Hamilton’s special lap to claim pole for Australian F1 GP

Mercedes’ British driver Lewis Hamiltondrives around the Albert Park circuit during the Formula One qualifying session in Melbourne on March 24, 2018, ahead of the Formula One Australian Grand Prix. (Paul Crock/AFP)
Updated 24 March 2018
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Hamilton’s special lap to claim pole for Australian F1 GP

MELBOURNE: Mercedes world champion Lewis Hamilton produced a sizzling final lap to grab pole position for the season-opening Australian Formula One Grand Prix in Melbourne on Saturday.
The four-time world champion knocked out his rivals with a blistering time of one minute 21.164 seconds to claim his 73rd career pole.
The Ferrari duo Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel finished second and third with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in fourth.
Hamilton delivered a special flying lap to put a stunning 0.664sec gap on Raikkonen and clinch the pole for Sunday’s opening race of the season.
His blistering pace shows he will be the one to beat and helped offset a spectacular crash of his Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas early in the final shootout.
“I’m so happy with that lap. It was such a nice lap,” Hamilton said.
“I’m always striving for perfection and that was as close as I could get.
“What was surprising was to see how quick the Ferraris were.
“During that lap I was in the same modes as before but it was hooking up the tires and getting the lap together.”
Raikkonen, who will also start off the front row in Sunday’s race, conceded that the gap with Hamilton was significant.
“It was a pretty decent job. Obviously the lap time difference is quite big,” the Finn said.
“It wasn’t a straight-forward session with the rain this morning.
“We have to be pretty happy with where we are starting, but there is an awful lot of work to be done to improve things.”
Vettel added: “Shame that Lewis had quite a big gap at the end but I guess his lap was pretty good.
“Looking forward to tomorrow, I think we improved the car and we’ll see what happens tomorrow.
“It’s very close, we saw yesterday on the long runs that pace is very close. It’s not the easiest place to overtake but who knows.
“We have an opportunity at the start and the race, who knows. I’m really happy for the team, it’s a good result. Let’s get going.”

Bottas’ crash brought out the red flag to halt Q1 after he ran wide on turn two and slammed into the wall, dislodging a wheel in the collision.
He was uninjured and was taken back to the pits in the course car.
The shunt tore the rear wing from the car and destroyed the right-side suspension, leaving a massive overnight repair job for the Mercedes crew.
Australia’s big hope Daniel Ricciardo, who went into qualifying with a three grid place penalty after a red flag infringement in practice, finished sixth in Q1.
“I thought (the grid penalty) was unjust. A penalty sure, there are reprimands, fines, other things but to shoot me in the ankle before the season has started — I thought they could have done better,” Ricciardo said.
“We’re starting on the supersofts and hopefully that works to our favor and later in the race we can make some things happen.”
Vettel topped Q2 in 1:21.944 from Hamilton and Bottas.
Verstappen and Australian Daniel Ricciardo both ran supersoft tires in a potential alternative strategy move from Red Bull.
McLaren’s Fernando Alonso was a major casualty in Q2, finishing 11th fastest and missing out to Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg.
Others to miss out in Q2 were Alonso’s teammate Stoffel Vandoorne, Sergio Perez, Lance Stroll and Esteban Ocon.
Hamilton topped Q3 with 1:22.824 ahead of Ferrari’s Raikkonen and Vettel.
Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson was among those who failed to get out of Q1 along with Brendon Hartley, Charles Leclerc, Sergey Sirotkin and Pierre Gasly.


Iva Jovic received tips from Novak Djokovic, but those couldn’t help her against Sabalenka

Updated 9 sec ago
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Iva Jovic received tips from Novak Djokovic, but those couldn’t help her against Sabalenka

  • They helped until Tuesday when top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka defeated the 18-year-old American 6-3, 6-0 to end her run in Melbourne
  • Predicted rankings published by the WTA showed her climbing to No. 20 — her highest spot
Iva Jovic has received playing tips throughout the Australian Open from Novak Djokovic. They worked very well until Tuesday, when top-seeded Aryna Sabalenka defeated the 18-year-old American 6-3, 6-0 to end her run at Melbourne Park.
“Hopefully throughout the year I can keep having more moments with him because it’s been amazing,” Jovic said of Djokovic, the star Serbian who has won 24 Grand Slam singles titles, 10 of them at the Australian Open.
But even Djokovic could not have saved Jovic against Sabalenka in the quarterfinal match.
To be fair, Jovic has been doing just fine on her own, rising quickly in the WTA rankings.
She finished 2024 ranked just inside the top 200. Predicted rankings published Tuesday by the WTA showed her climbing to No. 20 — her highest spot.
Jovic had a chance against Sabalenka in the first set. Sabalenka took a 3-0 lead, but Jovic stayed in the set and had three breakpoint chances in the ninth game trailing 5-3. She lost 6-3 and lost her momentum, losing the second set 6-0.
Jovic referred to a comment that she attributed to Andre Agassi speaking about Djokovic, noting his ability to change styles and keep opponents off balance.
She said Agassi compared Djokovic with “a boxer and the way that he’s going in for punches and then faking them out a little bit. I think the way (Djokovic) approaches the match is very impressive.”
Jovic is the California-born daughter of a Serbian father and Croatian mother who immigrated to the United States.
It was Jovic’s first appearance in a Grand Slam quarterfinal, but she seemed poised from the start.
“I think that I kind of went into the match obviously not knowing too much about how it was going to look like in person, having not really hit with her in the past,” Jovic said. “Our first meeting as well.”
“I kind of tried to just bring that middle ground, and I think I have to be able to adapt to the game and what’s necessary for different play styles. I wasn’t able to do that” against Sabalenka.
Jovic revealed her conversations with Djokovic earlier in the tournament. Djokovic confirmed he gave the young American some feedback, saying he was happy to help a player with Serbian heritage.
The 38-year-old Djokovic has stayed in touch.
“Yes, he did text me with some more tips throughout the rounds. I don’t even know what day it is anymore!” Jovic said. “So we’ve been in communication, and I feel like we’ve built a little bit of a relationship now, which is amazing, and I wish him all the best for the rest of the tournament.”
She plans to have more opportunities of her own at Grand Slams in the future.
‘It’s the quarterfinals but, you know, ultimately I hope to be in many quarterfinals,” she said. “So I don’t think this win or loss today is going to make or break my career.”