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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Mark Dobson

São Paulo Grand Prix: Lando Norris claims pole position after flying lap – live

Lando Norris and his McLaren MCL39 registered 1:09.511 during Q3 to go onto pole.
Lando Norris and his McLaren MCL39 registered 1:09.511 during Q3 to go onto pole. Photograph: Ricardo Moraes/Reuters

Giles Richards’s qualifying report has dropped so please get stuck into that. Thanks for your company today.
Norris soars to F1 São Paulo GP pole as Piastri stumbles and Verstappen flops

Qualifying results from São Paulo

1) Lando Norris (McLaren)
2) Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes)
3) Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)
4) Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
5) Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls)
6) George Russell (Mercedes)
7) Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)
8) Ollie Bearman (Haas)
9) Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
10) Nico Hülkenberg (Sauber)
11) Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)
12) Alex Albon (Williams)
13) Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari)
14) Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
15) Carlos Sainz (Williams)
16. Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
17. Esteban Ocon (Haas)
18. Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
19. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull)
20. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber)

Quite a contrast for the Ferrari drivers: Lewis Hamilton failed to make Q3 and will start from 13th tomorrow, while Charles Leclerc secured third on the grid.

The Monegasque driver said: Very good laps in Q2, Q3 and everything is so close it goes from being a disaster of a weekend to a really good weekend in a matter of a few hundredths. I am happy I could put everything together in Q2 and Q3, which was crucial for us as everything was on the limit, and then P3 I’m satisfied with that. It has been a difficult weekend for us.”

Updated

For Oscar Piastri, it feels like things are slipping away. There’s been plenty of talk of momentum over the past week in F1. Norris seems to have it, the Australian has apparently lost it since he enjoyed a 34-point lead back at the end of August.

On today’s disappointing sprint and qualifying, he said: “Everything felt much trickier today, I’m disappointed with the result.”

Updated

Fair to say it’s been a decent couple of days for Lando Norris. His immediate title rival Oscar Piastri crashed out of the sprint race, which Norris won, and the British driver is now on pole for tomorrow’s race with the Australian in fourth.

Norris said: “Again, tough out there with the conditions. Just slippery, inconsistent, but good fun. It’s always a pleasure around this track. I felt good. I was under a bit of pressure because I locked up on my first lap. So a little bit more pressure than I would have liked but stayed calm and put it all together when it mattered.”

Q3 result

1) Lando Norris (McLaren)
2) Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes)
3) Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)
4) Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
5) Isack Hadjar (Racing Bulls)
6) George Russell (Mercedes)
7) Liam Lawson (Racing Bulls)
8) Ollie Bearman (Haas)
9) Pierre Gasly (Alpine)
10) Nico Hülkenberg (Sauber)

That’s not a bad start to the weekend for Norris; pole for the sprint race, which he then won – and claimed eight points – and now he will start from No 1 position in tomorrow’s race. The big story of the day, apart from Norris’s pace, was Max Verstappen being knocked out in Q3. Norris says: “A bit more stressful than I would have liked but very happy.”

Lando Norris takes São Paulo pole

Title leader Norris takes pole with Kimi Antonelli second, Charles Leclerc third and Oscar Piastri down in fourth!

Oscar Piastri on a flying lap…

Lando Norris goes fastest! On provisional pole with 1:09.511

Drivers out on their final run … all eyes on Lando Norris. Can he beat his McLaren teammate? Ollie Bearman still in the mix but has just gone wide.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was pretty honest on his car today. He told Sky Sports: “It was just bad. I couldn’t push at all. The car was all over the place, sliding around a lot. I had to under-drive it a lot, just to not have a moment and of course, that doesn’t work in qualifying.”

Updated

Provisional pole for Oscar Piastri … the Australian clocks 1:09.897. Charles Leclerc second at the moment. Lando Norris needs to speed up after locking up.

Updated

Q3 begins

Here we go! Can Lando Norris continue his fine weekend or is Ollie Bearman going to shock everybody?

Updated

Hamilton and Alonso out of Q3 but the biggest shock of the day was Red Bull’s disastrous display.

More from the Red Bull chief Laurent Mekies, talking to Sky Sports. “Obviously, nobody expected something like that,” he said. “We have been unhappy with the car pretty much since we got here. Nonetheless we were at the point where we could not fight for the win but we could fight with the group just after.

“It’s fair to say we took some risk before qualifying to try to see if we could put the car in a better place and it obviously went in the opposite direction. It’s sometimes the price you pay when you take a risk.”

Updated

Out of Q3
11. Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin)
12. Alex Albon (Williams)
13. Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari)
14. Lance Stroll (Aston Martin)
15. Carlos Sainz (Williams)

Q2 over – Norris quickest; Hamilton out

Lewis Hamilton is the latest star name to be knocked out. He is unable to break into the top 10. A low for the man who loves Brazil

Three minutes left and teams are now doing their final runs. Lewis Hamilton is currently 10th fastest. Hanging in there…

Lewis Hamilton just above the danger zone, struggling for grip …

Ollie Bearman is flying! The British ace leads the way with a lap of 1:09.755 on the soft tyres. Kimi Antonelli is second with Oscar Piastri third.

