©Mercedes
George Russell delivered a timely response in the 2026 Formula 1 title fight by securing a commanding pole position for the Barcelona-Catalunya Grand Prix, finally bringing Kimi Antonelli’s recent qualifying dominance to an end.
After showing strong pace throughout the weekend, Russell converted his form into his first pole since the season-opening race in Melbourne, producing a stunning lap of 1m14.679s to edge out Lewis Hamilton by 0.064s.
Championship leader Antonelli could manage only third, more than three tenths adrift of his Mercedes team-mate, setting up an intriguing battle between the title rivals on race day.
Times to follow...
The decisive qualifying shootout was interrupted early when Charles Leclerc crashed heavily at the exit of Turn 4.
The Ferrari driver drifted onto the dustier outside line and suddenly lost the rear of the car, bringing out red flags after only two representative laps had been completed.
Before the stoppage, Oscar Piastri had briefly led the way with a 1m15.176s, narrowly ahead of Max Verstappen.
Once the session resumed, however, Russell immediately seized control.
The Mercedes driver posted a provisional pole lap of 1m15.145s, edging Piastri by just 0.031s, while Antonelli could only manage fourth on his first attempt.
Antonelli appeared poised to fight back on the final runs, improving to a 1m14.998s and briefly moving ahead of Russell.
The celebration lasted only moments.
Russell responded with an exceptional final lap, finding over three tenths to reclaim top spot and secure pole in emphatic fashion.
Hamilton then split the Mercedes pair with a late improvement to second, while Lando Norris jumped to fourth to ensure both McLarens started from the first two rows.
Verstappen qualified fifth for Red Bull ahead of team-mate Isack Hadjar, with just 0.056s separating the pair.
Piastri, who had looked threatening early in Q3, endured a messy conclusion and slipped to seventh, ahead of in-form Racing Bulls driver Liam Lawson. Nico Hulkenberg secured ninth for Audi, while Leclerc's earlier crash left him 10th.
Q2 brought a scare for McLaren, with both Norris and Piastri hovering near elimination before improving on their final runs.
Arvid Lindblad narrowly missed out on Q3 in 11th, ahead of Audi's Gabriel Bortoleto and Alpine's Franco Colapinto. Pierre Gasly qualified 14th, continuing a recent trend of being outpaced by his Argentine team-mate.
Oliver Bearman completed the top 15, while local favourite Carlos Sainz was eliminated in 16th for Williams.
Further back, Esteban Ocon qualified 17th, ahead of Alex Albon and the Cadillac duo of Sergio Perez and Valtteri Bottas.
Aston Martin endured a miserable session at the rear of the field. Lance Stroll finally outqualified Fernando Alonso for the first time this season, taking 21st as the reigning world champion could manage only 22nd on home soil.
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