
Ferrari's Leclerc on pole for Hungarian GP
BUDAPEST (AFP) Charles Leclerc grabbed the first pole position of the season for Ferrari on Saturday for the Hungarian Grand Prix.The Monegasque driver will share the front row on Sunday with McLaren's Oscar Piastri. McLaren's Lando Norris will start from the second row alongside fellow Briton George Russell, who was fourth for Mercedes."I honestly have no words, it's probably one of the best pole positions I've ever had because it's the most unexpected for sure," said Leclerc.The 27-year-old went late in the final minutes of a closely-contested session to clock a best lap in one minute and 15.372 seconds in changing conditions, leaving his rivals frustrated as they failed to improve on their first run times.He took pole by 0.026 seconds ahead of series leader Piastri and by 0.041 seconds ahead of the Australian's team-mate and title rival Norris, with Russell 0.053 seconds adrift in a breathtakingly close finish. It was Leclerc's first pole of the year, his first in Budapest and the 27th of his career. It was Ferrari's first pole in Hungary since Sebastian Vettel in 2017. "The whole qualifying has been extremely difficult, and when I say that I'm not exaggerating," said Leclerc of the windy conditions at the Hungaroring."It was super difficult for us to get to Q2 and Q3. In Q3, the conditions changed a little bit, and everything became a lot trickier, and I knew I had to just do a clean lap to target third.
"At the end of the day, it's pole position and I did not expect that."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The National
22 minutes ago
- The National
Hungarian GP: Lando Norris edges out teammate Oscar Piastri to close gap in title race
Lando Norris came out on top in a tense battle with his McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri to secure victory at the Hungarian Grand Prix on Sunday. After losing places following a poor start at the Hungaroring, a bold strategy paid dividends for Norris, who briefly dropped to fifth on the first lap, but made his tyres last to stop only once, while Piastri changed twice. Piastri steadily cut into Norris' lead in the latter stages of the race – and nearly collided with his teammate while trying to pass on the second-to-last lap – but the British driver held on to take the win by just 0.698 seconds. It means the Australian's lead in the drivers' championship has been cut down to nine points after Norris's fifth win of the season ahead of F1's midseason break. What started out as a day of promise for Charles Leclerc ended up a miserable one for the Ferrari man who started from pole and held on to that lead early on. But an increasingly exasperated Monegasque would finish the race fourth after being overtaken by the Mercedes of George Russell with eight laps to go, while Fernando Alonso took fifth – a fine result considering his back problems – and Gabriel Bortoleto secured a career-best sixth place for Sauber. 'I'm dead, it was tough, we weren't really planning on a one-stop at the beginning but after the first lap it was kind of our only option to get back into things,' said Norris after McLaren's fourth consecutive one-two finish. 'It was tough in the final stint with Oscar catching I was pushing flat out you know so my voice has gone a little bit. It feels good and rewarding a little more because of that but a good result today. 'We're so tightly fought it's hard to say that momentum is on anyone's side, but we're fighting hard both of us and it's fun, it's tough but fun racing with Oscar. 'It's great for us as a team and another one-two and our 200th win in Formula One. Credit to Oscar, he put up a good charge and I just about held on, so I look forward to many more of these.' Piastri insisted that he 'as hard as I could' but needed a mistake from his teammate that never arrived. 'I saw Lando going for a one [stop] so I knew I was going to have to overtake on track, which is easier said then done around here,' said the Australian. 'Tried a few things; it was a gamble either way and unfortunately, we were just on the other side of it. I needed to be a couple of tenths closer, and it was going to take a mistake from Lando to achieve that. 'You never want to try to save it for the next lap and it never comes, so thought I would at least try, but not quite.' Russell admitted his battle for third place with Leclerc ended up being 'a bit dicey at some points' but was 'happy to be back on the podium'. 'It's one of those when you sort of commit to a bit of a divebomb, if a driver in front moves, you're already right on the limit of grip and there's not much room for manoeuvre,' said the Briton. 'I think we made contact on the second time but I'm just glad to get through and a nice way to go into the break.' Leclerc was furious after problems that left his Ferrari 'undriveable' in a race that also saw him given a five-second penalty for erratic driving during his battle with Russell. 'It was around lap 40 because as soon as I started to struggle and complain, it was basically where we started to have the issue and it then got worse and worse,' said Leclerc about the chassis problem. 'It's very frustrating to have everything under control to know that the pace is in the car to win and then you end up being nowhere. We lost a podium so I'm very disappointed.' Reigning champion Max Verstappen finished ninth, with Lewis Hamilton fighting his way past Pierre Gasly and then Carl Sainz Jnr but finished outside of the points on a desperate weekend for the 40-year-old. On Saturday, Hamilton had called his performance 'just useless' after qualifying down in 12th.


