Suspension issue triggers miserable day at COTA for Hamilton, Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton says a suspension problem ahead of the Sprint race was the catalyst for a “terrible” day as he dropped out in Q1 at the United States Grand Prix. Mercedes looked quick throughout the Sprint Shootout on Friday evening but a yellow flag …

Lewis Hamilton says a suspension problem ahead of the Sprint race was the catalyst for a “terrible” day as he dropped out in Q1 at the United States Grand Prix.

Mercedes looked quick throughout the Sprint Shootout on Friday evening but a yellow flag on Hamilton’s final lap prevented him from having a chance of setting the fastest time. A largely uncompetitive run to sixth place in the Sprint was put down to a suspension issue, but Hamilton believes there was an issue with the car’s configuration after that as he finished 19th in qualifying.

“It’s been pretty terrible,” Hamilton said. “The car felt great yesterday, so obviously came really optimistic for today. Something failed on the front suspension literally as we pulled away from the line for the formation lap, and I had that through the race. They figured that out, they changed the corner, and it felt like a mess, obviously, through qualifying.”

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With the Sprint weekend taking on a different format that gives teams just one practice session, Hamilton said the failure is frustrating given the pace Mercedes has shown.

“I don’t know what the result… This shouldn’t happen, and it’s obviously not planned,” he said.

“I was about to qualify [on] pole yesterday, so it’s not a mental problem. When the suspension is failing or breaking, and things aren’t coming together, I mean today … you’ll have to ask the team what happened with the suspension. I know the guys are working as hard as they can; they did the change.

“Any performance we bring is positive. All of a sudden [yesterday] we were looking really quick. I don’t know where that went, but we’ll keep pushing.”

Hamilton says a fightback drive is unlikely in Sunday’s race, as he will start from 18th due to Liam Lawson’s grid penalty.

“There’s not going to be a lot going on. I started in karts with a pretty bad go-kart and used to come through the field, so I’ll see if I can do that tomorrow.”

Norris couldn’t repeat best pole lap of career in U.S. GP qualifying

Lando Norris says his pole position lap at the United States Grand Prix was the best of his career, and that he didn’t think he could better it when he went out for his final run. Max Verstappen was fastest in Q1 and Q2 having won the Sprint race, …

Lando Norris says his pole position lap at the United States Grand Prix was the best of his career, and that he didn’t think he could better it when he went out for his final run.

Max Verstappen was fastest in Q1 and Q2 having won the Sprint race, but Norris then set the provisional pole position time on the first attempts in Q3. George Russell’s crash while the final laps were in progress meant the opening times set the grid, and Norris doesn’t believe he could have improved anyway.

“The best probably of my career, I think,” Norris said. “It was just a very nice lap. I kind of set the bar too high, because on my second lap, I was like, ‘Guys, I don’t think I’m going to improve much here.’

“I got everything out of the car. We changed a good amount from the Sprint race into qualifying today now, and definitely took a step forward. But man, I was still struggling a lot. I just knew I had to risk a little bit more and give it that little extra, and it just came together perfectly.

“Definitely not a lap that I could have repeated, so I’m very happy because I really wasn’t expecting to be here today.

“It was a bit everywhere, honestly. Of course the high speed is a little bit where we struggle a touch compared to the Red Bulls especially. Max has been extremely quick in the first sector and the high speed. Trying to limit that a little bit more was a good start.

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“And then just the braking, the final sector, from [Turn]s 12 to 16, as soon as one part goes wrong, it can all fall away quite quickly. Again just hooked everything up the first time all weekend, and probably the last. It just came together perfectly. It was a very, very good lap. I’d probably say quite confidently the best of my career.”

Norris started the Sprint in fourth, but a good first corner led to him running second for the majority of the race before his pace faded and an error on the final lap cost him a place to Carlos Sainz. Although he admits tires are a big concern, the McLaren driver is hopeful he won’t suffer a repeat given the setup work the team did before qualifying, and is expecting a close fight between multiple teams for the win on Sunday.

“I don’t think it was as bad as what it was,” he said. “I think certain events led to such a thing. We improved the car quite a bit. We were definitely not contending anywhere close to pole yesterday, and today, we did.

