Seventh heaven for Leclerc in qualifying
Charles Leclerc has continued his untouchable run in qualifying by grabbing an ever-increasing record of seven poles in a row this afternoon in Budapest, defying his earlier comments that the Hungaroring was not a track that suited him to annex the top spot by almost half a second from Oliver Rowland and Artem Markelov.
The Monegasque driver stopped the clocks at 1:26.268 halfway through a hot and sunny session despite a red flag on his fast lap briefly slowing him, with his rivals unable to do anything about the gap on their second set of tyres as Leclerc continued his run, claiming every pole of the season so far.
All of the grid were straight out on track when the lights went green except Alexander Albon, Pertamina Arden teammates Norman Nato and Sean Gelael, and the championship leader: Rowland led the early running despite a messy first flyer, with the final 4 drivers finally emerging just as their rivals had finished their fast laps and were starting to return to the pits, with Markelov and Antonio Fuoco grabbing P2 and 3 on their final tours.
The last 4 drivers timed their run to hit a first flying lap as the rest of their rivals returned to the pits to ensure a clear run, but unfortunately for them all Gelael spun to a stop in the mid-section of the circuit, prompting the red flags to emerge and killing off Leclerc, Albon and Nato’s fast laps. The track remained closed for just 3 minutes, and the trio were straight back out on track to make up for lost time, with Nato at the front of the queue.
Leclerc, at the back of the trio, had the luxury to make some space ahead of himself for his fast lap, and it paid off in spades: he topped the 2nd and 3rd sector times to easily claim P1 before they all returned for fresh rubber as their rivals re-emerged. The three drivers had a quick tyre stop before returning again, with Leclerc the last man out as the clock wound down, but they needn’t have bothered: no one could get closed to the Ferrari Academy driver, and he had the luxury of returning without the need to set a better time.
Behind the top 3 Jordan King, Fuoco, Nato, Nicholas Latifi, Nyck De Vries, Nobuharu Matsushita and Sergio Canamasas rounded out the top 10, with debutant Santino Ferrucci impressively grabbing P11 well within a second of pole, all of whom will be hoping their race pace can make a dent in the Leclerc’s plans for tomorrow’s feature race.
Preliminary Qualifying Classification
Driver |
Team |
Laptime |
Laps |
|
1. |
Charles Leclerc | PREMA Racing | 1:26.268 | 9 |
2. |
Oliver Rowland | DAMS | 1:26.731 | 9 |
3. |
Artem Markelov |
RUSSIAN TIME |
1:26.806 | 11 |
4. |
Jordan King | MP Motorsport | 1:26.849 | 9 |
5. |
Antonio Fuoco | PREMA Racing | 1:26.885 | 11 |
6. |
Norman Nato |
Pertamina Arden |
1:26.968 | 12 |
7. |
Nicholas Latifi |
DAMS |
1:26.973 | 11 |
8. |
Nyck De Vries | Rapax | 1:27.026 | 12 |
9. |
Nobuharu Matsushita | ART Grand Prix | 1:27.103 | 11 |
10. |
Sergio Canamasas |
Rapax |
1:27.129 | 12 |
11. |
Santino Ferrucci |
Trident |
1:27.139 | 12 |
12. |
Alexander Albon |
ART Grand Prix |
1:27.221 | 11 |
13. |
Luca Ghiotto |
RUSSIAN TIME |
1:27.238 | 12 |
14. |
Robert Visoiu |
Campos Racing |
1:27.301 | 12 |
15. |
Ralph Boschung |
Campos Racing |
1:27.339 | 9 |
16. |
Sergio Sette Camara |
MP Motorsport |
1:27.492 | 12 |
17. |
Louis Delétraz |
Racing Engineering |
1:27.582 | 12 |
18. |
Gustav Malja |
Racing Engineering |
1:27.804 | 11 |
19. |
Nabil Jeffri |
Trident |
1:28.248 | 11 |
Sean Gelael |
Pertamina Arden |
1:46.783 | 2 |
Source : GP2.com