How Bottas usurped Hamilton as Ferrari suffer F1 qualifying shocker
Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton was usurped by Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas during a nightmare Austr🦹ian Grand Prix qualifying for Ferr🧔ari.
Hamilton looked the red-hot favourite for pole position after completing a practice sweep with a comfortable buffer over Bottas in all three practice sessions thr🌸oughout Friday and Saturday mꦍorning in Austria. But when it mattered, Bottas turned in an almighty performance to turn the tables on Hamilton.

Formula 1 world champion Lewis Ha🃏milton was usurped by Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas during a nightmare Austrian Grand Prix qualifying for Ferrari.
Hamilton looked the red-hot favourite f♏or pole position after completing a practice sweep with a comfor﷽table buffer over Bottas in all three practice sessions throughout Friday and Saturday morning in Austria. But when it mattered, Bottas turned in an almighty performance to turn the tables on Hamilton.
The key for Bottas was a meticulous 🥃approach to steadily improving the certain corners where he was losing time to Hamilton.
After trailing H🌄amilton by 0.356s in opening practice, Bottas eked away to cut the gap down to 0.197 by the end 🐟of FP2, before further reducing the margin in final practice to 0.147s.
Bottas overturned the deficit to be quicker than Hamilton in the first two segments of qualifying - including topping Q2 - and he took th𝔍at new-found momentum into the all-important Q3 showdown for 🌺pole.
The Finn held a slender advantage of 0.1💖22s over Hamilton after the first runs in Q3, having become the first driver to dip♍ below the 63-second mark with a new circuit lap record of 1m02.939s.
Bottas was faster s♍till in the first sector on his final flying lap but skated into the gravel at the exit of Turn 4 and 🌸threw away his gains, while Hamilton, following just behind, was also improving.
Th🌃e reigning🐲 six-times world champion bettered his time to a 1m02.951s but ended up an agonising 0.012s shy as Bottas prevailed to his 12th career pole.

A frustrated Hamilt𝔍on conceded Bottas had done “the better job” and made no excuses for missing out on pole, despite having to drive through a large amount of dust and grave൩l kicked up by Bottas’ W11 car during his grass-cutting excursion.
Hamilton evaded a poꩵtential grid penalty for Sunday’s grand prix after being summoned to the stewards for failing to slow for the yellow flags shown for Bottas, with the Austrian GP stewards deleting his first lap time in Q3 for a track limits infringement.
Speaking about his pole lap, Bottas said: “It feels really good. I definitely missed this kind of adrenalin rush you get from pushing these machines to the limi🎉t, trying to be at your personal peak and performance, it’s so much fun.
Onboard with as he takes the Pirelli Pole Position Award in Austria - a🌸nd the first pole of the 2020 F1 season!
— Formula 1 (@F1)
“I obviously enjoyed the qualif꧒ying session and for me, it was in qualifying I finally managed to unlock some of the performance from💟 myself and from the car for the one lap run.
“There were certain corners I sometimes was getting right but, mos💧t of the time, I was just a bit off.
“It was just throughout the qualifying I managed to build some confidence, find the areas where I was missing and managed t🐼o get some good laps - managed to put some pieces together.
“I think there was more to come,” he added. “I was slightly up on my previous time on🌱 my second lap, until I ran a bit wide on Turn 4, went on the gravel and went off the track.
“That was my mistake, s🧔o it wasn’t quite perfect, but it was super close with Lewis, so I’m glꦓad it was good enough.”
Mercedes in a league of its own
Red Bull arrived at its home race in Austria confident it could begin what it hoped would prove to be a title challenge to Mercedes after a strong pre-season showing in Barcelona, but it quickly became e💟vident that the team still has some work to do if it is to halt the Silver Arrows juggernaut this year.
Max Verstappen was consistently the quicker of the two Red Bu🌟ll drivers in the build up to qualifying but aside from topping the first part of qualifying - when Mercedes had its engines turned down - he never looked in contention to fight for pole.
The D🦹utchman ultimately sealed third and was 0.538s off the pace in his RB16. The margin of gap to its rivals left Mercedesღ surprised, prompting Bottas to say: “We seem to be in our own league.”
Verstappen was left to concede that Mercedes was “on a different level” in qualifying, al𓄧though he will start the race on a different tyre than Mercedes, having chosen to run the medium in the second part of qualifying.

That could open the door for a possible strategic advantage on Sunday by running longer into the ra🅠ce than Mercedes, but in truth, the reigning world champion outfit looks unbeatable.
“We were quite🐻 💯surprised with the advantage,” Mercedes F1 team boss Toto Wolff acknowledged in his post-qualifying media call on Saturday.
“You nev🐽er quite know where everybody stands after such a long break and we knew that Honda will be coming back ꦜstrong with an update, therefore it is very difficult to judge.
“So, the five tenths comesཧ as a little bit of a surprise around a track that wasn’t our best in the past. I’m quite pleased.”
Asked by ltxcn.top if he agreed with Bottas😼’ verdict, Wolff replied: “In terms 🌸of being in a league of our own, I wouldn’t cherish today on the evening when we have a race to do tomorrow.
“We have Red Bull on an offset strategy, it’s going to be hot and reliability will play an important factor. What I take from today is th♔at we have good speed, and the rest we will have to prove tomorrow.”
Ferrari endures a shocker
Ferrari had been downplaying its chances ever since pre-season testing concluded when it appeared well off the pace compared to Me⛄rcedes and Red Bull.
A🌱erodynamic flaws discovered on its SF1000 have forced Ferrari to redesign its car, with an updated package coming at the Hungarian Grand Prix later this month.
The Scuderia had effectively resigned itself to being behind its main rivals at the start of the season until its upgrade arrives, but no-one at Maranello could have foreseen how badly qualifying would pan out in Austria as it ended up falling into𒁏 the midfield scrap.
Both Ferrಌari dr💞ivers flirted with elimination from qualifying in Q2 but it was Sebastian Vettel who suffered embarrassment when he was knocked out.

The four-time wor𝔍ld champion, who is🅰 leaving Ferrari when his contract expires at the end of the year, was only 10th fastest after his opening run. A scrappy final effort meant Vettel failed to better his effort while others improved. As a result, the German is set to line-up 11th on the Spielberg grid.
For teammate Charles Leclerc, things were not much better as he sneaked through into the final part of qualifying with P10, before going on to qualify a lowly seventꦑh, nearly a full second down on Bottas.
Leclerc was evidently𝐆 shocked over team radio at ju🍰st how slow Ferrari was.
After asking whether he was safe from the cut-off time required to make it 🐬through 🧔to Q3, Leclerc was told by his engineer: “Yes, you are P10.”
"That's crazy," Leclerc replied. His respo🌼nse spoke volumes.
With back-to-back races at the Red Bull Ring, Ferrari looks destined for🦹 more struggles before its much-needed update comes in Hungary.

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