06/09/2025 13:37
Lando Norris goes into qualifying for the Italian Grand Prix as the
man to beat for the second successive weekend after setting the
leading time in practice at Monza. The Briton, who was quickest in
all three practice sessions for the Dutch Grand Prix a week ago,
but lost out on pole to McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri in Q3,
finished with a lap of 1:19.331s. Championship leader Piastri, who
holds a 34-point lead over Norris following the Briton's late
retirement at Zandvoort, was third quickest, but 0.165s adrift as
the Australian was ousted from second position on the timesheet by
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. The Monégasque finished just 0.021s
behind Norris, to bring the Tifosi to their feet. Team-mate Lewis
Hamilton, meanwhile, was left calling for "more juice" from his
SF25 - as Leclerc found - as the seven-time F1 champion was only
seventh quickest. Interestingly, the two McLaren drivers ran
different front-wing specifications, with Norris' a higher
downforce version compared to Piastri, providing him with greater
performance through the chicanes, whilst losing out a little on the
straights. Leclerc leaves it late Under clear blue skies, and with
track temperature hitting 40 degrees Celsius, it was not until
eight minutes in the session that the first timed lap was set by
Alpine's Pierre Gasly, fresh from signing a new contract extension
with the team, with a 1:23.965s on the hard tyres. Naturally, it
was only a marker and a time that was quickly lowered, initially by
team-mate Franco Colapinto, and then Yuki Tsunoda in his Red Bull,
with a 1:21.876s, although it remained quiet on track for the
minutes that followed. As the track action started to intensify,
there were early errors from Hamilton, with a right-front lock-up
into the first chicane, and Piastri soon after with an oversteer
out of it. They were not the only ones, however, as Williams'
Carlos Sainz and Ollie Bearman for Haas were forced to cut across
the gravel at the same chicane. Sainz suggested there was a
tailwind that had played its part, and he was correct given the
northerly direction of the light breeze blowing. After 20 minutes,
the three drivers at the top of the timesheet were all on different
compounds, spearheaded by Red Bull's Max Verstappen on the softs
with a 1:20.040s, followed by Hamilton on mediums, three-tenths
adrift, and then Tsunoda on hards, just over a further tenth back.
On Pirelli's yellow-striped mediums, Leclerc split Verstappen and
Hamilton, finishing 0.014s down on the Dutchman. Unwinding again,
however, Verstappen improved to 1:19.688s, as did Hamilton with a
1:20.064s, 0.010s behind Leclerc. McLaren, meanwhile, opted for
hard-tyre running early on, with Piastri and Norris eighth and 16th
respectively by the halfway stage. On another medium run, Hamilton
purpled the first sector, and although he lost out in the middle,
he still managed to post his first sub-80-second lap this weekend
with a 1:19.929s. With 18 minutes remaining, it was time for the
qualifying simulation runs, and Norris immediately went fastest
with a 1:19.331s, that proved to be the leader, and that after a
slow first sector, followed by Piastri, but a quarter of a second
down. With confidence high after becoming the fifth youngest driver
to score a podium last weekend, Isack Hadjar was third quickest
early on, just under three-tenths behind Norris. With 10 minutes
remaining, Verstappen jumped to P2, but he was still 0.182s adrift
of Norris, who failed to improve on his second run, finishing
0.161s slower. The Ferrari fans had to wait until the closing
minutes for Leclerc and Hamilton to emerge on the softs, and the
first flyer from the former saw him make a mistake out of the
second Lesmo, doing enough to avoid losing the car. At a point when
Piastri grabbed the second fastest time, 0.165s behind Norris,
Hamilton set the sixth best lap of the session, only to drop a
place courtesy of Leclerc's late run that elevated him from 11th to
second. Behind the top three, Verstappen had to settle for fourth,
and ahead of Mercedes' George Russell and Gabriel Bortoleto in his
Sauber, followed by Hamilton and Hadjar. Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli
was ninth quickest, a third of a second down, with Williams' Alex
Albon completing the top 10. Haas' Esteban Ocon was the slowest
with a time that meant all 20 drivers were within a second.