29/06/2025 10:30
McLaren quickly became the favourite for pole position at the
Austrian Grand Prix after finishing second and third practice with
a one-two; however, a battle between its two drivers was at least
expected. Oscar Piastri had no answer to Lando Norris in
qualifying, with the Briton having demolished the opposition.
Norris was the only driver to break into the 1m 03s, resulting in
an advantage of over five-tenths. It was a staggering performance
by the McLaren driver, particularly given the short duration of the
lap at the Red Bull Ring. The track consists of just 10 corners and
has a high average speed, making the difference in lap times
usually very small. Charles Leclerc secured second on the grid for
Ferrari, but was comfortably adrift of Norris in the second sector.
Norris found three-tenths on Leclerc alone in the second sector,
consisting of only four corners. It was the same for Norris over
Piastri; however, the latter's final lap time was heavily impacted
by a spin at the final corner for Pierre Gasly. When looking at the
data, it is clear that Norris consistently braked later than
Leclerc and Max Verstappen and still carried more speed into the
corners. It did impact his exit speed compared to his rivals, but,
overall, the approach worked. View the data of Norris, Leclerc,
Piastri and Verstappen below. The text continues after that. Red
Bull horror show For Red Bull, qualifying was a disaster on home
soil. Yuki Tsunoda was eliminated in Q1 once again, whilst
Verstappen had to settle for seventh. The Dutchman's final lap was
looking good enough for third; however, Gasly's spin forced him to
back out. Despite this, the 27-year-old's deficit to Norris
remains significant, caused by an imbalance in particular corners.
Verstappen said: "The final lap was just bad luck, but the whole
thing was terrible. The car had no balance at all. It was really
difficult—just no grip in any corner, so it wasn't enjoyable to
drive." The Milton Keynes-based outfit had entered qualifying
feeling optimistic after looking good in every practice session.
Verstappen had been close to the McLarens, raising expectation that
he could fight for pole. Between third practice and qualifying,
something drastically changed for the Austrian team, with even Red
Bull's top speed having reduced, an area it is usually the
strongest. Verstappen does have good race pace, but fighting
through the field from seventh will be a huge test on what is
expected to be a scorching day in Styria. View the top speeds from
qualifying below!