
Kimi Antonelli becomes Formula 1’s youngest driver to start on pole position for the Chinese Grand Prix. The Mercedes driver will start in P1, sharing the front row slot with his teammate and championship leader George Russell. Former Silver Arrows driver Lewis Hamilton is P3 for Ferrari.
While attempting to score back-to-back poles, Russell came to a stop on track and, while he was able to get the car going again, he was unable to change gear. The Mercedes driver had to crawl back to the pits, opening the opportunity to a different polesitter this time around.
Antonelli went fastest in Q3 with a time of one minute, 32.322 secinds, and later improved to one minute, 32.064 seconds to set a benchmark for the other drivers to beat.
Lewis Hamilton was a keen challenger and set a time that was 0.315 seconds off, but Russell was able to get back on track for one final last-minute lap. Thus, Antonelli faced an agonising wait – one that paid off as Russell was only 0.222 seconds slower to lock out the front row for Mercedes.
Hamilton and Charles Leclerc will start on the second row for Ferrari, while the McLarens were both on row three. Oscar Piastri led Norris by 0.06 seconds in the battle for fifth on the grid.
Pierre Gasly interrupted the two-by-two nature of the grid by outqualifying the Red Bulls, as Max Verstappen was almost a second away from pole. The four time champion took eighth, ahead of teammate Isack Hadjar and Oliver Bearman in the Haas.
Nico Hulkenberg missed out on Q2 by just 0.002 seconds, while Franco Colapinto was another 0.003 seconds behind as the two just missed out on the opportunity to prise Hadjar out of the top ten.
Esteban Ocon was P13, but his attempts to improve were denied by a late yellow flag. This also affected Racing Bulls duo of Liam Lawson and Arvid Lindblad, who fell out in Q2 too. Lindblad had escaped elimination in Q1 after pitting with an issue, but the rookie was given the all-clear to continue.
The cause of the yellow flag was Gabriel Bortoleto, who looked set to improve from P16 before suffering a spin at the final corner. As the rear locked up, the Audi driver was pitched into a uncontrollable slide towards the barrier – although the gravel trap slowed him down enough to result in only a minor hit with the wall.
Carlos Sainz briefly looked to have made it into Q2 and moved up to P14 after his final lap, but soon dropped back into the elimination zone when Lindblad, Colapinto and Bortoleto all improved on their laps.
Thus, the same six cars were knocked out in both the sprint and the main race qualifying. Alex Albon also dropped out, moaning about his session as “terrible” as struggles continued at Williams.
Fernando Alonso is P19 on the grid, while Cadillac’s Valtteri Bottas outqualified Lance Stroll. Sergio Perez, who has been suffering with reliability issues all weekend, will start last.
So congratulations to Andrea Kimi Antonelli with his first career pole position in Formula 1. This is his ‘second’ P1 after achieving a front row slot at the Miami sprint race last year. But this time, the Mercedes earned the number one spot on merit over his rivals.

Chinese Grand Prix, qualifying positions:
1 Kimi Antonelli Mercedes 1:32.064
2 George Russell Mercedes 1:32.286
3 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari 1:32.415
4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:32.428
5 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes 1:32.550
6 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes 1:32.608
7 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes 1:32.873
8 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Ford 1:33.002
9 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Ford 1:33.121
10 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari 1:33.292
11 Nico Hulkenberg Audi 1:33.354
12 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes 1:33.357
13 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari 1:33.538
14 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Ford 1:33.765
15 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Ford 1:33.784
16 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi 1:33.965
17 Carlos Sainz Williams-Mercedes 1:34.317
18 Alex Albon Williams-Mercedes 1:34.772
19 Fernando Alonso Aston Marin-Honda 1:35.203
20 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari 1:35.436
21 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda 1:35.995
22 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari 1:36.906



















