LAS VEGAS — Lando Norris’ attempt to rewrite his personal history at the Las Vegas Grand Prix couldn’t have started any better.
McLaren’s championship front-runner will start the Saturday race from the front of the grid after clinching first place with a timely final lap at the conclusion of the third and final stage of a rainy qualifying session on Friday.
Norris eclipsed Red Bull’s Max Verstappen by 0.323, depriving the reigning four-time champion of what would have been his eighth pole of the season.
“It was pretty nasty,” Norris said of the conditions. “It was so slippery. The amount of wheel spin in certain places was difficult. It was difficult to lock the tires. Everything was pretty tough, so I’m even more satisfied with the end result because of how tricky everything was out there today.”
Friday marked the first wet qualifying session since the 2024 Sao Paulo Grand Prix last November, where Norris also claimed pole position for that weekend’s Grand Prix.
Norris, 26, can move within proverbial inches of his first World Drivers’ Championship with a win — or even a positive result — on Saturday. Norris previously struggled at the Las Vegas Strip Circuit, retiring after a scary crash in 2023 before registering a disappointing sixth-place finish in 2024.
Williams’ Carlos Sainz, who qualified in second at Las Vegas in 2023 and 2024, will start third on the grid on Sunday after notching another impressive performance on the Strip. McLaren’s Oscar Piastri, who is second in the championship standings, qualified fifth after going off the track on his final lap.
Ferrari’s Lewis Hamilton, typically a star in the rain, will start Saturday’s race dead last after being eliminated with a P20 finish in the first qualifying session. Hamilton aborted his final lap after a miscommunication with his team about whether his time was safe before he began the last-second attempt. Hamilton, in his 19th Formula 1 season, qualified last on pure pace for the first time.
“I had a yellow flag in the last corner and then going into turn 17, there was a yellow flag, so I had to lift, came across the line and it was red,” Hamilton said. “But I didn’t have the grip anyway, so I don’t think it would have made much difference.”
–Will Despart, Field Level Media




