Russian Grand Prix: Nico Rosberg denies Lewis Hamilton his 50th career pole position

Published on: Saturday, 10 October 2015 //

Russian Grand Prix, Russian GP, Nico Rosberg, Rosberg, Lewis Hamilton, Hamilton, Formula One, F1 news, f1 Nico Rosberg’s fast lap denied Hamilton what would have been his 50th career pole position and 12th of this season. (Source: Reuters)

Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg took pole position for the Russian Grand Prix on Saturday ahead of his teammate and title rival Lewis Hamilton.

Rosberg set an unbeatable time of 1 minute, 37.113 seconds midway through the final qualifying session in Sochi, more than three tenths of a second faster than Hamilton.

The top drivers had been in an uncertain situation ahead of qualifying after rain and various incidents, including a heavy crash for Toro Rosso’s Carlos Sainz, reduced dry practice time to a minimum.

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“Very happy. It’s been a difficult weekend because of the little running we got,” Rosberg said. “Qualifying worked out really well. We found a good balance on my car, thanks to my engineers as well. We had to guess a bit.”

Hamilton challenged for the top spot with an aggressive final lap but ran off track and aborted the attempt. He said he was pleased to see Mercedes defy predictions that the team’s car could struggle in Russia as it had on the similar Singapore circuit last month.

“Coming into the weekend, people were making assumptions that we’d have a repeat of Singapore,” Hamilton said.

“Honestly, I had no idea what it was going to be like and to think that now we’re the other way, it’s very, very strange. I don’t have an answer for it.”

Hamilton has a lead of 48 points over Rosberg with five races remaining. The Mercedes team can secure the constructors’ title Sunday.

Rosberg’s fast lap denied Hamilton what would have been his 50th career pole position and 12th of this season.

At the last race in Japan, Rosberg also started on pole but was overtaken by Hamilton in the first two corners. Rosberg said his approach to the start would not be affected by the way he had lost the lead in Japan, saying his procedure would be simply to “work on the start, get everything right there, look at last year’s start (in Sochi), learn from that.”

Last year in Russia, Rosberg started second behind Hamilton and challenged his teammate for the lead but misjudged the move and damaged his tires. Hamilton went on to take the win.

Even though Rosberg’s attempt last year had not worked out, Hamilton said he was confident he could pass his teammate in Sunday’s race. “It’s a long, long way down to turn one, probably one of the longest ones of the whole year, so it should create opportunities,” he said.

In cool, cloudy conditions, Williams’ Valtteri Bottas took third ahead of the two Ferraris of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen.

“I think we got it right. We got the max out of the car and tires,” Bottas said.

Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg and Sergio Perez were sixth and seventh, with Romain Grosjean eighth for Lotus and Toro Rosso’s Max Verstappen ninth.

Amid concerns the team may not return next season, the two Red Bull cars were off the pace in qualifying, with Daniel Ricciardo 10th, one place ahead of Daniil Kvyat, who disappointed his home crowd in Russia by failing to reach the final qualifying session.

Toro Rosso driver Carlos Sainz did not compete in qualifying after a high-speed crash in the final practice session. His team says he is uninjured but will spend the night in hospital as a precaution.

Sainz’s Twitter account posted a picture of him giving a thumbs-up sign from his hospital bed with the caption: “Already thinking how to convince the doctors to be on the grid for tomorrow.”

Sainz lost control of his car on a high-speed stretch heading into a steep right-hand corner, before scraping along the wall and crashing head on into the barriers. The car went through impact-absorbing barriers and buckled the metal barrier behind.

Rosberg said he had not seen the accident but suggested it could give rise to new concerns over driver safety.

“Apparently it’s not good, not ideal, so let’s see if we can make progress on that,” he said.

It is just over a year since a heavy crash at the Japanese Grand Prix left French driver Jules Bianchi in a coma. He died in July.

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