Talking to Sky F1, Red Bull’s team principal Laurent Mekies said they took a “risk” to improve the car after the sprint race. It didn’t work.

Fair to say the atmosphere in the Red Bull garage is a bit glum. A huge shock for the team. Having said all that … you should never write him off tomorrow.

Q2 begins

Q2 goes green … no Red Bulls will feature. Feels like there’s little pressure for Norris and Piastri now

Who failed to make Q2
16. Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
17. Esteban Ocon (Haas)
18. Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
19. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull)
20. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) - car could not be repaired in time

History made in Brazil. That is the first time both Red Bulls have dropped out at this point since Japan 2006. The tinkering to the setups failed to deliver anything positive for Verstappen. A hammer blow for his title prospects. Over the team radio, he said: “Oh my God mate, the car and the ride is a tiny bit better but now sliding in turn one.”

Updated

Red Bulls out of qualifying – end of Q1

Incredible scenes as Max Verstappen and Yuki Tsunoda are knocked out in Q1! The first time Verstappen has been knocked out at this point since 2021.

Verstappen needs a decent lap. Here is the current drop zone:
16. Max Verstappen (Red Bull)
17. Franco Colapinto (Alpine)
18. Esteban Ocon (Haas)
19. Yuki Tsunoda (Red Bull)
20. Gabriel Bortoleto (Sauber) - yet to emerge from the pits

Max Verstappen is on track but isn’t happy with the setup; he’s sliding around the corners. Red Bull had hoped improvements would give them a lift after a disappointing sprint race.

Updated

No sign of Gabriel Bortoleto yet … a reminder his car was a wreck after a crash in the sprint race. Sauber mechanics working furiously to get him out there.

Sun is shining and, in theory, with the temperatures up, the softer tyres should perform better today. The teams were not particularly impressed yesterday during the practice session. Lewis Hamilton goes quickest with a 1:10.233. Impressive.

Updated

Oscar Piastri is out for his first lap and immediately locks up. It’s a bit of a timid start. Lando Norris clocks 1:10.404 to go quickest.

Updated

Q1 under way

The opening session gets going after that small delay. Green lights mean the cars begin Q1. Clear skies above…

Barriers repaired and we’re a minute away from Q1

Liam Lawson has been given a five-second penalty and one penalty point on his super licence for causing a collision with Ollie Bearman during the sprint race earlier. Lawson is now on eight penalty points for the 12-month period. Earlier, Bearman was also handed a five-second time penalty for the sprint race and one penalty point on his licence for “driving in manner deemed potentially dangerous” for his contact with Lawson

Updated

Delay to qualifying

There is a delay to qualifying due to repairs required to barrier damage at turns 10 and 11. No confirmation of how long yet …

Weather update: the sun is shining! This is an obvious boost to McLaren who have been out on their own so far this weekend. Max Verstappen would have preferred a little rain. There is still a small chance of it later on in the session.

It seemed for a long time that Oscar Piastri was impervious to pressure and the title was a mere formality. A reminder that, at the end of August, Piastri had won his seventh race of the season at the Dutch Grand Prix, putting him 34 points ahead of Lando Norris, who retired late on with an oil leak. Over the past four race weekends, the Australian’s record reads: Mexico 5th, US 5th (Sprint DNF), Singapore 4th and Azerbaijan DNF.
Squeaky bum time.

It doesn’t happen too often in F1 and Giles Richards celebrates a three-way tussle for the title. This brings back some memories …
F1’s three-way title fight echoes the glorious battles of yesteryear

Updated

There’s also a race against time for the home hero Gabriel Bortoleto to make qualifying after a shocking crash during the sprint race. The Brazil star was unhurt after the smash but … his car wasn’t. Bortoleto crashed heavily at turn one on the final lap of the sprint race while battling the Williams driver Alex Albon for 10th place. Sauber are working furiously to rebuild the car for Q1.

Updated

The stewards have confirmed that Ollie Bearman has been handed a five-second time penalty and one penalty point for driving in a manner deemed “potentially dangerous” during the sprint race. The Brit is now up to nine penalty points, with two points not due to disappear until May 2026. Drivers who have 12 points during a 12-month period are given an automatic race ban.

Qualifying preamble

There are so many reasons why F1 fans love Interlagos and we’ve just had a reminder – pure drama. In a sport which is sometimes criticised for a lack of action, Brazil tends to offer up unpredictability, emotion and laps of entertainment. The sprint race gave us clues as to how the title challengers are shaping up.

Lando Norris took sprint pole and hung on to the eight points on soft tyres, despite the impressive Mercedes duo of Kimi Antonelli and George Russell on his tail. Max Verstappen bagged five points, but the former championship leader Oscar Piastri crashed out. Is the pressure telling on the Australian? “I’m just trying to put this behind [me], I guess,” he told Sky Sports. “We’ll see what the weather we have for this afternoon but obviously, there’s a lot more points on offer tomorrow. So, the better job I can do this afternoon of trying to get myself a good starting point, the better it’ll be.”

