Charles Leclerc takes French F1 GP pole for Ferrari with help from Sainz

  • Red Bull’s Max Verstappen and Sergio Pérez second and third
  • Leclerc able to utilise slipstream of teammate Carlos Sainz

Against the painted symmetry of the Paul Ricard circuit, Ferrari excelled in qualifying for the French Grand Prix with a suitably artistic display of synchronised scarlet teamwork. So often the butt of criticism for poor strategy, the Scuderia pulled off an Italian job to perfection, ensuring Charles Leclerc secured pole for Sunday’s race.

He put in a fine lap for Ferrari but was aided by a tow from his teammate, Carlos Sainz, that helped him clinch pole, beating the Red Bulls of Max Verstappen and Sergio Pérez into second and third. Lewis Hamilton and George Russell were fourth and sixth – decent enough given their season but far from the improvement Mercedes had hoped for. An end to their winless run seems as far off as ever.

Sainz finished in ninth but, with the team knowing he would start from the back row of the grid after taking new power unit components, they opted to use him tactically to Leclerc’s advantage.

Leclerc had set the pace on his first hot lap in Q3 after enjoying a slipstream from Sainz on the Mistral straight. It was a vital advantage as Verstappen was breathing down his neck and crossed the line eight-thousandths of a second down, setting up a mighty head-to-head for the final runs.

Ferrari repeated their tactics on the second hot laps with Sainz leading Leclerc but Red Bull did not use Pérez similarly for Verstappen, instead choosing to ensure they had two drivers in the mix at the front of the race. Once more Leclerc, in Sainz’s wake with the two a shimmering blur of red, line astern in the Provence sunshine, took advantage before the Spaniard elegantly peeled off from his path. Leclerc sailed past and smashed his previous lap with a 1min 30.872sec. Verstappen could not match it and was three-tenths back.

“I have to say thanks to Carlos for the help,” Leclerc said. “Carlos judged it perfectly and got out of the way at the right moment. I think [the time gained] is around two-tenths, so it’s significant. It would have been a lot tighter with Max without the tow.”

Charles Leclerc en route to pole
Charles Leclerc was three tenths quicker than Max Verstappen. Photograph: Eric Gaillard/AP

Hamilton will reach his 300th race on Sunday but it is highly unlikely to be the celebratory affair he might have hoped for. Despite Mercedes’ optimism of moving toward the frontrunners, their pace in qualifying appeared to suggest they are no closer. Hamilton was nine-tenths back on Leclerc while Russell was more than a second in arrears. Hamilton was confounded, especially after their significant improvements at Silverstone.

“I finished it and thought that was an awesome lap but I was still nine-tenths off,” he said. “I am not sure why that gap has got bigger over these two races. They are in their own league performance-wise. I came here thinking last race we were three- or four-tenths off and I thought maybe this weekend we would be two- or three-tenths off and we have been a second off.”

The 37-year-old, who is in his 16th season in the sport, has said he is confident Mercedes can still compete for wins but they are clearly not there yet. His outstanding record of having won at least once in every season in F1 since 2007 looks to be under genuine threat.

The Mercedes principal, Toto Wolff, commended his driver but in so doing admitted the W13 car remained far from where it should be. “Lewis has probably extracted more than the car has at the moment,” he said. “We knew that once we got the new tyres on and we are driving the car in anger that we would be there in a third and fourth, like we have been all season. But it’s just not good enough.”

Mercedes deployed a new nose in France and in high temperatures it was hoped the circuit, with its smooth, flat surface and high-speed configuration, would suit their revised car. Yet the gap to Leclerc remains a chasm. They will expect a better race pace, as will Red Bull, but Leclerc is on a roll.

He needs to make the place count. With six victories Verstappen has established a dominant position in the title race and enjoys a 38-point advantage over the Monegasque driver in second place and 57 points on Pérez.

  • Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.
  • If you already have the Guardian app, make sure you’re on the most recent version.
  • In the Guardian app, tap the Menu button at the bottom right, then go to Settings (the gear icon), then Notifications.
  • Turn on sport notifications.

Lando Norris was fifth for McLaren, Fernando Alonso in seventh for Alpine and Yuki Tsunoda eighth for AlphaTauri. Kevin Magnussen was in 10th place but will start from the back of the grid having taken new power unit elements.

Daniel Ricciardo was in 11th for McLaren and Esteban Ocon in 12th for Alpine. Valtteri Bottas was 13th for Alfa Romeo, Sebastian Vettel 14th for Aston Martin and Alexander Albon 15th for Williams.

Pierre Gasly was in 16th for AlphaTauri, Lance Stroll in 17th for Aston Martin with Guanyu Zhou in 18th for Alfa Romeo. Mick Schumacher was 19th for Haas and Nicholas Latifi in 20th for Williams.

Contributor

Giles Richards at Circuit Paul Ricard

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Charles Leclerc claims superb Monaco F1 GP pole as Pérez and Sainz collide
Ferrari took the front row of the grid in Monaco with Carlos Sainz in second, while Red Bull’s Sergio Pérez and Max Verstappen qualified third and fourth

Giles Richards in Monte Carlo

28, May, 2022 @3:49 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc seals pole while Ferrari lock front row for Miami Grand Prix
Charles Leclerc claimed pole for the inaugural Miami Grand Prix with another demonstration of superb precision, executed flawlessly for Ferrari

Giles Richards at the Hard Rock Stadium Circuit

07, May, 2022 @10:28 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc takes pole for F1 Italian GP with British pair behind
Charles Leclerc took pole for the Italian Grand Prix for Ferrari, with George Russell and Lando Norris in second and third places

Giles Richards at Monza

10, Sep, 2022 @3:59 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc pips Lewis Hamilton to Azerbaijan pole in crash-strewn session
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc edged out Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen for pole at the Azerbaijan F1 Grand Prix, with several drivers crashing out in qualifying

Giles Richards

05, Jun, 2021 @1:56 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen wins Austrian F1 GP sprint race from Leclerc and Sainz
Max Verstappen took the eight points on offer for winning the sprint race for the Austrian GP at the Red Bull Ring and will start Sunday on pole

Giles Richards at the Red Bull Ring

09, Jul, 2022 @3:38 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen tops Belgian F1 GP qualifying but Carlos Sainz Jr takes pole
Max Verstappen will join Charles Leclerc in starting at the back of grid after accruing penalties, while Sergio Pérez starts second after qualifying third for Red Bull

Giles Richards at Spa-Francorchamps

27, Aug, 2022 @3:50 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen takes Canadian F1 GP pole in wet with Leclerc near the back
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc will start 19th in Montreal because of power unit penalties, while Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton are fourth and second

Giles Richards

18, Jun, 2022 @9:50 PM

Article image
Leclerc claims pole for Bahrain GP as Hamilton and Mercedes struggle
Charles Leclerc underlined Ferrari’s supremacy over their rivals by claiming a thrilling pole position for the opening race of the F1 season in Bahrain

Giles Richards at the Sakhir Circuit

19, Mar, 2022 @5:03 PM

Article image
Carlos Sainz shines in Silverstone deluge to take British F1 GP pole
Carlos Sainz claimed the first pole of his career at the British Grand Prix with a superb lap at Silverstone in extremely tricky wet conditions

Giles Richards at Silverstone

02, Jul, 2022 @3:26 PM

Article image
Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win F1 sprint race and take pole at Imola
World champion will start P1 on Sunday and claimed championship eight points, while Lewis Hamilton struggled with his Mercedes and will begin in 14th

Giles Richards at Imola

23, Apr, 2022 @3:36 PM