
Andrea Kimi Antonelli achieved his second career pole position in Formula 1 by beating his Mercedes teammate George Russell at Suzuka, the scene of the Japanese Grand Prix.
Antonelli asserted his dominance on his Mercedes colleague George Russell so far this weekend, with youngster quicker than his elder in the last two free practice sessions as well as Q2 – by six tenths – and Q3 – by three.
The racing order was mostly unsurprising in Q1. Ferrari and Mercedes led McLaren at the front, while the Williams, Cadillac and Aston Martin cars are in the drop zone – like they did in both qualifying sessions in China – with five minutes remaining.
Late improvements by Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon allowed the former to jump to P15, with Oliver Bearman out in Q1 with a shocking P18 – the Haas driver currently stands in a remarkable fifth place in the drivers’ championship, but adding to his points tally will be a difficult this time around.
The troubled Aston Martin team ended up last and will line up in P21 and P22 on struggling Honda’s track, some three seconds off the pace…
Oscar Piastri then set the early pace in Q2, leading the Mercedes by three tenths, before Charles Leclerc, then Antonelli went even faster.
Gabriel Bortoleto and Pierre Gasly established themselves as the two midfield cars in the top ten from Audi teammate, Nico Hulkenberg.
The Red Bulls, however, were on the limit of elimination. A late effort by Arvid Lindblad earned him P10 for Racing Bulls, kicking Verstappen out of Q3.
“I think there is something wrong with the car mate, it’s completely undriveable suddenly in this qualifying”, Verstappen told his race engineer on the radio. “Jumping on high speed in the rear suddenly.”
This was a disappointing qualifying for the four-time champion, who is the most successful driver at Suzuka. It will be a challenging race for the Verstappen due to the tricky RB22.
The first Q3 run saw Antonelli set the first one minute, 28 seconds lap of the weekend, with one minute, 28.778 seconds, with teammate Russell three tenths down with one minute, 29.076 seconds despite similar times in the opening sector of the lap.
McLaren outperformed Ferrari with Oscar Piastri three tenths ahead of Lando Norris and Leclerc, as Lewis Hamilton ended up one further tenth. The remaining Red Bull of Isack Hadjar was exactly 1.2 seconds off the pace.
Neither Mercedes driver improved on their times in the second Q3 run, despite Antonelli setting the fastest final sector overall. Ditto for the McLarens and Ferraris, in fact, so the order of the top six remained unchanged.
Gasly, however improved to take seventh position away from Hadjar, with the Alpine under one second away from pole position.
Bortoleto and Lindblad will make up the fifth row of the grid.
So congratulations to Kimi Antonelli with yet another pole position. He achieved his first at China in the previous race and Kimi looks strong compared to George. The Japanese Grand Prix is going to be fascinating.

Japanese Grand Prix, qualifying positions:
1 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:28.778
2 George Russell Mercedes 1:29.076
3 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes 1:29.132
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:29.405
5 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes 1:29.409
6 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:29.567
7 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes 1:29.691
8 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford 1:29.978
9 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi 1:30.274
10 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford 1:30.319
11 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford 1:30.262
12 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari 1:30.309
13 Nico Hulkenberg Audi 1:30.387
14 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford 1:30.495
15 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes 1:30.627
16 Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes 1:31.033
17 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes 1:31.088
18 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari 1:31.090
19 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari 1:32.206
20 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari 1:32.330
21 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda 1:32.646
22 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda 1:32.920



















