James Galloway
Senior Sports Journalist
Max Verstappen and Red Bull beat the weather to get the job done early in Q3 and seal pole position ahead of Charles Leclerc and the Aston Martins; watch Sprint Saturday at the Sao Paulo GP live on Sky Sports F1, with the Shootout at 2pm and the Sprint itself at 6.30pm
Last Updated: 03/11/23 8:11pm
Max Verstappen beat the arrival on an extraordinary Interlagos storm to see off what had been a fierce qualifying challenge from his rivals to secure pole position for Sunday’s Sao Paulo Grand Prix.
Having appeared set to face a major fight for pole from McLaren’s Lando Norris, who topped Q2, in particular, Red Bull crucially got their man out early as ominously dark clouds gathered over the circuit for the start of Q3 and Verstappen delivered on what turned out to be the one flying lap in the final session to secure an 11th pole position of his season.
For Norris and McLaren, it was sharp disappointment, as the Briton’s pacesetting form from the second phase turned in to just seventh on the grid for Sunday’s grand prix.
Team-mate Oscar Piastri spun into the grass at the penultimate corner as the rain fell and he qualified 10th.
“The car was amazing,” admitted a disappointed Norris. “Easily probably quick enough to be quickest today and on pole. So pretty gutted for that to end the way we did.”
In amazing scenes at what was only just after 4pm local time, Interlagos almost descended into total night-time darkness as storm clouds rolled in overhead.
The rain though took time to properly begin and so drivers just had time to complete one fast lap in Q3 on slick tyres. Verstappen, who overtook Russell on his way out of the pit lane, set his time first with conditions only gradually getting worse for those behind him on the road.
The clouds started to truly burst as the drivers headed back to the pits, meaning the session was soon red-flagged with four minutes remaining. With so few minutes on the clock, and the weather only worsening, Race Control soon decided that the pole shootout would not be restarted and so the Q3 timesheet stood as it was.
While McLaren badly lost out, Aston Martin had been quick on their feet at the start of Q3 and profited from the truncated session to take a morale-boosting third and fourth on the grid after a miserable run of recent races for the team.
Lance Stroll outqualified Fernando Alonso for just the third time this year and he will start as the team’s lead car in third place, the Canadian’s best starting berth for three years.
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, the polesitter for the first two legs of F1’s ongoing Americas triple header, will start alongside Verstappen on the front row while Mercedes pair Lewis Hamilton and George Russell qualified fifth and sixth respectively.
With Norris and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz to share the fourth row, under-pressure Sergio Perez is back on row five in ninth for Red Bull after unfortunate timing meant he passed Piastri while the McLaren was spinning on the grass and he had to slow down for yellow flags.
But, not for the first time, there was no such misfortune for the other Red Bull.
“We didn’t know when it would hit in qualifying, we thought it would hit,” said polesitter Verstappen. “This is of course insane weather.”
Sao Paulo GP Qualifying result: Top 10
1) Max Verstappen, Red Bull
2) Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
3) Lance Stroll, Aston Martin
4) Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin
5) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
6) George Russell, Mercedes
7) Lando Norris, McLaren
8) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
9) Sergio Perez, Red Bull
10) Oscar Piastri, McLaren
With a exciting-looking grid now in place for Sunday’s grand prix, attention now turns to Saturday’s standalone Sprint events at Interlagos.
The Sprint Shootout to set the grid for the Sprint itself starts at 2pm, with the 24-lap mini race when points are awarded to the top-eight finishers following at 6.30pm
The full-length Grand Prix, which uses the results from Friday’s qualifying to set its grid, is on Sunday at 5pm. All sessions are live on Sky Sports F1.
More to follow…
Sao Paulo GP Qualifying timesheet
Driver | Team | Time |
1. Max Verstappen | Red Bull | 1:10.727 |
2. Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | +0.294 |
3. Lance Stroll | Aston Martin | +0.617 |
4. Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin | +0.660 |
5. Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | +0.742 |
6. George Russell | Mercedes | +0.863 |
7. Lando Norris | McLaren | +1.260 |
8. Carlos Sainz | Ferrari | +1.262 |
9. Sergio Perez | Red Bull | +1.594 |
10. Oscar Piastri | McLaren | No Q3 time set |
Out in Q2 | ||
11. Nico Hulkenberg | Haas | 1:10.547 |
12. Esteban Ocon | Alpine | 1:10.562 |
13. Pierre Gasly | Alpine | 1:10.567 |
14. Kevin Magnussen | Haas | 1:10.723 |
15. Alex Albon | Williams | 1:10.840 |
Out in Q1 | ||
16. Yuki Tsunoda | AlphaTauri | 1:10.837 |
17. Daniel Ricciardo | AlphaTauri | 1:10.843 |
18. Valtteri Bottas | Alfa Romeo | 1:10.955 |
19. Logan Sargeant | Williams | 1:11.035 |
20. Zhou Guanyu | Alfa Romeo | 1:11.275 |
F1 is in Brazil for the final leg of the Americas triple header and the last Sprint weekend of the 2023 season. Watch every session from the Sao Paulo Grand Prix live on Sky Sports F1, with Sunday’s race at 5pm. Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW