the final top-ten shootout, local hero Max Verstappen gave everything to challenge McLaren, but even his best was only good enough for third. The Red Bull driver initially trailed by four tenths after his first run, before a spectacular middle sector – the fastest overall – on his final lap cut the deficit to 0.250s.
The effort wasn’t enough to crack the McLaren front row, but it at least spared Verstappen from a bigger gap to the papaya cars.

Alongside him on row two will be rookie sensation Isack Hadjar, who stunned with a late flyer to put his Racing Bulls fourth – bumping George Russell down to fifth for Mercedes.
Ferrari edge battle within
Ferrari’s intra-team contest tilted toward Charles Leclerc, who found extra speed on his final run to slot into sixth, a tenth clear of Lewis Hamilton in seventh. The seven-time world champion had been quicker after the first laps, but could not extract more from his final attempt.
Behind them, Liam Lawson delivered a solid performance to take eighth in the second Racing Bulls machine.
Williams’ Carlos Sainz booked his first Q3 appearance since Imola, taking ninth, while Fernando Alonso recovered from the brink of elimination in Q2 to complete the top 10 for Aston Martin.
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