Charles Leclerc on pole, 0.286s clear of Max Verstappen; Lando Norris fourth ahead of Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton and George Russell; Fernando Alonso crashes in Q3, Lance Stroll and Nicholas Latifi collide in Q1; watch Sunday's race live on Sunday at 6am on Sky Sports F1
Sunday 10 April 2022 06:07, UK
Championship leader Charles Leclerc will start on pole for the Australian Grand Prix after outpacing 2022 rival Max Verstappen with his final lap of an exciting Melbourne qualifying that was disrupted by crashes.
Leclerc left it late but posted a mighty 1:17.868 in the dying embers of Q3 to snatch pole from Verstappen, who finished almost three tenths off the driver he has gone wheel-to-wheel with in both races to start the season.
"It feels great," said Leclerc, who now has two poles out of three this year. "We were quite surprised by our pace."
A frustrated Verstappen has complained of a lack of balance all weekend and felt that held him back again in qualifying, calling it a "struggle" and insisting there wasn't "one lap where I have felt confident."
The pair will go head-to-head again on the front row for Sunday's race, live on Sky Sports F1 at 6am.
Verstappen still beat Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez, while Lando Norris delivered a superb fourth for McLaren as the team put their early 2022 struggles behind them with both cars in the top seven.
Another team who found much-needed improvement were Mercedes.
While still finishing one second off pole, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell managed fifth and sixth, lowly positions given Mercedes' F1 success of old but heady ones considering their form so far this weekend and this season.
Carlos Sainz was surprisingly only ninth in the other Ferrari, caught out by the red flags that were brought out by Fernando Alonso in the the second crash of qualifying.
Alonso, who looked to be in the battle for top positions and was on a stonking opening Q3 lap, agonisingly went off in the final sector in his Alpine to end his chances.
Earlier in qualifying, there was a bizarre coming together as Nicholas Latifi and Lance Stroll crashed heavily in Q1.
Latifi and Stroll were both on slow laps when they squabbled for position when trying to get out of the way of another car, with Stroll inadvertently turning into the Williams as he tried to pass. Both drivers blamed each other.
That incident also had potential to have repercussions further up the grid, with Perez investigated for failing to slow for the double waved yellows - although the Mexican was later cleared.
Australian GP Qualifying, Top 10
1) Charles Leclerc, Ferrari
2) Max Verstappen, Red Bull
3) Sergio Perez, Red Bull
4) Lando Norris, McLaren
5) Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
6) George Russell, Mercedes
7) Daniel Ricciardo, McLaren
8) Esteban Ocon, Alpine
9) Carlos Sainz, Ferrari
10) Fernando Alonso, Alpine
Heading into qualifying it looked like there could be a four-team fight for pole, with Alpine and McLaren joining Ferrari and Red Bull in the battle at the front. Once the session began, however, the cream truly rose to the top.
Red Bull looked to be in control with Verstappen and then Perez topping Q1 and Q2, but the Ferrari has always looked the more stable on track this weekend and it was Leclerc who once again delivered when it mattered most.
The 0.286s margin to Verstappen was mainly built in the final two corners, and the pair will renew hostilities from the front on Sunday, with Red Bull having two against one versus Ferrari thanks to Sainz's struggles.
McLaren and Mercedes provided one of the biggest talking points of qualifying thanks to their return to form.
From McLaren's end, they appear to have solved their brake issues and say the new high-speed Albert Park layout helped them, while Mercedes third-row result is largely down to their drivers and qualy setups.
Mercedes have not brought upgrades this weekend, but both Hamilton and Russell - split by just a tenth - impressed, a the team got their underperforming W13 car into a better window despite the heavy porpoising.
"I feel like we extracted the most out of the car today," said Hamilton. "The problem is when you push the car a little bit more, it's quite spiteful. It's like a viper, or a rattlesnake."
Alfa Romeo and Haas meanwhile took steps back, both failing to reach Q3 for the first time this season, while Williams and Aston Martin endured miserable Saturdays.
Not only did their drivers Latifi and Stroll crash, but Alex Albon stopped on track after Q1 and the Williams driver was later excluded from qualifying over a fuel sample. Sebastian Vettel - while able to get back on track after a P3 shunt - finished 18th and was handed a fine for pit-lane speeding.