IMOLA, Italy, (Reuters) – Formula One champion Max Verstappen won a sprint for pole position at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix yesterday as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc stretched his overall lead to 40 points.
Verstappen had already secured the official pole for the record books in a wet Friday qualifying for the sprint but yesterday’s result made that concrete as well as bagging him eight points.
Leclerc seized the lead at the start, and held it through an initial safety car period, before Verstappen made up for his poor getaway and passed the Monegasque — whose tyres were fading fast — with a late move around the outside.
Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz moved up to second in the championship standings after racing from 10th place to fourth, behind Red Bull’s Sergio Perez, in the 100km race over 21 laps at Imola.
Verstappen, who retired in the first two races of the season, is now 45 points behind Leclerc.
The first sprint of the season saw points awarded to the top eight, rather than podium places as was the case last year.
McLaren’s Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo finished fifth and sixth with Valtteri Bottas seventh for Alfa Romeo and Kevin Magnussen banking the final point for Haas after starting in fourth place.
“My start was not very good and it took a while to try and put the pressure on,” said Verstappen, who made his move two laps from the end.
“We were a bit better on our tyres at the end of the race so I could get into DRS (drag reduction system) and we had a good fight into turn two.”
Leclerc said it had been a struggle with the tyre degradation at the end but was confident Ferrari would come back stronger on Sunday in front of their army of red-shirted home ‘tifosi’.
“It’s only the sprint race and we’ll learn from this to be better tomorrow,” he said.
“It felt like we damaged the tyres a bit more, especially the front right for some reason. So, we’ll focus on that for tomorrow’s race.”
Champions Mercedes had an afternoon to forget, with George Russell finishing 11th and losing second place in the standings while seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton was 14th — one place lower than where he started.
“We’re obviously not fighting for this championship,” Hamilton told Sky Sports television.
“But we’re fighting to understand the car and improve and progress through the year. That’s all we can hope for right now.”
Magnussen’s Haas team mate Mick Schumacher ensured he starts in 10th place, with a chance of securing his first point.
The safety car was brought out on lap two when Alfa Romeo’s Chinese rookie Guanyu Zhou and Alpha Tauri’s Pierre Gasly got in a tangle.
Zhou crashed out and will start from the pit lane today while Gasly ended up 17th, ahead of the Williams pair of Alex Albon and Nicholas Latifi.