Grand Prix qualifying results: Verstappen on pole for Austria F1

Max Verstappen took pole position for the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring on Saturday, the ninth round of the 2021 Formula 1 World Championship season, ahead of McLaren's Lando Norris.

Grand Prix qualifying results: Verstappen on pole for Austria F1

Verstappen came out on top after the one-hour qualifying session, with title rival Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes only managing fourth position.

Read Also:

Austrian Grand Prix qualifying results: Verstappen on pole from Norris

Cla Driver Time Gap km/h
1 Netherlands Max Verstappen
1'03.720 243.954
2 United Kingdom Lando Norris
1'03.768 0.048 243.771
3 Mexico Sergio Perez
1'03.990 0.270 242.925
4 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
1'04.014 0.294 242.834
5 Finland Valtteri Bottas
1'04.049 0.329 242.701
6 France Pierre Gasly
1'04.107 0.387 242.482
7 Japan Yuki Tsunoda
1'04.273 0.553 241.855
8 Germany Sebastian Vettel
1'04.570 0.850 240.743
9 United Kingdom George Russell
1'04.591 0.871 240.665
10 Canada Lance Stroll
1'04.618 0.898 240.564
11 Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.
1'04.559 0.839 240.784
12 Monaco Charles Leclerc
1'04.600 0.880 240.631
13 Australia Daniel Ricciardo
1'04.719 0.999 240.189
14 Spain Fernando Alonso
1'04.856 1.136 239.681
15 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
1'05.083 1.363 238.845
16 Finland Kimi Raikkonen
1'05.009 1.289 239.117
17 France Esteban Ocon
1'05.051 1.331 238.963
18 Canada Nicholas Latifi
1'05.195 1.475 238.435
19 Germany Mick Schumacher
1'05.427 1.707 237.589
20 Russian Federation Nikita Mazepin
1'05.951 2.231 235.702

What happened in Q1?

Verstappen set the Q1 benchmark at 1m04.249s, a quarter of a second ahead of Hamilton. Valtteri Bottas (Mercedes) was third, 0.314s off the pace, with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz and Norris completing the top five after the first runs.

Norris went again, jumping up to P2 and just 0.096s off Verstappen’s best time, and Alpine’s Fernando Alonso took the third-fastest spot – quicker than the Mercedes duo, who both failed to improve on their second runs.

Falling at the first hurdle were Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Raikkonen (who missed Q2 by 0.032s), Alpine’s Esteban Ocon, Williams’ Nicholas Latifi, and the Haas duo of Mick Schumacher and Nikita Mazepin.

Austrian Grand Prix Q1 results: Verstappen fastest from Norris

Cla Driver Chassis Laps Time Gap Interval km/h
1 Netherlands Max Verstappen
Red Bull 3 1'04.249 241.946
2 United Kingdom Lando Norris
McLaren 6 1'04.345 0.096 0.096 241.585
3 Spain Fernando Alonso
Alpine 3 1'04.472 0.223 0.127 241.109
4 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes 6 1'04.506 0.257 0.034 240.982
5 Finland Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes 6 1'04.563 0.314 0.057 240.769
6 Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.
Ferrari 9 1'04.596 0.347 0.033 240.646
7 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Alfa Romeo 9 1'04.782 0.533 0.186 239.955
8 Mexico Sergio Perez
Red Bull 8 1'04.833 0.584 0.051 239.766
9 France Pierre Gasly
AlphaTauri 9 1'04.841 0.592 0.008 239.737
10 Germany Sebastian Vettel
Aston Martin 9 1'04.846 0.597 0.005 239.718
11 Monaco Charles Leclerc
Ferrari 9 1'04.906 0.657 0.060 239.497
12 United Kingdom George Russell
Williams 6 1'04.907 0.658 0.001 239.493
13 Canada Lance Stroll
Aston Martin 9 1'04.927 0.678 0.020 239.419
14 Japan Yuki Tsunoda
AlphaTauri 9 1'04.967 0.718 0.040 239.272
15 Australia Daniel Ricciardo
McLaren 9 1'04.977 0.728 0.010 239.235
16 Finland Kimi Raikkonen
Alfa Romeo 9 1'05.009 0.760 0.032 239.117
17 France Esteban Ocon
Alpine 6 1'05.051 0.802 0.042 238.963
18 Canada Nicholas Latifi
Williams 6 1'05.195 0.946 0.144 238.435
19 Germany Mick Schumacher
Haas 9 1'05.427 1.178 0.232 237.589
20 Russian Federation Nikita Mazepin
Haas 9 1'05.951 1.702 0.524 235.702

What happened in Q2?

