Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes was criticised by Toto Wolff as being “a nasty piece of work” after the British driver certified solely thirteenth for the Miami Grand Prix.
As Sergio Perez took a shock pole place – with Charles Leclerc’s late crash leading to a pink flag to depart Max Verstappen ninth on the grid – Hamilton endured one other sobering night in his unruly machine.
Fernando Alonso joins Perez on the entrance row following one other spectacular show by the evergreen Spaniard, with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz third.
Kevin Magnussen certified fourth for Haas forward of Alpine’s Pierre Gasly and Hamilton’s team-mate George Russell. Leclerc, who broke his rear wing within the accident at Turn 7, certified seventh.
On Friday, Hamilton described the efficiency of his lacklustre Mercedes as “a kick in the guts”, and his temper will solely have worsened after he was eradicated from Q2, an eye-watering 1.1 seconds off the tempo, and two-tenths down on Russell.
He returned to the pits shaking his head and took intention at Mercedes for leaving him with an excessive amount of to do by not releasing him early sufficient for his closing try in Q2.
“We left that way too late, guys,” he stated over the radio. Hamilton now trails team-mate Russell 4-1 in qualifying after the opening 5 rounds.
“There is not a lot to say to Lewis because the car is simply not fast enough,” stated Mercedes crew principal Wolff.
“Putting him in a situation on his out lap where the driver is not able to prepare his tyres makes it even worse.
“We are not trying to make mistakes. We are trying to give the drivers the best position on the track, and we have in the past got it wrong many times, and also got it right many times. But if things go badly, they compound the situation.
“I take no enjoyment from finishing sixth (with Russell) and it is the lack of comprehension of what is wrong that makes this car such a nasty piece of work.
“The car is not a good car. There are problems everywhere, with the base performance of the car and the lack of understanding of the car. The performance is just really bad. It is not acceptable.”
Hamilton, already 45 factors behind championship chief Verstappen, began Saturday’s operating on the backfoot following a near-miss with Haas driver Kevin Magnussen.
The 38-year-old was on his first speedy lap of the afternoon when he was blocked by the Dane below braking at Turn 17. Hamilton was pressured to take evasive motion, brushing the limitations within the course of.
“Check the front wing”, stated the Mercedes driver, who swiftly dived into the pits for repairs. “I just hit the wall.”
Commenting on his lowly grid slot for Sunday’s 57-lap race, Hamilton stated: “We knew it would be very hard and there was a 50:50 chance we could get into Q3 so we needed to be better with our timing.
“But it’s done. I’ll try and get my head down tomorrow and see what I can do – 13th to God knows where.”
Verstappen appeared set to safe pole after dominating observe, however he made a mistake in his first run in Q3.
Then, with lower than two minutes remaining, Leclerc misplaced management of his Ferrari and thudded into the wall.
The session was red-flagged and didn’t restart, leaving Verstappen, who leads Perez by simply six factors within the standings, within the midfield.
“F*** sake,” stated the Dutchman over the radio after he was unable to finish his closing lap.
For Perez, his pole comes every week after profitable in Azerbaijan, and offers him with the prospect to imagine management of the world championship.
“It has been a bad weekend,” stated the Mexican, who had struggled to rise up to hurry in his Red Bull earlier than qualifying.
“But we made a small change and everything came alive. Tomorrow is an opportunity starting from pole and we will go out there and enjoy this amazing crowd.”
Source: www.unbiased.co.uk