Antonelli storms to Suzuka pole ahead of Russell
Antonelli leads Mercedes front-row lockout
Teen sensation Kimi Antonelli delivered another statement performance by taking pole position at the Japanese Grand Prix, beating team-mate George Russell in a dominant showing for Mercedes-AMG Petronas.
The 19-year-old secured his second consecutive pole, underlining his rapid rise as a genuine title contender.
Qualifying results – top contenders
- Kimi Antonelli (Mercedes)
- George Russell (Mercedes) +0.298s
- Oscar Piastri (McLaren)
- Charles Leclerc (Ferrari)
- Lando Norris (McLaren)
- Lewis Hamilton (Ferrari)
Meanwhile, reigning champion Max Verstappen could only manage 11th, after being eliminated in Q2.
Antonelli’s rapid rise continues

Antonelli controlled qualifying from start to finish:
- Fastest across multiple sessions
- Set a benchmark lap early in Q3
- Nearly improved again before a lock-up at Turn 11
“Super happy… every run I was improving,” said Antonelli.
After already becoming the youngest pole-sitter in F1 history, the Italian is now just four points behind Russell in the championship.
Russell puzzled despite strong result
Russell admitted confusion over his performance:
“Really strange session… we were nowhere after changes.”
Despite strong pace all weekend, the Brit struggled with:
- Rear grip issues
- Inconsistent balance after setup tweaks
Still, Mercedes secured a crucial front-row lockout, reinforcing their early-season dominance.
McLaren closing the gap
McLaren showed clear progress:
- Piastri starts third
- Norris recovered to fifth despite issues
Piastri said:
“We don’t have the pace to match Mercedes… but we are getting closer.”
Ferrari competitive but inconsistent
Ferrari had flashes of speed:
- Leclerc looked like a pole contender
- Lost time after a mistake at Spoon Curve
- Hamilton stayed close but still behind
Ferrari remain in the fight—but not yet at Mercedes’ level.
Verstappen struggles continue
For Max Verstappen, it was another frustrating session:
- Eliminated in Q2
- Complained the car was “undriveable”
- Outperformed by team-mate Isack Hadjar
This marks a dramatic shift from his recent dominance at Suzuka.
Key takeaways
- Mercedes lead the field – strongest race pace and qualifying form
- Antonelli emerging as title contender
- McLaren improving rapidly
- Ferrari close but inconsistent
- Red Bull facing serious issues
Final thoughts
The Japanese Grand Prix is shaping up as a Mercedes vs McLaren battle, with Antonelli now at the center of the title race.
The big question for race day:
Can anyone stop Antonelli’s momentum—or is a new F1 era already beginning?








































































































































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