Max Verstappen made his intentions clear in Austin after snatching the Sprint pole for the United States Grand Prix sprint race. The Red Bull driver pulled out a strong late lap to beat McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri to set up another heated battle at the Circuit of the Americas.
The Dutchman’s lap was a statement and with a time gap of just 0.071 seconds to Norris reminded everyone that he is never out of the picture even when McLaren look strong.
How Was Max Verstappen’s Performance in Austin Yesterday?
Things started off looking good for McLaren as Norris had set the early pace in practice and the first two rounds of qualifying and showed confidence around the twisty Austin circuit but when it mattered, Verstappen delivered.
“It’s been a nice qualifying,” Verstappen said after the session. “Throughout all of the segments, we were quite close. It was just about putting it all together at the end, when it matters most, which is not easy because you go to the soft compound with no reference.”
The lap earned him his third Sprint pole at the Circuit of the Americas and added to his growing collection of achievements in Texas. The final lap was a masterclass from both Verstappen and Norris, but the Red Bull star found just enough in the last corners to seal it.
However, he wasn’t taking anything for granted heading into Saturday’s sprint race, “It worked out well. I still expect it to be a tough battle tomorrow with the Sprint but that is exactly what we want to see, right? So yeah, I’m excited for tomorrow and happy with today.”
McLaren Remain Right in the Mix
McLaren can still hold their heads high after another strong qualifying performance, as Norris was slightly frustrated not to grab pole but accepted the result with a smile.
“Disappointed not to be on pole but not a surprise for us to be just a bit slower than the Red Bull lately.,” Norris said. “A little couple of bits here and there I could have improved on and caught a few bumps a little bit wrong, that’s the difficulty of this track. Otherwise, all happy.”
Piastri will start third and admitted that his lap wasn’t his best, “A pretty scruffy lap. Just didn’t really get it together. In some ways, I feel a bit fortunate to be third. The pace in the car is good. It’s nothing major, just been a bit of a messy lap and hopefully I can tidy it up tomorrow.”
Behind the top three, there were a few surprises as Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg impressed once again with a fourth-place start and backed up his solid form from earlier this year. George Russell and Fernando Alonso followed in fifth and sixth, while Ferrari struggled again, with Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc down in eighth and 10th, respectively.
However, for Red Bull, not everything went to plan. Their second driver, Yuki Tsunoda, had yet another rough session, bowed out in Q1 after a messy out-lap, and finished 18th, which was another setback in a season full of frustrations for the Japanese driver.
Even when McLaren look fast, the Dutchman’s calm focus and ability to perform under pressure make the difference and set him apart from the rest.
“It worked out well. I’m excited for tomorrow and happy with today. I hope that we have good pace in the race but we’ll find out tomorrow,” Verstappen said.
With McLaren breathing down his neck and just fractions separating the top three, today’s Sprint race in Austin promises to be anything but predictable.