Max Verstappen edged out his title rival Lando Norris as Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz claimed pole position at the Mexico Grand Prix . Norris trails Verstappen by 57 points in the drivers’ championship with five races remaining and 146 points up for grabs and needs to start making major inroads into the Dutchman’s advantage. McLaren failed in their bid to overturn Norris’s controversial penalty which demoted him behind Verstappen in Austin last weekend, a result the British driver labelled a “momentum killer” in his pursuit of a maiden title.
And those hopes suffered a further blow as Norris could only finish third in qualifying for Sunday’s 71-lap race, a place behind his title rival and more than three-tenths off the pace of pole-sitter Sainz. Norris topped the first two sessions of qualifying but had no answer to the blistering lap of the Spaniard, with his Ferrari teammate Charles Leclerc taking fourth on the grid. Verstappen has won five of the past six grands prix in Mexico and is bidding for a fourth win in succession at the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez on Sunday.
The Red Bull driver endured a difficult run-up to qualifying, suffering from engine problems which limited his running on Friday before complaining of a lack of grip in final practice. But the Dutchman will be delighted to have pulled it together for qualifying and will hope to keep Norris at bay on the lengthy 768-metre blast down to turn one. Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.
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George Russell will line up fifth for Mercedes, a place clear of his teammate Lewis Hamilton. Norris will not have support from Oscar Piastri after the Australian suffered a dramatic dip in form, being knocked out in the first part of qualifying having been fastest in final practice just hours earlier. In a blow to McLaren’s constructors’ title bid, Piastri qualified only 17th and was joined in a Q1 elimination by Sergio Pérez.
The Mexican, who admitted on Thursday he had endured a “terrible season”, disappointed his raucous home support by finishing a lowly 18th as pressure intensifies on his Red Bull future. McLaren lead Red Bull by 40 points, with Ferrari only a further eight points adrift..
Sainz takes pole at Mexico Grand Prix as Verstappen gets the jump on Norris
Norris trails Verstappen by 57 points in title fightDutchman second in qualifying, with British rival thirdMax Verstappen edged out his title rival Lando Norris as Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz claimed pole position at the Mexico Grand Prix. Norris trails Verstappen by 57 points in the drivers’ championship with five races remaining and 146 points up for grabs and needs to start making major inroads into the Dutchman’s advantage.McLaren failed in their bid to overturn Norris’s controversial penalty which demoted him behind Verstappen in Austin last weekend, a result the British driver labelled a “momentum killer” in his pursuit of a maiden title. And those hopes suffered a further blow as Norris could only finish third in qualifying for Sunday’s 71-lap race, a place behind his title rival and more than three-tenths off the pace of pole-sitter Sainz. Continue reading...