Nico Rosberg achieved his third pole position following a brilliant lap at the Circuit de Catalunya. His Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton lines up second after being quickest in Q1 and Q2.
This was Mercedes team’s third consecutive pole position despite showing little of their one-lap pace during the three practice sessions.
And yet come the qualifying hour, the speed of the Silver Arrows reveals the true performance against their rivals.
Rosberg repeated his Bahrain pole after producing two great laps in the top ten shootout.
His initial one minute, 20.8 seconds benchmark proved unbeatable, but the German was able to improve this with a time of one minute, 20.718 seconds to secure the front row spot.
Lewis Hamilton had to settle for second place, just 0.254 seconds adrift.
As for the Formula 1 championship leader Sebastian Vettel, the Red Bull driver will lines up third. Ahead of Kimi Raikkonen’s Lotus and the home crowd favourite Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso.
Alonso’s team-mate Felipe Massa mounted a strong challenge for pole position only to lose crucial time in the final sector and ended up in sixth position.
Unfortunately, the Brazilian was deemed to have impeded Mark Webber’s Red Bull in Q2 and will drop three places on the grid.
Hamilton had earlier starred in a thrilling end to Q2, throwing in a last-gasp lap that jumped him from a worrying P13 to a comfortable first, six tenths clear of the pack.
Sergio Perez also produced an eleventh-hour surge in Q2, getting up to seventh and then qualifying ninth in Q3. His McLaren team-mate Jenson Button was unable to match that. Was six tenths slower and will start in a disappointing P14.
Toro Rosso had looked promising in practice and both Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne had a realistic shot at Q3. Both were holding onto a top ten spot, before being narrowly squeezed out by others.
They will share row six, ahead of Adrian Sutil, who could not join team-mate Paul di Resta in the pole position shootout. The Scot took tenth place.
Going into the final seconds of Q2, both Saubers had made it into Q3. But in the subsequent flurry of improvements, Nico Hulkenberg and Esteban Gutierrez tumbled down to row eight.
The race stewards would later demote the Mexican further down the grid after blocking Kimi Raikkonen in Q1.
As for Williams, who started the race on pole and later won the Spanish Grand Prix last year. The new upgrades failed to improve the car’s overall speed meaning neither drivers got beyond Q1.
The 2012 winner, Pastor Maldonado will start the race in P18 (accused of blocking by Button) while team-mate Valtteri Bottas was just be one position ahead.
The back of the grid battle stepped up a gear with a very close tussle between Caterham and Marussia.
Giedo van der Garde finally emerged on top for Caterham, edging out Marussia’s Jules Bianchi by just 0.052 seconds.
Max Chilton and Charles Pic were a few tenths behind their respectable team-mates.
So a fantastic performance by Mercedes. But can the team win from the front? Tyre degradation will play a part in Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix and yet if Mercedes can continue their impressive qualifying pace into the race, then we could see a Silver Arrows taking the chequered flag first.
Qualifying positions for the Spanish Grand Prix:
1. Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1m20.718s
2. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m20.972s
3. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1m21.054s
4. Kimi Raikkonen Lotus-Renault 1m21.177s
5. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1m21.218s
6. Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 1m21.308s
7. Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1m21.570s
8. Sergio Perez McLaren-Mercedes 1m22.069s
9. Felipe Massa Ferrari 1m21.219s*
10. Paul di Resta Force India-Mercedes 1m22.233s
11. Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m22.127s
12. Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m22.166s
13. Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1m22.346s
14. Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1m23.166s
15. Nico Hulkenberg Sauber-Ferrari 1m22.389s
16. Valtteri Bottas Williams-Renault 1m23.260s
17. Pastor Maldonado Williams-Renault 1m23.318s
18. Giedo van der Garde Caterham-Renault 1m24.661s
19. Esteban Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 1m22.793s*
20. Jules Bianchi Marussia-Cosworth 1m24.713s
21. Max Chilton Marussia-Cosworth 1m24.996s
22. Charles Pic Caterham-Renault 1m25.070s
107 per cent time: 1m27.448s
*Three-place grid penalty for impended