“We’re still a bit off, but we’re in a good position. Our pace relative to Max over yesterday and today is probably a bit more similar. I probably expected the Ferraris and Mercedes to be a bit quicker today, but maybe they just got a bit more out of the car earlier on in the weekend, and we’ve been able to take a bigger step forward between the Sprint and now.

“Maybe we’ve caught up a bit, but it’s going to be a tough race. Ferrari were very quick in the race today with the degradation. Max is Max, so they’re going to be fast. I’m excited. I think it’s going to be a good battle and a good one to watch.”

Norris pinches U.S. GP pole after Russell crash ends qualifying

Lando Norris took pole position from Max Verstappen after a high-speed crash for George Russell truncated qualifying before the final laps could be completed. Russell’s crash compounded a woeful afternoon for Mercedes, coming after three-time …

Lando Norris took pole position from Max Verstappen after a high-speed crash for George Russell truncated qualifying before the final laps could be completed. Russell’s crash compounded a woeful afternoon for Mercedes, coming after three-time Circuit of The Americas polesitter Lewis Hamilton was eliminated from Q1 in 19th.

Verstappen had topped all three qualifying segments on his way to what looked likely to be a largely straightforward pole before a peach of a lap from title challenger Norris put the McLaren car on provisional pole by 0.031s. It was the most convincing lap the Briton has strung together all weekend, having lamented his modestly upgraded McLaren hasn’t had the pace to match Verstappen or the Ferrari drivers this weekend.

Verstappen was first of the pair to return to the track for the final runs of the hour and blitzed the first split, setting a purple time to put himself 0.172s ahead. Norris, meanwhile, couldn’t improve on his own time at the first interval.

The duel was interrupted by Russell, who lost control of his car high speed at Turn 19 and spun into the barriers. With both Verstappen and Norris behind him on the track, both drivers were forced to abandon their laps, allowing Norris to claim an unexpected pole. It’s the Briton’s fifth pole from the last seven grands prix and keeps his slim title hopes alive, now trailing Verstappen by 54 points after the morning’s Sprint.

“It was a beautiful lap,” he said. “We’ve been on the back foot pretty much all weekend. I had to do something, and today I did that.

“I was not going to go much quicker than what I did — when you just do a lap and think, ‘It’s going to be tough to beat that.’ I put everything out on the line. It’s what we needed to do.”

Verstappen rued a mistake at Turn 19 on his first lap that left him needing his second lap to take pole but was nonetheless pleased by his updated car’s performance.

“Unfortunately, I couldn’t finish the lap, otherwise we had a really good shot,” he said. “We’re on the front row at least, and we had the potential to be first, so that’s very good.

“It seemed that we were competitive, so we made some minor changes on the car, which felt nice. … I hope that will also be positive for tomorrow.”

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Carlos Sainz also had a shot at pole spoiled, having been on a much better second lap after an unconvincing first run, fractionally up on Norris’s time in the first sector and less than 0.1s down in the second before Russell’s crash. The Spaniard qualified fifth for the sprint but finished the short race a punchy second and believes third on the grid would give him the chance to improve that result in the grand prix.

“That was the target, to do a step in qualifying compared to yesterday,” he said. “Yesterday we were P5, today we are P3, so we’ve done a good step in the right direction.

“I think we’ve done some good progress. We should be in the fight tomorrow.”

His teammate, Charles Leclerc, qualified fourth ahead of Oscar Piastri and the crashed-out Russell.

Pierre Gasly had an impressive session to qualify seventh ahead of Fernando Alonso and Kevin Magnussen. Sergio Perez will start 10th after having his first lap deleted for exceeding track limits, though the time would have been good enough for only eighth, having been 0.9s slower than his teammate’s front-row effort.

Yuki Tsunoda will start 11th, missing out on Q1 by just 0.045s.

Nico Hulkenberg, having qualified sixth for the sprint, managed just 12th for the grand prix after locking up into the first corner and spoiling his lap. Esteban Ocon will line up 13th ahead of Lance Stroll in 14th, both drivers shaded by more than 0.3s by their Q3-bound teammates.

