Charles Leclerc stunned McLaren’s Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris with Ferrari’s first pole position of the season at the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Leclerc pipped Piastri by 0.026s to upset McLaren, who were expected to lock out the front row and dominate qualifying in Budapest.
Norris was only 0.041s off pole-sitter Leclerc as the McLarens struggled with a change in the wind direction during Q3 which opened the door for their rivals.
George Russell will start Sunday’s race – lights out at 2pm live on Sky Sports F1 and Sky Sports Main Event – from fourth, with Fernando Alonso enjoying his joint-best qualifying of the year in fifth for Aston Martin.
His team-mate Lance Stroll was sixth, ahead of Sauber’s Gabriel Bortoleto while Max Verstappen could only rescue eighth on a dismal weekend at Red Bull.
It was not all smiles for Ferrari as Lewis Hamilton’s wretched qualifying form continued with a Q2 elimination that puts him 12th, behind the Racing Bulls of Liam Lawson and Isack Hadjar, plus Haas’ Oliver Bearman in 11th.
Hamilton described himself as “useless” and suggested Ferrari should “change driver” to Sky Sports F1.
Red Bull’s Yuki Tsunoda was knocked out in Q1 for the fifth time this season and Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli had another disappointing Saturday in 15th.
How Leclerc upset McLaren in thrilling Q3
Piastri and Norris dominated proceedings up to the last part of qualifying, having topped all three practice sessions, plus Q1 and Q2.
They were first and second after the first Q3 runs, despite both drivers visibly sawing at the wheel through the corners, with Piastri ahead of Norris.
Alonso provided the McLaren pair a warning by completing his last run early and going second, then Leclerc stole pole position from Piastri.
Both McLaren drivers were on laps though but neither improved which gave Leclerc his first pole since last year’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix in September 2024.
“I don’t understand anything at Formula 1,” said Leclerc, who felt the Hungaroring was one of his weakest tracks when speaking earlier in the week.
“Honestly, the whole qualifying has been extremely difficult. When I say extremely difficult, it’s not exaggerating.
“It was difficult for us to get to Q2, it was difficult for us to get to Q3! In Q3, the conditions changed a little bit. Everything became a lot trickier, and I knew I just had to do a clean lap to target third.
“At the end of the day, it’s pole position. I definitely did not expect that.”
Russell was only just over half a tenth from an even more shocking pole for Mercedes on a weekend they have reverted to their old suspension.
Alonso was only 0.109s off pole too in fifth, underlining the closeness of the field in Budapest where forecast rain on Sunday could throw up more drama.
Verstappen had his worst qualifying of the year in eighth but fared better than team-mate Tsunoda, who will start 16th after expressing his frustration with the car throughout Saturday.
‘I’m useless’ – Hamilton makes shock admission after dismal qualifying
Ferrari had a double qualifying shock with Leclerc on pole but Hamilton knocked out in Q2 as the seven-time world champion failed to reach Q3 for a third consecutive qualifying session.
Hamilton had been off the pace compared to Leclerc on Friday and was three tenths behind in final practice. Ferrari were expected to be McLaren’s closest challengers but both drivers were fighting to get into the pole shootout.
Hamilton missed out on the top 10 by just 0.015s and said “every time” on the radio when told of his elimination.
He later told Sky Sports F1: “It’s me every time. I’m useless, absolutely useless.
“The team have no problem. You’ve seen the car’s on pole. So they probably need to change driver.”
Hamilton is a nine-time pole-sitter in Hungary and has won the race a record eight times. Earlier this week, he revealed “there will be some tears” during F1’s summer break, which begins after Sunday’s race.
“The last god knows how many seasons have been hard in their own way. This one has definitely been the most intense one, I would say, just from a work perspective,” he said.
“Integrating into a new culture and into a new team. It’s not gone smoothly in all areas, and it’s been a real battle.
“I definitely need to get away and recharge, be around the kids, laugh, let go. I’m sure there’ll be some tears at some point and I think that’s really healthy.”
Sky Sports F1’s Hungarian GP Schedule
Sunday August 3
7.25am: F3 Feature Race
8.55am: F2 Feature Race
10.40am: Porsche Supercup Race
12.30pm: Grand Prix Sunday: Hungarian GP build-up*
2pm: The HUNGARIAN GRAND PRIX*
4pm: Chequered Flag: Hungarian GP reaction
*also on Sky Sports Main Event
Formula 1 is in Budapest at the Hungarian Grand Prix for the final race before the sport’s summer break, watch live on Sky Sports F1 from Friday. For Sky customers, Sky Sports F1 is now found on channel 407. Stream Sky Sports with NOW – no contract, cancel anytime