In Q2 the majority went out on medium tyres to begin with. Red Bull’s Sergio Perez ran early, setting the benchmark at 1m04.554s.

Hamilton briefly took P1 with 1m04.501s but was soon toppled by Verstappen’s 1m04.208s. Norris took second, 0.275s off Verstappen, his time matched to the thousandth of a second by Perez – on a second set of fresh mediums – a few moments later. Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel jumped to fourth, 0.008s quicker than Hamilton.

On the final runs, Verstappen improved the P1 time to 1m03.927s, with Hamilton also improving but was 0.331s slower in P2. Bottas moved up to third, 0.449s off the pace, while (on soft tyres) Gasly jumped to fourth ahead of Norris and Perez.

Vettel was seventh, but ruined Alonso’s final lap at the last corner – which will be investigated by stewards. George Russell again starred for Williams, making it into Q3 on mediums, just behind Yuki Tsunoda (AlphaTauri) and Lance Stroll (Aston Martin) who were on softs.

Knocked out at this point were the Ferraris of Sainz (by 0.006s) and Charles Leclerc (who both gambled on mediums again, and were beaten by those on softs), McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo, the fuming Alonso, and Antonio Giovinazzi (Alfa Romeo).

Austrian Grand Prix Q2 results: Verstappen fastest from Hamilton

Cla Driver Chassis Laps Time Gap Interval km/h
1 Netherlands Max Verstappen
Red Bull 6 1'03.927 243.164
2 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes 6 1'04.258 0.331 0.331 241.912
3 Finland Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes 7 1'04.376 0.449 0.118 241.468
4 France Pierre Gasly
AlphaTauri 6 1'04.412 0.485 0.036 241.333
5 United Kingdom Lando Norris
McLaren 6 1'04.415 0.488 0.003 241.322
6 Mexico Sergio Perez
Red Bull 9 1'04.483 0.556 0.068 241.068
7 Germany Sebastian Vettel
Aston Martin 5 1'04.493 0.566 0.010 241.030
8 Japan Yuki Tsunoda
AlphaTauri 6 1'04.518 0.591 0.025 240.937
9 Canada Lance Stroll
Aston Martin 6 1'04.547 0.620 0.029 240.829
10 United Kingdom George Russell
Williams 6 1'04.553 0.626 0.006 240.806
11 Spain Carlos Sainz Jr.
Ferrari 6 1'04.559 0.632 0.006 240.784
12 Monaco Charles Leclerc
Ferrari 6 1'04.600 0.673 0.041 240.631
13 Australia Daniel Ricciardo
McLaren 6 1'04.719 0.792 0.119 240.189
14 Spain Fernando Alonso
Alpine 6 1'04.856 0.929 0.137 239.681
15 Italy Antonio Giovinazzi
Alfa Romeo 6 1'05.083 1.156 0.227 238.845

What happened in Q3?

In the top-10 shootout, Norris set the benchmark at 1m03.958s before Verstappen produced 1m03.720s to take provisional pole. Hamilton could only manage third with 1m04.014s, ahead of Bottas and Perez.

On the final runs, Verstappen didn’t manage to improve his time but Norris unleashed 1m03.768s, and only missed out on his first pole by 0.048s. Perez jumped to third, ahead of Hamilton, Bottas and Gasly. Tsunoda will start seventh, ahead of Vettel (with a likely grid penalty), Russell and Stroll.