Liam Lawson qualified 15th on his first full-time grand prix weekend without a time in Q2, having carried a back-of-grid engine penalty into the session. The Kiwi was impressively quicker than teammate Tsunoda in Q1 and was deployed to give the sister car a slipstream in Q2 before returning to his garage.

Williams teammates Alex Albon and Franco Colapinto, eliminated in Q1, will therefore line up 15th and 16th ahead of Sauber’s Valtteri Bottas in 17th.

Hamilton will start 18th in by far his worst qualifying result at COTA. The Mercedes driver, having never qualified lower than fifth at the Austin circuit, was only 0.121s short of a spot in Q2 but a massive 0.618s slower than teammate Russell and 1.108s off top spot in the opening qualifying stanza. The damage was almost all done in the middle sector, where he lost half a second to the front-runners running wide at Turn 12.

Zhou Guanyu will start 19th for Sauber ahead of the penalized Lawson.

Norris cleared of Sprint penalty, but Ferrari’s COTA pace ‘worrying’

Lando Norris avoided a penalty after the Sprint but says the performance potential that Ferrari has at the United States Grand Prix is “worrying.” The McLaren driver is trying to close the gap to Max Verstappen in the drivers’ championship but had …

Lando Norris avoided a penalty after the Sprint but says the performance potential that Ferrari has at the United States Grand Prix is “worrying.”

The McLaren driver is trying to close the gap to Max Verstappen in the drivers’ championship but had to settle for third place behind race-winner Verstappen and Carlos Sainz on Saturday. Both Ferraris nearly got past Norris and he admits the performance seen on Friday has translated so far into race pace that is likely to be tough to beat.

“It was still a tough race,” Norris said. “The start was obviously good, and it gave me quite a bit of hope at the beginning of achieving something strong, but just not the pace today. The whole weekend actually we’ve been quite a long way off.

“I don’t think we were shocking compared to Max, but the Ferraris were just another level. They were quick yesterday; they both just didn’t get the most out of their quali laps, but their potential was worrying.

“So I was a bit like, ‘Maybe that’s just quali and [in] the race they will be a bit further off,’ but they were just as quick today. Qualifying we have things to work on, and the race we clearly have a lot more to work on. Not bad, but we’re not quickest, and we’re not quick enough.”

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Norris was under investigation for allegedly driving erratically late in the Sprint, both as he lost a position to Sainz and then as he defended from Charles Leclerc, but the stewards opted to take no further action.

“There did not appear to be any significant changes of direction under braking, and the move at Turn 15 was a legitimate defending move by the driver of Car No. 4,” the stewards’ decision read. “In Turn 1, Car No. 4 locked up under braking and went wide, losing a position.”

Leclerc acknowledged both the incident and Ferrari’s performance after the Sprint, believing the team can look to mount a more serious challenge for victory on Sunday.

“I think our race pace was really strong today,” Leclerc said. “We had quite a lot of fighting, which is part of racing in a Sprint race, so it was a very high-adrenaline Sprint race. My approach of trying to save a little bit more in the first five or six laps didn’t pay off, and that was it.

“At the end [I started to push]. We were very fast, but then there was a DRS train in front with Carlos having the DRS of Lando, and a close call on the last lap with Lando, so all-in-all P4 is the way it is. It’s a Sprint race and we’ve learned a lot for tomorrow.”

Verstappen wins U.S. GP Sprint after late Ferrari-McLaren duel

Max Verstappen cruised to victory in the U.S. Grand Prix Sprint ahead of fast-finishing Carlos Sainz. The Dutchman started from P1 on the grid for the first time since the Austrian Grand Prix in June but had no problem acing his getaway to put …

Max Verstappen cruised to victory in the U.S. Grand Prix Sprint ahead of fast-finishing Carlos Sainz.

The Dutchman started from P1 on the grid for the first time since the Austrian Grand Prix in June but had no problem acing his getaway to put himself ahead of a first-turn melee as the frontrunners jockeyed for position.

Front-row starter George Russell attempted to follow Verstappen through the corner but was swamped by both Ferrari drivers — Leclerc and Sainz starting third and fifth respectively — who were both eager to make up on underwhelming qualifying results.