Gulf Today
10 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Leclerc ends Ferrari barren run with stunning pole ahead of McLaren
Charles Leclerc stunned himself and runaway leaders McLaren with an exceptional late lap to end Ferrari's barren qualifying run by claiming pole position for Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix. Excelling on a circuit that on Thursday he had described as his worst of the year, the 27-year-old Monegasque clocked a best lap of one minute and 15.372 seconds to beat the champion team which had dominated every previous practice session. 'Wow, wow!, Mama Mia!' exclaimed Leclerc after his beautifully-judged late lap on Saturday put him top in windy conditions at the Hungaroring and claim his first pole of the season for the Italian team. 'Today, I don't understand anything about F1! The whole of qualifying has been so extremely difficult - and when I say that I am not exaggerating. 'It was super difficult for us to get to Q2 and Q3, in Q3 the conditions changed a little bit and everything became a lot trickier and I knew I had to just do a clean lap to target third. 'But at the end of the day, it's pole position and I definitely did not expect that. Honestly, I just don't have any words for this. It's one of my best poles and the most unexpected.' While series leader Oscar Piastri and the Australian's McLaren team-mate and title rival Lando Norris found themselves unable to cope with changing conditions in the final minutes, Leclerc improved his lap time to snatch his unexpected pole. Charles Leclerc reacts after he won the qualifying session at the Hungaroring circuit in Mogyorod, near Budapest, Hungary, on Saturday. AFP It was his first at the Hungaroring, his first this year and first since last year's Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku as well as the 27th of his career. It was Ferrari's first pole in Hungary since Sebastian Vettel in 2017. Aston Martin's Fernando Alonso was fifth ahead of team-mate Lance Stroll, the pair enjoying their best qualifying of the season, with Sauber's Gabriel Bortoleto seventh ahead of Red Bull's four-time champion Max Verstappen and the two Racing Bulls rookies Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar. While Leclerc celebrated his and Ferrari's success, team-mate and seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton struggled to swallow his disappointment after qualifying 12th and being knocked out in Q2. 'I'm useless,' said the 40-year-old Briton. 'Absolutely useless. The team has no problem. You've seen the car on pole so they probably need to change driver.' Hamilton's frustration as he fights to find form after moving to Ferrari this year was clear as he ducked into the team motor home without removing his helmet. But Leclerc had proved the potential of the Ferrari car with their recent upgrades package, even in what proved to be challenging changing conditions. 'I could feel it was changing a lot and I was on the lower side of the downforce so, when the rain started in Q2, I was hoping that it wouldn't stay for long,' said Leclerc. 'It didn't but the conditions changed which made everything very tricky and at the end we were on pole position!' Looking ahead to the race, Leclerc said: 'The start and Turn One will be key, but I have no idea how it will go. One thing for sure is that I will do absolutely everything in order to keep that first place! 'If we manage to do that then that should make our life easier for the rest of the race.' Piastri said he had been unable to improve due to a change of wind direction in Q3. Agencies


Gulf Today
20 hours ago
- Gulf Today
Wallabies restore pride with consolation victory over Lions
The Wallabies restored some pride by finally producing an 80-minute performance to beat the British & Irish Lions 22-12 in a weather-disrupted third test on Saturday, handing the visitors their only loss of their nine-match tour of Australia. Dylan Pietsch and Max Jorgensen scored tries either side of a 40-minute delay for a lightning warning, and Tate McDermott added a third late on to ensure Australia would not be swept 3-0 by the Lions for the first time since 1904. Australia coach Joe Schmidt said the victory was all the sweeter given how crushed his players had been after losing the second test, and the series, to a late try in Melbourne last week. 'I think they really earned what they got tonight,' he told reporters. 'That's the longest test match I've ever been involved in, with a big hiatus, but I couldn't be a lot prouder of the way the players rebounded after last week, after the feeling of disappointment that they had, it was deep.' The Lions, who had late tries from Jac Morgan and Will Stuart, had already secured series honours for the first time since their last visit to Australia in 2013 but were disappointed not to secure the sweep. 'There's going to be frustration because we didn't do what we wanted to do in the end, but the best team won today,' said Lions coach Andy Farrell. Rain had been pouring down all day and the match started in front of a crowd of 80,213 in conditions more familiar to the nine Irishmen in the Lions team than the Wallabies. It was the home side who struck first in the eighth minute, however, when winger Pietsch scored in the corner after the Lions had repelled the Australian forwards under the posts. The Lions got back down the other end after a raking kick to touch from Finn Russell in the 12th minute but chose to tap a penalty under the posts and the Wallabies snuffed out the danger. Given the rain, territory was always going to be at a premium and kicking duels studded the next period of play until the Wallabies got some continuity off the pick-and-go to put more pressure on the Lions' try line. A rolling maul from an attacking lineout was neutered and several other thrusts pushed back before the Wallabies elected to kick a penalty in the 34th minute, flyhalf Tom Lynagh converting in his last act before going off with concussion. Lions lock James Ryan had to be carted off the field on a stretcher early in the second half and the lengthy delay for that was extended by a longer suspension of play for lightning, causing the players to head back to the dressing rooms and the evacuation of the lower tiers of the stands. Australia were better after the delay with prop Taniela Tupou charging towards the try line only to drop the ball and then compound his error by being penalised at the subsequent scrum. He and lock Will Skelton brought huge physicality to the Wallabies pack, however, which was maintained this week by the replacements after they went off. Winger Jorgensen has been outstanding throughout the series and he extended the lead to 15-0 when he pounced on a loose ball in the 55th minute and tip-toed down the touchline to score. The Lions had trailed 23-5 after half an hour in Melbourne before coming back to win with a last-minute try, so the massed ranks of Lions fans were not giving up on their team just yet. Wales captain Morgan got them on the scoreboard with a try from close range in the 62nd minute after the Lions had again turned down three points in front of the posts. The Wallabies charged down the other end, though, and scrumhalf McDermott forced his way over the line in the 71st minute to take the lead out to 22-7 soon after Lions hooker Ronan Kelleher had been sent to the sin bin. The Lions had promised to empty the tank in their final match and they had the final word in the series with replacement prop Stuart forcing his way over the line in the final seconds. Agencies