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Sports / Formula One

Rosberg storms to pole for Japan GP

Published: 27 Sep 2015 - 12:19 am | Last Updated: 02 Nov 2021 - 06:13 pm
Peninsula

British Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton (left) of Mercedes AMG GP and his German team-mate Nico Rosberg wave at fans at the end of the qualifying session at the Suzuka Circuit in Suzuka, Japan, yesterday. 

Suzuka, Japan: Nico Rosberg stormed to pole in yesterday’s qualifying for the Japanese Grand Prix, edging out Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton after Red Bull’s Daniil Kvyat survived a hair-raising smash.
World champion Hamilton, who leads the championship standings by 41 points from Rosberg, will start alongside the German at Suzuka today, while Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel qualified for the second row.
“Happy birthday, mum!” Rosberg said in German after securing only his second pole of the year. 
“That’s a birthday present for you. At times today I had the perfect car and I pretty much nailed my laps. Obviously it’s a great comeback for the team after Singapore.”
Finland’s Valtteri Bottas steered his Williams to third on the grid ahead of Vettel – who won last weekend’s night race to boost his outside title hopes – with team-mate Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen’s Ferrari on the third row.
Rosberg also topped the timesheets in a frantic final practice session yesterday morning after heavy rain effectively washed out Friday’s practice.
With memories of Frenchman Jules Bianchi’s fatal crash at Suzuka last year raw this weekend, Kvyat reminded everyone of Formula One’s inherent risks when he crashed spectacularly on approach to the hairpin.
Despite flipping over and totalling his car, the Russian was able to climb out of the mangled wreckage unhurt as red flags brought a premature end to qualifying.
“I’m okay, and you?” Kvyat chirped over the radio when asked if he had sustained any injuries. He will start the race from the pitlane after his 180kph shunt. 
There was early drama when Max Verstappen’s Toro Rosso rolled to a halt poking out dangerously across the track after breaking down with electrical trouble, costing him a grid demotion of three places.
The Dutch teenager trudged back to the pits, yellow flags having bounced out several drivers, including Jenson Button, who was furious after his worst ever Japan qualifying result. 
Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo qualified seventh quickest with Frenchman Romain Grosjean alongside him on the fourth row for the troubled Lotus team, whose Formula One future has been plunged into doubt over a cash-flow crisis.
A repeat of Hamilton’s victory in Japan last year, when he was also pipped to pole by Rosberg, would put the Briton tantalisingly close to a third world title with five races left. Vettel, meanwhile, was realistic about Ferrari’s chance of inflicting another upset. “Ideally I would have like another spot (on the grid) but let’s not be too greedy,” said the German, who ended a run of 23 straight qualifying wins for Mercedes last time out. “We can be reasonably happy.
Hamilton suffered his first race-ending retirement in over a year in last Sunday’s race, when the dominant Mercedes were rocked by a mysterious loss of pace, but normal service has been resumed in Japan.
He will be chasing an eighth victory of the season in Japan and bidding to equal boyhood hero Ayrton Senna’s tally of 41 race wins.AFP