Kimi Antonelli confirmed his rising star status by storming to a second consecutive pole position on Saturday at Suzuka.
The Mercedes teenager was untouchable when it mattered, once again outpacing team-mate George Russell in a display of authority that has defined his weekend in Japan so far.
Qualifying began with a familiar pattern in Q1. Ferrari and Mercedes controlled the front, with McLaren just behind, while the likes of Williams, Cadillac and Aston Martin anguished near the drop zone.
Late improvements from Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon rescued their sessions, but there was no such relief for Ollie Bearman. The Haas driver – fifth in the championship – suffered a shock exit in 18th.
Meanwhile, Aston Martin’s struggles deepened dramatically, both cars ending up at the very back, over three seconds off the pace at Honda’s home circuit.
Q2 delivered the session’s biggest shock. Oscar Piastri initially set the pace before Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and then Antonelli raised the bar.
But all eyes turned to Max Verstappen, who found himself in unexpected trouble.
Struggling with balance issues, the Red Bull driver reported his car as “undriveable” over team radio – and the timing screens confirmed it.
A late improvement from Racing Bulls rookie Arvid Lindblad knocked Verstappen out in Q2, a stunning elimination.
In Q3, Antonelli wasted no time. His opening lap – a 1m28.778s – was the first effort into the 1m28s range all weekend and proved decisive. Russell fell three tenths short, unable to match his team-mate’s final sector brilliance.
Behind them, McLaren edged Ferrari, with Piastri leading Lando Norris and Leclerc, while Lewis Hamilton slotted in just behind.
No driver improved on their final runs, leaving the order unchanged at the front.
Further down, Pierre Gasly impressed by claiming seventh for Alpine, less than a second off pole. Racing Bulls’ Isack Hadjar followed, ahead of Gabriel Bortoleto and Lindblad, who completed the top 10.
As the grid is set, Antonelli stands firmly in control – but with surprises already unfolding, Sunday’s race promises anything but predictability.
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