The battle gave Lando Norris, starting fourth, a clear line down the inside, and after running the embattled Russell side by side around the outside through Turn 2, he emerged in second and directly behind Verstappen.

Norris harried the Red Bull until lap four, when Verstappen put his foot down and broke free of DRS.

The loss of straight-line boost left Norris exposed to Russell, and the Mercedes pushed hard for position at the end of the back straight. The two bravely dueled side by side through to Turn 15, where Norris reasserted himself in the position from which he was never again challenged.

It was a costly battle for Russell, cooking his medium tires. From being on the attack, he was suddenly forced to defend from the Ferrari drivers behind him.

Charles Leclerc led Sainz in the opening laps, but the Spaniard was determined to lead the charge up the field. From the first lap he relentlessly challenged the sister car for position until he barged past at Turn 15, pinning Leclerc on the curbs on exit on lap five.

With clear air, Sainz rapidly closed onto the back of Russell’s ailing Mercedes, and by lap nine he was through with a move down the inside of his favored Turn 15.

Leclerc muscled through at the same place one lap later, demoting Russell to fifth.

The scarlet cars chartered a course for Norris’ second place, and with two laps to go the trio were split by less than a second.

It took a critical mistake from Norris to break open the battle, the Briton locking up into the first turn to open the door to Sainz, who immediately punished him down the inside to take the place.

Norris committed a second lock-up at Turn 12, but having had DRS down the long back straight, Leclerc wasn’t close enough to immediately capitalize. The Monegasque attempted to double Norris’s pain at Turn 14 but was caught off-guard by the Briton holding an unusually tight line. The Ferrari had to take avoiding action to avoid a crash ending the battle in Norris’s favor.

The battle will make for enjoyable post-race viewing for Verstappen, who kept himself above the fray to record a straightforward victory.

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“It was not too bad — it feels a bit like old times,” he said forebodingly. “I’m very happy with today.

“If you look at the whole race, Ferrari was also very quick, but for us, finally we were racing again.

“Normally in the race we were always looking back behind us, but we could just do our own race. We had good pace.”

Sainz enjoyed battling up to second, though his tires were too worn to be a victory contender.

“Honestly, they were very fun battles,” he said. “A good sprint — I think if the Sprints are like this, you always enjoy them, that little bit of extra action.

“Toward the end I was starting to struggle with the tires, but I saw Lando also struggling and thought if I could get into DRS, I would have my chance to get into P2

“We made it stick into Turn 1. It was a fun one.”

Norris was happy with his result, even though his tires were too shot to defend second place by the end of the race.

“Honestly, I’m pretty happy with how things ended up,” he said. “It was a tough one. I thought I could maybe hang on to second, but Carlos did a good job.

“My front tires were completely finished; there was not a lot I could do.

“I did the most I could. I don’t think we had the pace of Max or the Ferraris, therefore happy to finish third.”

The finish cost him two points to Verstappen, extending the title margin to 54 points.

Russell finished a glum fifth ahead of teammate Lewis Hamilton in sixth, up one place from his starting position.

Haas teammates Kevin Magnussen and Nico Hulkenberg scored the final points of the Sprint in seventh and eighth.

Sergio Perez finished ninth and several seconds behind the American cars, up just two places from his grid spot after a long battle with RB’s Yuki Tsunoda for position.

Oscar Piastri crossed the line 10th after a feisty recovery from 16th on the grid after battling later with Tsunoda for the place. He was fast enough in the closing laps to negate a 5s penalty incurred for pushing Pierre Gasly off the track earlier in the Sprint.

Tsunoda beat Franco Colapinto to 11th ahead of Lance Stroll.

Alpine duo Gasly and Esteban Ocon finished 14th and 15th ahead of Liam Lawson, Alex Albon — the Williams driver having started from pit lane — and Sauber teammates Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu.

Verstappen wary of threats but more comfortable with car at COTA

Max Verstappen says his fastest time in qualifying for the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix was due to Red Bull hitting the ground running and giving him a car he’s more comfortable with. The last time he was fastest in any qualifying session …

Max Verstappen says his fastest time in qualifying for the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix was due to Red Bull hitting the ground running and giving him a car he’s more comfortable with.

