JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia — Lando Norris showed just how fine the margins can be when he crashed while chasing pole position at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Max Verstappen stayed just the right side of the limit.
Formula 1 champion Verstappen will start at the front of the grid after the crash by standings leader Norris on Saturday.
Red Bull's Verstappen beat McLaren driver Oscar Piastri's time by .01 of a second on his final run to take pole for Sunday's race. George Russell was third fastest for Mercedes, .113 off the pace.
''I definitely didn't expect to be on pole here,'' said Verstappen, who was coming off a difficult race last week in Bahrain amid speculation over his future with Red Bull.
He said ''the car came alive" ahead of qualifying after some setup changes, but played down expectations he could turn the pole position into a win, as he did at the Japanese Grand Prix.
''It's really satisfying," Verstappen said. "To be first there in qualifying is of course the best position for tomorrow, even though I think tomorrow in the race it will be tough to keep them behind, but we're going to give it a good go.''
Verstappen struggled with overheating in his tires and brakes in Bahrain and was off the pace in the hotter daytime practice sessions in Saudi Arabia. Sunday's race is at night, like qualifying, but Verstappen said he was unsure how the Red Bull car would react to heat building up over the longer distance.
Verstappen was helped in Japan by a track design which makes overtaking difficult. He kept Norris and Piastri behind him throughout that race. The Jeddah track has three zones where drivers can use the DRS overtaking aid, against just one in Japan, something which Piastri said was ''a nice difference.''