Which brings us to qualifying in this fascinating three-way battle for the F1 crown. The McLarens have looked a class apart so far this weekend so Verstappen will be hoping for the return of some weather as Q1 begins.

A reminder of the standings before qualifying begins at 6pm (GMT).

1) Lando Norris (McLaren) 365pts
2) Oscar Piastri (McLaren) 356pts
3) Max Verstappen (Red Bull) 326pts
4) George Russell (Mercedes) 264pts
5) Charles Leclerc (Ferrari) 214pts
6) Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari) 148pts
7) Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes) 104pts
8) Alexander Albon (Williams) 73pts
9) Nico Hülkenberg (Sauber) 41pts
10) Fernando Alonso (Aston Martin) 40pts

Norris stretches lead after winning sprint

Lando Norris won the sprint race for the São Paulo Grand Prix and with it extended his lead over his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri, whose championship ambitions took another blow after he crashed out with an unforced error in Brazil. Max Verstappen also dropped points to Norris after he could manage only fourth for Red Bull.

Kimi Antonelli and George Russell were in second and third for Mercedes. Lewis Hamilton took seventh from 11th on the grid for Ferrari, with his teammate Charles Leclerc in fifth.

Norris led from pole to the flag at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in a race that opened in damp conditions after earlier rain that made the track tricky and which caught Piastri out. It was an enormously costly error and one from which his McLaren team must now repair his car to have it ready for qualifying.

Norris extended his lead over Piastri to nine points, while Verstappen dropped back to 39 points behind the British driver, with 108 still on the table from the remaining four meetings (including a sprint race in Qatar).

Piastri had qualified in third and was looking to close on Antonelli when on lap six the Australian spun out after he caught the kerb with his left-front at the exit of turn two and slid into the barriers. The same spot then caught out Nico Hülkenberg and Franco Colapinto, who went off after edging on to the same kerb immediately after the Australian. The race was then stopped a lap later to deal with the cars at the side of the track.

Piastri had already endured a run of difficult races of late, including crashing out in Baku and being off the pace in the US and Mexico, which has enabled Norris to overtake him in the championship standings. He made an error at the last sprint in Austin,striking Norris and taking them both out of the race when too optimistic heading into turn one, bruising his confidence just as the season reaches its crucial phase.

Having exhibited such control and assurance as he took a strong lead in the title race early in the season, his touch increasingly appears to have deserted him of late.

This stands in stark contrast to Norris, for whom the victory comes on the back of his dominant pole-to-flag win in Mexico as he continues what has been an enormously strong and consistent run of form. It demonstrates that he is now very much more comfortable with a car that early in the season he had struggled with, as he was not suited to the lack of feel for grip through the front axle.

It is his third sprint race win, having taken the first in Brazil last year and his second in Miami this season, and is another statement of intent from the British driver. On this form the McLaren remains the class of the field and will likely be formidable in qualifying and the grand prix.

On the restart following the red flag after Piastri went out, Norris held the lead from a frenetic rolling launch and began swiftly to open a gap once more even while the track remained treacherous, with damp areas and strong gusts of wind making handling tricky.

Norris put more than a second on Antonelli by lap 16 but the Italian did come back at him as the soft tyres Norris had taken began to suffer in the final third. Antonelli pushed hard for the last four laps but Norris held his nerve and closed it out with great assurance, albeit under yellow flags after Gabriel Bortoleto suffered a huge crash.

On the final lap Bortoleto, from Osasco in São Paulo state, lost the rear looking to go up the inside heading into turn and speared into the barriers on the inside which catapulted him, airborne into the barriers on the opposite side of the circuit with an enormously heavy impact. Bortoleto emerged from the car and was taken to the medical centre.

Verstappen, who has been unhappy with his car all weekend, could make little progress. Lacking grip and suffering over the bumps of the circuit, he described it as “completely broken” on Friday after sprint qualifying and badly needs to find a better race setup for race qualifying.

Updated

Sprint race drama in São Paulo

Lando Norris’s world championship hopes were handed a boost after Oscar Piastri crashed out of Saturday’s sprint race in São Paulo.

Norris began the race from pole position and was leading before the action was suspended on lap seven of 24 after Piastri hit the barriers at turn three. Franco Colapinto and Nico Hülkenberg also collided with the wall in the same part of a damp Interlagos track, leading to a safety car, and then a red flag.

Norris started from pole position and was in control of the race when Piastri, running in third, lost control of his McLaren. Piastri dipped his front-left tyre on to the damp kerb on the exit of the Senna Esses which sent him into a spin and an unavoidable date with the wall.

With Colapinto and Hülkenberg both following Piastri off the track, the race was red-flagged to repair the tyre barrier. Norris will extend his title advantage to nine points if he wins the 24-lap dash to the flag. PA Media

Updated

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