The last time he was fastest in any qualifying session was in Belgium, although a grid penalty for taking a new power unit meant he did not start from pole position. Prior to that he was quickest in the qualifying sessions in Austria back in July, and after returning to the front in the Sprint Shootout at COTA the championship leader says the car was more to his liking on Friday.

“It was just a positive day,” Verstappen said. “From lap one I think the car was in a decent window; I felt quite comfortable. I could attack the high-speed corners; I think we were quite quick there.

“Then going into Sprint qualifying is always a tricky one. You do medium-medium-soft — of course on the mediums at one point you get a bit of a reference, but then you go into SQ3 and you have the soft tire and it’s only really one lap, so that was not easy. It’s the same for everyone, but you can’t really push to the limit, you have to leave a little bit of a margin, but it was OK.

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“Looking at the lap, a few little balance issues still but to be ahead of the others I think is positive. I think also when you look, Lewis [Hamilton] had a little mistake in [Turn] 12, otherwise I think he would have been up there as well. I’m happy, but I’m also aware that there are a lot of fast cars around me, but it’s definitely a positive return.”

Verstappen’s mention of Hamilton was backed up by the seven-time world champion, who says a yellow flag caused by Franco Colapinto spinning cost him what he believes would have been the fastest time.

“I just got unlucky with the yellow flag and it is what it is — I was 0.4s up,” Hamilton said, after teammate George Russell ended up just 0.012s off Verstappen.

“The good thing is the team’s made a step with the car, the upgrade has clearly worked and I’m really grateful to everyone back at the factory for all the hard work over this period of time because it’s been a tough slog for everyone to get the upgrade and make sure that they’re working. Tomorrow we got another shot.”

‘Shocking’ U.S. GP Sprint qualifying lap could have been worse – Norris

Lando Norris believes he could have been even lower than fourth on the grid for the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix due to how difficult his Friday was. Max Verstappen set the fastest time in the Sprint Shootout and will lead the field on …

Lando Norris believes he could have been even lower than fourth on the grid for the Sprint at the United States Grand Prix due to how difficult his Friday was.

Max Verstappen set the fastest time in the Sprint Shootout and will lead the field on Saturday, with his main title rival Norris down in fourth place, 0.25s adrift. The McLaren driver admitted he was not happy with his car at any stage on Friday and felt his lap was so poor that a spot on the fourth row is better than it might have been.

“Not very good,” Norris said. “P4. Not a great day. Been struggling the whole day, honestly, with the balance and the set-up. In a way, happy with P4, because I feel like it could have been a lot worse, but my lap was shocking. Not a terrible day, could have been worse, could have been better, but I’ll take it.”

Norris dismissed any suggestion that the upgrade McLaren introduced at COTA could be the cause of his struggles, and says he expects to be in a similar position over a Sprint race distance too.

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“No, not really [much chance to progress]. I hope to move forward — that’s my plan — but on pace, I think we are where we deserve to be today,” he said. “So my plan is to go forward, but I have no idea how much we can.”

It was an even worse day for teammate Oscar Piastri who dropped out in SQ1 when his best time was deleted for exceeding track limits, but the Australian is grateful it wasn’t in the main qualifying session.

“Most of the lap was good,” Piastri said. “I made a few mistakes in the last sector and, obviously, in the second-last corner I tried to go a bit too fast and that’s the result, so it’s a shame, but if there’s one good thing about sprint weekends [it’s] that we have another shot tomorrow.

“[The car] feels OK, maybe not quite as strong as what it has been in the last few races, but I don’t think that’s because we are weaker. Maybe the others are a little bit strong. Let’s see. We’re still hopefully in the fight … so it’s certainly not a case of [being] miles behind, but maybe it’s a bit more difficult for us than in some of the other weekends.”

Sealing components makes Red Bull device a non-story – FIA

The FIA believes the steps taken to ensure no team changes the ride height under parc ferme conditions will make it a non-story from the United States Grand Prix onwards. Red Bull has been the focus of attention because a rival team complained to …

The FIA believes the steps taken to ensure no team changes the ride height under parc ferme conditions will make it a non-story from the United States Grand Prix onwards.

