BAKU, Azerbaijan — Charles Leclerc has his own recipe for pole position in Formula One this season. A street circuit, an unexpectedly fast Ferrari and a crash.
Leclerc won the pole for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix when a crash stopped qualifying for the second round in a row. Last time it was Leclerc’s own car in the wall in Monaco that stopped his rivals from beating his time.
In Baku, Yuki Tsunoda and Leclerc’s teammate Carlos Sainz played the deciding role.
Leclerc set a time of one minute, 41.218 seconds early in Saturday’s third session. Championship leader Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton were just starting their late flying laps when Tsunoda hit the wall and then Sainz crashed his Ferrari right behind Tsunoda.
It brought an immediate end to the session and put Leclerc on pole for the second consecutive grand prix. He hasn’t won a race since September 2019.
Even though he retained his starting position at his home track in Monaco two weeks ago, repairs to his car were not completed in time and he did not race. The pole spot was left empty on the grid.
“It feels good, it feels better than Monaco, though it still doesn’t feel as good as a pole position should feel, just because of the red flag,” Leclerc said. “We definitely did not expect this type of performance so it’s looking good for the future.”
The red flag was also brought out in the first qualifying session when Montreal’s Lance Stroll and Antonio Giovinazzi both went off at the same corner before setting a time.
Daniel Ricciardo crashed in the second session. The Australian is in his first season with McLaren but has finished behind teammate Lando Norris in four of five races so far this year.
Leclerc arrived in Baku expecting to fight McLaren or be “even a little behind” rather than a challenger to title contenders Hamilton and Verstappen. He’s sixth in the standings and already 65 points behind leader Verstappen after his bizarre Monaco weekend.
But for the second consecutive race, Verstappen and Hamilton didn’t get a chance to challenge Leclerc. Tsunoda’s crash brought out the fourth red flag of the qualifying session and stopped their charge.
“To be honest, we didn’t expect to be as competitive as were this weekend until now,” Leclerc said.
Hamilton was .232 off the pace in second — a rebound after Mercedes had struggled to match Red Bull and Ferrari in practice. Verstappen took third, .113 back. Both could only speculate if they could have taken the pole from Leclerc.
“I can’t say that I would definitely have been quicker than Charles, but there was definitely time left on the table,” Hamilton said.
Verstappen called the session “stupid qualifying” and rued his lack of a slipstream on the long straight.
Red Bull and Mercedes have spent the week bickering over what Hamilton has called Red Bull’s “bendy” rear wing — it flexes at speed to reduce drag — and then Red Bull accused Mercedes of having its own questionable front wing.
Ferrari sidestepped the debate entirely and won the pole, though Leclerc doubted he can convert that into a win Sunday. “I think it’s going to be difficult to keep these two behind me,” he said.
Mercedes’ lack of pace Friday had sparked speculation that even reaching the final qualifying shootout would be a challenge. In the end, Hamilton was shocked at how much his car had improved, but teammate Valtteri Bottas only qualified 10th. The Finn has less than half of Hamilton’s points after five races and has yet to beat Hamilton this season.
“We definitely weren’t expecting that because we’ve been struggling all weekend. You can definitely see it. We continue to have difficult discussions in the background and challenging one another and just never taking no for an answer,” Hamilton said of the turnaround.
“We’ve moved around and made so many changes over these two days, just chasing your tail has been so difficult. We really worked overnight and between the sessions and I’m really proud of everyone for keeping positive and to be up there and to be so close to these guys is a great start.”
Pierre Gasly of Red Bull’s sister team AlphaTauri was a surprise fourth, two thousandths of a second behind Verstappen. No such luck for Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Pérez. The Mexican driver was fastest across the three practice sessions and was expected to challenge for pole but instead was a disappointing seventh.
Nicholas Latifi of Toronto finished 16th in qualifying.
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