Nico Rosberg beat Mercedes team mate Lewis Hamilton to the Brazilian GP pole position by a mere 0.033s. Rosberg’s 10th pole of the year ensures that he has secured the inaugural F1 Pole Trophy.
The German was driver topped all three practice sessions over the course of the weekend but was not about to start celebrating just yet. “Perfect job only if it works out tomorrow. I need to make it happen in the race unlike Austin,” he said in the post-qualifying press conference.
Of course, with the two drivers matching times so closely, he’s perfectly right. Lewis lost the Brazilian GP pole position by fractions of a second after carrying too much speed into Turn 10 on his flying lap, which caused the rear to step out and send him drifting around through the turn.
The Williams drivers put up an exceptionally impressive battle and at one point even threatening to separate the two Mercedes drivers. “We really thought he [Felipe Massa] could have separated the Mercedes drivers,” Clare Williams said in post-qualifying interviews. Massa however locked up at T1 on his final flying attempt and faced traffic in the final sector which forced him to abort his final lap and qualify in third place. His home crowd cheered like crazy as he arrived back in Parc Ferme shouting, “Massa! Massa! Massa!” to let him know they were fully behind him.
Williams team mate Valterri Bottas was also forced to abort his final lap and qualifying in fourth place on the Brazilian GP grid. Jenson Button was fifth for McLaren, ahead of outgoing world champion Sebastian Vettel.
Button is hoping that his team can take the challenge to Ferrari tomorrow and qualifying ahead of them today is a good start, “It’s a massive gap to Ferrari in the constructors. But we have to make them feel like we’re challenging them,” he said.
Kevin Magnussen finished ahead of Fernando Alonso, with Daniel Ricciardo and Kimi Raikkonen rounding out the Top 10 qualifiers.
Both Sauber drivers made it into Q2 with Esteban Gutierrez and Adrian Sutil split by Nico Hulkenberg in his Force India. Sutil may have finished a little better but ran wide at Juncao on his first hot lap costing him valuable time.
Daniil Kvyat didn’t set a lap time in Q2 and finished in 14th place but will drop down to back of the grid as he serves the remainder of an engine penalty carried over from Austin.
Romain Grosjean finished only 15th fastest, while Jean-Eric Vergne placed 16th for Toro Rosso after making an error at Mergulho.
Sergio Perez finished in 17th place but will drop back behind Maldonado who qualified in last place. Perez drops back due to his grid penalty for causing a collision with Sutil, which the FIA branded as “reckless”, in Austin.
The stage is set for plenty of drama tomorrow’s Brazilian GP and we’re again faced with a chance of rain. Join us tomorrow on Twitter @F1_Madness for live commentary and chat with fellow F1 Mad fans!