Red Bull has been the focus of attention because a rival team complained to the FIA about its design in Singapore, leading to a clampdown from the governing body to ensure no team breaches parc ferme regulations. The FIA’s single seater director Nikolas Tombazis says sealing the component in question once it can no longer be adjusted should rule out any suspicions moving forward and attributes the recent focus to the heat of a championship battle.

“At the previous race, it was pointed out to us that certain designs could allow a change of the height of the front of the car, which some people call a bib, in parc ferme,” Tombazis told Sky Sports. “We didn’t have any indication or any proof that anybody was doing something like that. That would be clearly illegal under parc ferme regulations.

“But as I said, we didn’t have any clear indication that somebody was doing such a thing, so we said from this race onwards, there must be no possibility to do such a thing at all. If a team has a design that would allow a quick change of that height, then it had to be sealed so they could not have access in parc ferme. I think all teams have adhered to that, and as far as we’re concerned, that’s reasonably under control.

“I think it’s certainly not a story from now on. I think we’ve done all that’s needed to stop there being any accusations, and then of course it is a tight championship and people get rather excited about each other’s cars. We can’t definitively close the previous races or any insinuations between teams in a very competitive environment, but in the present situation, we believe it’s a non-story, yes.”

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Tombazis says the FIA is unlikely to revisit previous races and the device’s use, despite Zak Brown’s calls for a full investigation into the way Red Bull has been running its car.

“Honestly, no. We’re talking … a couple of millimeters or something like that, potentially. We’re really talking very, very small numbers. I don’t think it’s something that we could go and check. But as I say, we don’t have any indication or proof or anything like that about something untoward having happened before.”

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner added that the setup has been in place since the start of the current regulations in 2022, and insists it has remained untouched like the rest of the car that is subject to parc ferme regulations.

“Every car has a tool that they can adjust the front of the bib, what we call the front of the floor being the bib,” Horner also told Sky Sports. “Ours is located at the front, in front of the footwell. It’s been there I think for over three years.

“You’ve got to have the pedals out, other panels and pipework out, in order to be able to get to it. It’s like any other adjustment on the car. It would be easier to adjust a rear roll bar than it is to get to that component. It’s all part of the packaging in the front end of the chassis.

“I think there’s been a bit of moaning from one of our rivals, and it’s the FIA’s job to look into these things. It’s on a list of the open source components. It’s been publicly available for the last three years. The FIA are happy with it. I think [maybe this is] just to satisfy some paranoia elsewhere in the paddock.

“It’s obvious that we’re at the start of a tripleheader — could have mentioned it three weeks ago. It was a conversation that we actually had with the FIA in Singapore. They looked at it, they’re more than happy with it…

“Just to explain to the public — there’s probably about 600 items on the car that are fully adjustable. Everybody can adjust these elements. What you can’t do is adjust them during parc ferme, and that is what hasn’t happened.

“As I say, it would be easier to adjust the floor stay or a roll bar or a push rod length than strip out the pedals. We have cameras watching the cars. We have scrutineers and witnesses watching the cars. Our car has come under more scrutiny in the last three years than any other car in the pit lane, so we’re totally comfortable.”

Verstappen pips Russell to U.S. GP Sprint pole

Max Verstappen will start the U.S. Grand Prix Sprint race from pole after a late stunner pinched top spot from George Russell after the flag. Verstappen complained throughout the session that he was struggling with ride quality and was clearly …

Max Verstappen will start the U.S. Grand Prix Sprint race from pole after a late stunner pinched top spot from George Russell after the flag.

Verstappen complained throughout the session that he was struggling with ride quality and was clearly avoiding running too wide over the curbs in the build-up to the SQ3, but his final flying lap showed no such impediment, setting the benchmark at 1m32.833s to beat Russell by just 0.012s.

It’s the first time Verstappen has set the fastest time in a qualifying session since the Belgian Grand Prix in July, and Saturday will be the first time he will start from pole since Austria in June.

“We had a good day,” he said. “Of course sprint quali is always very difficult. You never really know how much you can push, but I’m happy with today.

“I think the whole day the car was working quite well. I’m very happy to be first. It’s been a while!”

