Max Verstappen produced a magnificent turn to take pole position and pee the McLarens in Suzuka.
The Red Bull driver even surprised one of the tricks of his career himself to organize a attractive race in Japan. Here are the winners and losers of the third qualification session of the year.
Winner: Max Verstappen
Where would Red Bull be without Max Verstappen?
The speech was that McLaren Driver would take a post, but as he has often done in the past, Verstappen has proven that he should never be excluded.
A magnificent tour, which even impressed the driver himself, saw him Pip Norris in Pole in the first P1 of Verstappen from Austria.
The Dutch race profession could be essential with two McLarens behind it. Prepare for sharp elbows.
Loser: Carlos Sainz
He can fly under the radar compared to other major scenarios, but Carlos Sainz has so far a really difficult season.
He continues to be outdone by Alex Albon and reached the third quarter once this year.
To make matters worse, he picked up a three -seater grid penalty for hampering Lewis Hamilton.
Winner: Liam Lawson
It was always going to happen, right?
Demoted to the second seat after only two races and he returns to qualify before the man who replaced him.
After two outings in the first quarter, Lawson needed a confidence strengthening performance and he obtained it in Suzuka.
He may still have been beaten by his teammate, but it is a step in the right direction for the Kiwi.
Loser: Sauber
A promising start to the season has worsened more and more, which resulted in the first release in Sauber’s double quarter of the year.
Nico Hulkenberg let out a large expiration on the way to the stands, suggesting that he knew that the car was starting to miss against other competitors.
Winner: Oliver Bearman
Another impressive moment of Oliver Bearman’s first F1 career.
With the experienced teammate Esteban Ocon in 18th, Bearman mounted Boe and beyond to put his haas in the top 10.
This is the first time that the 19 -year -old has done it this season, and although this is a fight, Bearman could do consecutive score races.
Loser: Yuki Tsunoda
P5. P9. P15.
No price to guess which one came to the Red Bull.
Yuki Tsunoda became the last driver to fight on the Red Bull seat and qualified 15th, a place behind Lawson.
To his credit, Tsunoda did not have as many difficulties as Lawson had done, but there are still 14 places between the Red Bull drivers.
Where Verstappen made the difference ‘
Hamilton reveals the training effect ” after “ good enough ” Suzuka Qualy
Winner: Alex Albon
A festive “come on” was heard from Albon after a particularly fast round when he made three to three for the appearances of the third quarter.
Albon has succeeded in the ground this season and is the main competitor of the “Best of the Rest” pack.
16 points so far put it sixth in the ranking and its P9 in the qualification qualities that it could add to its count.
Loser: FIA
A persistent problem is reappeared in qualities like the grass next to the burned track, as it had done several times before.
A lack of rain in Japan meant that the area around the circuit has dried so much that even the smallest spark could set it on fire.
He interrupted Q2 and, if the FIA could not solve it in one day with four cases, it suggests that we could see more disturbances in the race on Sunday.
Read then: Starting grid F1 – What is the order of the network for the Japanese Grand Prix 2025?
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