Charles Leclerc beat Lando Norris and Lewis Hamilton to a thrilling United States Grand Prix pole as an error left world champion Max Verstappen starting from sixth.
In a wide-open contest, Verstappen momentarily held pole position before he lost what was the fastest lap time of the session for exceeding track limits at the penultimate corner at Circuit of The Americas.
With Verstappen’s time deleted, Ferrari’s Leclerc regained pole, edging out Norris and Hamilton by little more than a tenth of a second to seal his third pole position of the season – the most by any driver other than Verstappen.
Hamilton will be disappointed at failing to produce his best lap at the key moment, but the seven-time world champion is set to have a rare chance of ending his near-two-year winless streak with Mercedes appearing to have benefitted from a final major upgrade of the season.
In contrast, Norris had not looked quite quick enough to be part of the pole battle, but delivered his best lap at the opportune moment to sneak ahead of Hamilton.
Leclerc’s Ferrari team-mate Carlos Sainz took fourth, while George Russell overcame a challenging session to take fifth for Mercedes.
Alpine duo Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon were seventh and eighth behind Verstappen, whose team-mate Sergio Perez was ninth ahead of McLaren’s Oscar Piastri.
The result sets up an enticing race on Sunday, in which Verstappen will still be a major threat to claim a 15th victory of the season, which would equal the record he set last year.
The Dutchman is chasing a host of historic marks having sealed his third successive drivers’ title earlier this month in Qatar with five rounds of the season still remaining.
First though will come Saturday’s Sprint action, with the shortened qualifying session and race set to provide the enthusiastic Austin crowd with more entertainment in two contests that should be similarly open.
Qatar GP Qualifying result
1) Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
2) Lando Norris, McLaren
3) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
4) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
5) George Russell, Mercedes
6) Max Verstappen, Red Bull
7) Pierre Gasly, Alpine
8) Esteban Ocon, Alpine
9) Sergio Perez, Red Bull
10) Oscar Piastri, McLaren
How thrilling pole contest played out
Although Verstappen had topped the event’s sole practice session earlier on Friday, enough promise was shown by the likes of Hamilton and Leclerc to suggest the Dutchman was not going to have things all his own way, as has been the case so often this season.
That theory was quickly backed up in a highly-competitive opening to the session, which saw Hamilton end Q1 at the top of the timesheet.
Not part of the battle at the front was Fernando Alonso, the driver who posed the biggest – albeit usually distant – threat to Verstappen during the early stages of the season.
Another upgrade added for this weekend did not help halt what has been a gradual slide away from the front of the grid from Aston Martin, but Alonso’s Q1 exit, alongside another disappointing display from team-mate Lance Stroll, marked a new low point for the team.
There was no surprise exit in Q2, with Daniel Ricciardo 15th on his return from a five-race absence with a wrist injury, almost three tenths back from AlphaTauri team-mate Yuki Tsunoda, who took 11th.
That left the minimum of just five teams represented in Q3, with Red Bull, Mercedes, Ferrari, McLaren and Alpine each getting two cars into the pole position shootout.
There was genuine tension as the final 12 minutes began, with at least Leclerc, who had topped Q2, Hamilton and Verstappen all clearly in with a shot at pole.
That buzz around the circuit was only heightened when Leclerc and Hamilton, separated by just over half a tenth, led Verstappen after the first runs.
The Dutchman made it clear his competitive edge has not been blunted by his latest success, fuming over the radio after having felt his team-mate Perez’s positioning impacted the closing stages of his lap.
For once this season, the 25-year-old did not appear to have regained his composure by the time the second flying laps began, running wide at Turn 1, and then making the crucial error as he went beyond track limits at Turn 19 to give up pole.
Despite the errors, the lap was remarkably still five-thousandths of a second faster than Leclerc’s, and suggests Verstappen will still be the driver to beat throughout the remainder of the weekend.
As for the Monegasque, it was a reminder of the one-lap speed he has become renowned for during his career, but had been lacking as he watched his team-mate Sainz claim consecutive poles in Italy and Singapore.
While Norris appeared to overachieve by coming so close, Hamilton might feel a potential second pole of the season slipped through his hands, having looked supreme at certain moments during the session.
With Ferrari’s tyre degradation issues likely to play a role in the Texan heat on Sunday, both Norris and Hamilton will undoubtedly see the race as a huge opportunity.
The McLaren driver will be seeking his first win, and Hamilton a 104th that may feel like his first.
Leclerc, meanwhile, will be seeking to end a run of nine failed attempts to convert pole position to victory – a run that stretches back to the Australian Grand Prix at the start of last season.
United States GP Qualifying timesheet
Driver | Team | Time |
1. Charles Leclerc | Ferrari | 1:34.723 |
2. Lando Norris | McLaren | +0.130 |
3. Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | +0.139 |
4. Carlos Sainz | Ferrari | +0.222 |
5. George Russell | Mercedes | +0.356 |
6. Max Verstappen | Red Bull | +0.358 |
7. Pierre Gasly | Alpine | +0.366 |
8. Esteban Ocon | Alpine | +0.431 |
9. Sergio Perez | Red Bull | +0.450 |
10. Oscar Piastri | McLaren | +0.744 |
Out in Q2 | ||
11. Yuki Tsunoda | AlphaTauri | 1:35.697 |
12. Zhou Guanyu | Alfa Romeo | 1:35.698 |
13. Valtteri Bottas | Alfa Romeo | 1:35.858 |
14. Kevin Magnussen | Haas | 1:35.880 |
15. Daniel Ricciardo | AlphaTauri | 1:35.974 |
Out in Q1 | ||
16. Nico Hulkenberg | Haas | 1:36.235 |
17. Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin | 1:36.268 |
18. Alex Albon | Williams | 1:36.315 |
19. Lance Stroll | Aston Martin | 1:36.589 |
20. Logan Sargeant | Williams | 1:36.827 |
When to watch the US GP and F1 Academy finale live only on Sky Sports F1
Saturday October 21
- 3.30pm: F1 Academy Race One
- 6pm: US GP Sprint Shootout build-up
- 6:30pm: US GP Sprint Shootout
- 9.15pm: F1 Academy Race Two
- 10pm: US GP Sprint build-up
- 11pm: US GP SPRINT (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
- (Sunday) 12.30am: Ted’s Sprint Notebook
Sunday October 22
- 3.30pm: F1 Academy Race Three
- 6.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: US GP build-up
- 8pm: THE UNITED STATES GRAND PRIX (also on Sky Sports Main Event)
- 10pm: Chequered Flag: US GP reaction
- 11pm: Ted’s Notebook
Watch Formula 1 return to Texas for the United States Grand Prix and another Sprint weekend live on Sky Sports F1 this weekend Stream F1 on Sky Sports with NOW