Russell’s time was arguably compromised by Mercedes sending out both its drivers unusually early in the eight-minute session, costing him a chance to capitalize on the track’s fastest conditions.

Charles Leclerc was third, qualifying 0.226s off the pace in a car that exhibited none of the vices that slowed it through the middle of the season, suggesting its recent round of upgrades prior to Austin are working.

Title challenger Lando Norris was a disappointing fourth and 0.25s slower than championship leader Verstappen. The Briton needs a perfect end to the season and at least one mistake from the Dutchman to beat him to top spot by Abu Dhabi.

Carlos Sainz will line up fifth for the fourth time in a row for a sprint race this season after lapping 0.006s slower than Norris.

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Nico Hulkenberg excelled to lead a double Haas SQ3 appearance at the American team’s home race, qualifying sixth ahead of teammate Kevin Magnussen in eighth. They sandwiched a disappointed Lewis Hamilton, who was fastest in the first sector but couldn’t complete the lap competitively after losing time drifting wide of the apex at Turn 12.

Yuki Tsunoda will line up ninth ahead of Williams rookie Franco Colapinto, whose session was compromised by a spin at Turn 12.

Sergio Perez was knocked out of qualifying in 11th, the Mexican a disappointing 0.954s slower than his SQ3-bound teammate. He was lucky not to be demoted a further place by Liam Lawson, who was just 0.04s slower in 12th but lost time bobbling over the curbs exiting the first turn on his fastest lap.

Pierre Gasly led the way for Alpine in 13th ahead of Aston Martin teammates Lance Stroll and Fernando Alonso after both had lap times deleted for exceeding track limits.

Oscar Piastri was knocked out in 16th after also having his fastest time deleted for running wide off the road at Turn 19. Had it stood, the lap would have seen him through to SQ2 in seventh.

It was the first time the Australian qualified outside the top 10 for either a sprint or grand prix since last year’s Las Vegas Grand Prix.

Esteban Ocon will start 17th ahead of Alex Albon, who spun at the final corner on his final flying lap.

Sauber teammates Valtteri Bottas and Zhou Guanyu qualified at the back of the grid.

Racing on TV, October 17-20

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted. Thursday, October 17 Richmond 6:00-8:00am (D) Sydney 8:00-9:00pm (D) Friday, October 18 U.S.GP practice 1 1:25-2:30pm U.S.GP Sprint qualifying 5:25-6:30pm Las Vegas qualifying 6:30-8:00pm Saturday, …

All times Eastern; live broadcasts unless noted.


Thursday, October 17

Richmond 6:00-8:00am
(D)
Sydney 8:00-9:00pm
(D)

Friday, October 18

U.S.GP
practice 1
1:25-2:30pm

U.S.GP
Sprint
qualifying
5:25-6:30pm

Las Vegas
qualifying
6:30-8:00pm

Saturday, October 19

Spain race 1 8:00-9:00am
Road Atlanta 12:00-1:00pm
(D)
Road Atlanta 1:00-3:00pm
(D)
U.S. GP
Sprint
1:55-3:00pm


COTA
race 1
3:35-4:20pm

Las Vegas
qualifying
4:30-6:30pm

U,S, GP
qualifying
5:55-7:00pm
Las Vegas 7:00-7:30pm
pre-race
7:30-10:00pm
race

Prescott Valley 10:00pm
Phillip Island
sprint
11:30pm-
1:00am

Sunday, October 20

Spain race 2 8:00-9:00am
Portimao 9:00am-
1:30pm
COTA
race 2
10:55-11:40am

U.S. GP 1:30-3:00pm
pre-race
3:00-5:00pm
race

Las Vegas 2:00-2:30pm
pre-race
2:30-6:00pm
race
Phillip Island
GP
9:30pm-
12:00am

Key: SDD: Same day delay; D = delayed; R = Replay

FIA WEC is available on Max’s B/R Sports Add-On in addition to Motor Trend. Check your streaming provider for air times

MotoGP is now airing live on TruTV and Max’s B/R Sports Add-On. Check your streaming provider for air times

A variety of motor racing is available for streaming on demand at the following sites: