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New dad, same speed: Verstappen flies to Miami pole as Hamilton hits Ferrari slump

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MIAMI, May 4 — Red Bull’s Max Verstappen grabbed pole position for Sunday’s Miami Grand Prix with a blistering fastest lap of 1:26.204 in qualifying on Saturday.

The Dutchman was 0.065 seconds ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris, while 18-year-old Kimi Antonelli of Mercedes again impressed by powering into third place on the grid.

There was more disappointment for seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton in his first season with Ferrari as he was eliminated in Q2 and will start in 12th place.

Verstappen’s aggressive approach in the first sector paid off and gives him a chance for a third win in four years at Miami.

“It has been a great qualifying. We improved the car a tiny amount too. Q1, Q2, Q3 — just improving every run, trying to find the limit. It worked out well. I’m very happy to be on pole,” said Verstappen.

“Race pace, I don’t know. We have to wait and see with the weather. To be honest, the colder the better. No one has really done any long running with the sprint race here.”

The Dutchman announced on Friday that he had become a father for the first time, with his girlfriend Kelly Piquet giving birth to their daughter, Lily.

That prompted speculation among some pundits that fatherhood might slow him down — a belief occasionally heard in the sport that drivers lose their edge once they become parents.

It is not a view Verstappen takes seriously.

“I don’t listen to these kinds of silly things,” he said.

“I just do my thing. I think there are enough racing drivers in the past that have been world champions even after having kids. Honestly, I don’t even know where that comes from.”

A ‘Max lap’

Norris, who won the sprint race earlier in the day to close the gap on championship leader and teammate Oscar Piastri, was disappointed not to grab pole as he eyes a repeat of his win here last year, but said he was pleased with his performance.

“I’m happy with today, happy with the progress I’ve been making with the car and myself. Max did a Max lap again, I can’t fault him. It’s all shoulda, woulda, coulda. I didn’t deliver again but the pace is good. I still haven’t put it together,” said the Briton.

“I don’t mind if it is dry or wet, I’ll be ready for both.”

Antonelli, who became the youngest driver to grab pole in any F1 race after taking the top position for the sprint race, again showed his speed and potential.

Although he could not capitalise on his sprint pole, finishing seventh, he remains confident.

“This weekend is going well so far. A bit disappointing this morning, but good to bounce back this way. I struggled a little bit in quali, I didn’t have a clean lap like yesterday. It’s really about putting everything together and so far this weekend, I am doing that,” said the Bologna-born driver.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc qualified a disappointing eighth, having never contended for the front row, and he could not hide his frustration.

“The feeling is not great. But it’s the way it is. It’s just frustrating because when you do your best and the best is P8, with a Ferrari it hurts, and the two Williams in front of us — I didn’t do any mistakes… we are just not fast enough,” he said.

Adding to Ferrari’s woes, Hamilton failed to reach the final session.

“We will keep trying. We are only six races in but we are struggling big time,” said the British driver, who moved from Mercedes in the off-season.

“We are trying our hardest not to make big set-up changes but no matter what we do it’s so inconsistent every time we go out.

We have problems with brakes, problems with this instability that we are struggling with, and we are generally not quick enough. Just to get through to Q3 is tough for us.” — AFP