Austrian Grand Prix Q3 results: Verstappen takes pole from Norris

Cla Driver Chassis Laps Time Gap Interval km/h
1 Netherlands Max Verstappen
Red Bull 7 1'03.720 243.954
2 United Kingdom Lando Norris
McLaren 7 1'03.768 0.048 0.048 243.771
3 Mexico Sergio Perez
Red Bull 7 1'03.990 0.270 0.222 242.925
4 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes 6 1'04.014 0.294 0.024 242.834
5 Finland Valtteri Bottas
Mercedes 6 1'04.049 0.329 0.035 242.701
6 France Pierre Gasly
AlphaTauri 6 1'04.107 0.387 0.058 242.482
7 Japan Yuki Tsunoda
AlphaTauri 6 1'04.273 0.553 0.166 241.855
8 Germany Sebastian Vettel
Aston Martin 6 1'04.570 0.850 0.297 240.743
9 United Kingdom George Russell
Williams 3 1'04.591 0.871 0.021 240.665
10 Canada Lance Stroll
Aston Martin 6 1'04.618 0.898 0.027 240.564

 

shares
comments
F1 Austrian GP: Verstappen edges Norris to pole, Hamilton fourth

Previous article

F1 Austrian GP: Verstappen edges Norris to pole, Hamilton fourth

Load comments
How the cost cap is putting new pressures on F1's top teams Plus

How the cost cap is putting new pressures on F1's top teams

Formula 1’s budget cap means that even the richest teams now have to juggle what they can afford to spend – to the extent that Mercedes recently had to back out of an important tyre test. MARK GALLAGHER explains how the bean-counters now have to work to the limits of the regulations just like technical directors do

Why Mercedes isn't fooled it's ahead of Red Bull despite Austrian GP practice pace Plus

Why Mercedes isn't fooled it's ahead of Red Bull despite Austrian GP practice pace

After a comprehensive defeat to Red Bull and Max Verstappen in Austria last weekend, Mercedes remains wary of taking its promising pace as a guarantee for success. But with lessons learned from the Styrian GP, the Black Arrows squad continues to be poised for another almighty tussle against its familiar foe

Why '5/10' Ricciardo isn't giving up on his McLaren quest Plus

Why '5/10' Ricciardo isn't giving up on his McLaren quest

Daniel Ricciardo has endured a tough start to his McLaren career. He's been comprehensively outscored by his team-mate so far, and with each passing race the explanations of his struggles can increasingly be seen as excuses. But while admitting that his on-track performances don’t merit a particularly flattering mark, Ricciardo is convinced that he will make a success of the move

Formula 1
Jul 2, 2021
Why F1’s secret rulebook is causing angst among the ranks Plus

Why F1’s secret rulebook is causing angst among the ranks

With competition on the track increasing as the 2021 Formula 1 season intensifies, any possible advantage is being aggressively fought over. This includes off the track, as F1's rules and regulations come under scrutiny which, for multiple reasons, is causing unease up and down the grid

Formula 1
Jul 1, 2021
The crucial improvements Russell needs to reproduce to soothe Styrian GP DNF "hurt" Plus

The crucial improvements Russell needs to reproduce to soothe Styrian GP DNF "hurt"

Having been cruelly denied a long-awaited first points finish as a Williams driver at the Styrian GP, George Russell gets another crack at it this weekend at the Red Bull Ring. While his impressive pace remains unquestioned, a few other vital gains shown at recent races will be needed again to finally deliver

Formula 1
Jun 30, 2021
How the Rumble in the Jungle can inspire Mercedes to beat Red Bull Plus

How the Rumble in the Jungle can inspire Mercedes to beat Red Bull

After a bruising Styrian Grand Prix, Mercedes announced that while it would limit the development of its W12 Formula 1 car, it was not willing to give up fighting Red Bull for the 2021 title. Although the team's development stream is slowing with a focus on 2022, Mercedes still has lots of options available to keep it in the fight

Formula 1
Jun 29, 2021
Styrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings Plus

Styrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings

The Styrian GP was a weekend dominated by Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, as others showed resurgence after key mistakes, while a couple of drivers were denied the chance to demonstrate their full potential. Here’s the driver ratings from the first race of the Red Bull Ring double-header which features two maximum scores

Formula 1
Jun 28, 2021
How Red Bull reversed an old Mercedes advantage in the Styrian GP Plus

How Red Bull reversed an old Mercedes advantage in the Styrian GP

With Red Bull toppling Mercedes at another one of the Black Arrows strongholds, momentum is truly with it and Max Verstappen in the 2021 Formula 1 world title fight. But what became clear at the Styrian Grand Prix is Red Bull now also holds a key strength once possessed by its rival that could be pivotal in the championship chase

Formula 1
Jun 28, 2021