Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc ends Max Verstappen’s record F1 run with Monaco pole

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Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during qualifying at the Monaco Grand Prix on May 25.

Ferrari's Charles Leclerc during qualifying at the Monaco Grand Prix on May 25.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc ended Max Verstappen’s record-equalling run of Formula One pole positions in style on May 25 to make himself favourite to become the first home winner of the Monaco Grand Prix since 1931.

The pole was Leclerc’s third in Monaco and 24th of his career, but he has yet to stand on the podium in front of his home crowd.

McLaren’s Oscar Piastri will start alongside the 26-year-old on the front row.

Leclerc said: “It was nice, the feeling after qualifying and after the qualifying lap is very special here. I’m very happy about the lap, the excitement is so high that it feels really good.

“We need to put everything together for Sunday’s race,” added the Ferrari driver, who can become the first Monegasque to win since Louis Chiron drove a Bugatti to victory in the early years of an event that now stands for glamour and history.

“In the past here we didn’t manage to do so, but we are in a stronger position and we are a stronger team. I’m sure we can achieve great things tomorrow and the win is the target.”

Red Bull’s triple world champion Verstappen, who was chasing an unprecedented ninth successive pole and eighth of the season, will line up only sixth after pushing too hard and paying the price.

“I’ve hit the wall,” the championship leader, who has won five of seven races so far this year, exclaimed over the team radio.

He was third fastest after the initial round of fast laps in the final top-10 shoot-out, with Leclerc setting a time of 1min 10.418sec and Piastri 1:10.444.

Leclerc improved on his time with his final effort of 1:10.270, while Piastri shaved 0.020 seconds off his previous best.

Verstappen, who has been wrestling with his car since practice on May 24, threw everything at it but his mistake effectively cost him three places on a circuit where overtaking is very difficult and races are often processional.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz qualified third and McLaren’s Lando Norris fourth. Mercedes’ George Russell will share the third row with Verstappen.

Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton secured seventh place, a disappointment after the Briton’s strong showing in practice, with RB’s Yuki Tsunoda eighth.

Alexander Albon qualified ninth for Williams and Pierre Gasly a morale-boosting 10th for struggling Renault-owned Alpine in the closest thing to a home race for the Frenchman.

Verstappen’s teammate Sergio Perez was the big casualty of the first phase of qualifying, with the Mexican set to line up only 18th. Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, another past Monaco winner, also had a bad day and starts 16th. REUTERS

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