Hamilton secures first pole for McLaren

McLaren steal pole position from Red Bull at their 700th Grand Prix in Korea as Hamilton finishes in front of Vettel.

Lewis Hamilton
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Lewis Hamilton will lead the pack in Korea ahead of Sebastian Vettel and Jenson Button [GALLO/GETTY] 

Red Bull’s perfect run of pole positions this season ended Saturday when McLaren driver Lewis Hamilton edged out Sebastian Vettel in qualifying for the Formula One Korean Grand Prix.

Hamilton’s time of 1 minute, 35.820 seconds was 0.222 seconds faster than Red Bull’s Vettel, who clinched his second straight F1 drivers championship at last weekend’s Japanese GP. Hamilton’s teammate Jenson Button was third ahead of Red Bull’s Mark Webber.

Red Bull had taken pole in all 15 races this season – 12 for Vettel and three for teammate Mark Webber – but couldn’t keep the streak going at the Yeongam track.

“I’m happy to be here and very proud of what the team has been able to achieve over the course of the last few races,” Hamilton said.

“For Jenson to win the last race and for us to be on the front again and the only ones competing with Red Bull, I’m very happy.”

Red Bull employed a novel strategy of using the same set of super-soft tires for both the first two periods of qualifying meaning they have an extra set of the harder tires for Sunday’s race, giving them more flexibility in race strategy.

“McLaren looked competitive yesterday and though the conditions were completely different today, they were a fair chunk ahead of everyone including us,” Vettel said.

“In the dry this morning they were extremely quick but once again we pushed them very hard in qualifying, perhaps more than they expected and we did a good job in qualification.”

Revving up for race day

McLaren had topped the timesheets in all three practice sessions, at what is the team’s 700th Grand Prix.

Hamilton took his 19th pole and his first grid-topping performance since Canada last year.

Webber was fourth after aborting his final lap of qualifying. Ferrari teammates Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso were fifth and sixth respectively.

Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg was seventh ahead of Renault’s Vitaly Petrov. The Force India duo of Paul di Resta and Adrian Sutil rounded out the top 10.

“We’ve had some difficult races in the past but we hope we can redeem ourselves tomorrow”

Lewis Hamilton

As happy as he was with pole, Hamilton was focusing on Sunday’s race. The Briton finished second here last year to Alonso and is hoping to change his luck after a disappointing series of results including two fifth place finishes in the last two races in Singapore and Japan.

“To be back on pole is a great feeling but tomorrow is the most important day,” Hamilton said.

“We’ve had some difficult races in the past but we hope we can redeem ourselves tomorrow.”

Button, who won the Japanese GP last weekend, said a mistake at the last corner prevented a McLaren 1-2 finish.

“I lost way too much time on the last corner,” Button said.

“But I feel good in the car, P3 isn’t what I wanted but I’m looking forward to the race.”

Source: AP