Vettel goes from pole to pole

Motor Sport: Sebastian Vettel today equalled the Formula One record for number of pole positions in a single-season following…

Motor Sport: Sebastian Vettel today equalled the Formula One record for number of pole positions in a single-season following another one-lap last-gasp masterclass from the double world champion.

Lewis Hamilton, fastest in second and third practice for tomorrow’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, appeared poised to snatch Vettel’s thunder at the Yas Marina Circuit.

Hamilton underlined his speed by going quickest in the first two qualifying sessions, and when he pipped McLaren team-mate Jenson Button by just 0.009secs in the top-10 shoot-out, pole was on for the Briton.

But not for the first time this season Vettel stole top spot on the grid at the death in his Red Bull, beating Hamilton by 0.141secs to take his 14th pole of the season, and so match Nigel Mansell’s 1992 mark.

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Vettel’s also prevented an all McLaren front row, with Hamilton starting second for the seventh time this season, whilst Button lines up third.

Red Bull’s Mark Webber finished four tenths of a second adrift of team-mate Vettel and so starts ahead of the Ferrari’s of Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa.

Then come the Mercedes duo of Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher, with the Force India pairing of Adrian Sutil and Paul di Resta on the fifth row, although neither man set a time in the final outing.

Following the 15-minute Q2 that was red-flagged at one point as a Ferrari dislodged a bollard and its base at turn six, the expected gap between the top five teams at this track and the rest duly materialised.

It means Sergio Perez starts 11th for Sauber ahead of Vitaly Petrov in his Renault and the Toro Rosso of Sebastien Buemi. Bruno Senna lines up 14th in his Renault followed by Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari and the second Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi.

Although Pastor Maldonado qualified 17th, a 10-place grid penalty for using his ninth engine of the season means Williams will occupy the back row of the grid.

To compound their woes, Rubens Barrichello also started the day with a new engine — without penalty — but an oil leak saw him complete just five laps in final practice and unable to set a time at all in Q1.

All those who were behind Maldonado now get bumped up a place, so the Lotus duo of Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli start 17th and 18th, followed by Virgin’s Timo Glock and Daniel Ricciardo for Hispania.

In 21st and 22nd will be Jerome D’Ambrosio in his Virgin along with the Hispania of Vitantonio Liuzzi, and then the lowly Williams duo of Maldonado and Barrichello.