Renault's Fisichella on pole in Malaysia
Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella took pole position with a flying late lap in qualifying for the Malaysian Grand Prix yesterday. The Italian grabbed the third pole of his career in a time of one minute 33.840, knocking Honda's Jenson Button off the top...
Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella took pole position with a flying late lap in qualifying for the Malaysian Grand Prix yesterday.
The Italian grabbed the third pole of his career in a time of one minute 33.840, knocking Honda's Jenson Button off the top spot as the seconds ticked away at the end of the session.
"I was confident I would be in the front two rows," said Fisichella. "But then in the qualifying session the car was just fantastic."
Renault team boss Flavio Briatore thought it was poetic justice after Bahrain, where Fisichella was forced to retire with an engine problem he had identified in qualifying.
"It was a fantastic performance by Fisico, great," said the Italian, whose other driver world champion Fernando Alonso was eighth fastest but lines up seventh.
"After the drama of last weekend, I'm happy for him. He deserves it and was quick all weekend and has done a very good job."
Button, still chasing his first win after 101 starts, was delighted to be on the front row after struggling with the set-up in Friday practice.
"This is great for us," he said. "We didn't expect front row until the first session when the car came alive."
The Briton lapped in 1:33.986 just ahead of Williams rookie Nico Rosberg, who continued the impressive start to his Formula One career with the third fastest lap.
"I'm really pleased," said the German, who set the fastest lap and scored points with seventh place on his debut last week. "Third is really special for me.
"It's not easy at all but I just fit into the team very well and I think we'll have an edge in the race."
Seven-times world champion Michael Schumacher was next quickest for Ferrari but has replaced his engine and loses 10 places on the grid as a result.
Australian Mark Webber will therefore line up alongside Rosberg in an all-Williams second row with the McLarens of Juan Pablo Montoya and Kimi Raikkonen behind.
Alonso, who won in Bahrain last weekend, will line up alongside Red Bull's Christian Klein.
"We have a little bit of a different strategy between Fernando and Fisico and Fernando had some electrical problem as well," said Briatore.
His caution was understandable given that four drivers have changed their engines so far at the hot and humid circuit.
Ralf Schumacher pulled over on the start-finish straight six minutes into the second session with his engine in flames to continue a miserable start start for Toyota.
Coulthard, Barrichello, Toyota driver Jarno Trulli, BMW's Jacques Villeneuve and Nick Heidfeld as well as Ferrari's Felipe Massa all went out of the reckoning in the second 15-minute session of the new qualifying format.
The first session went to form with backmarkers Toro Rosso, Midland and Super Aguri providing the six drivers eliminated.
Last two races in Malaysia...
2005 - Fernando Alonso handed Renault a second win in a row and became the first Spaniard to lead the championship. Jarno Trulli gave Toyota their first podium finish with second place.
2004 - Michael Schumacher, of Ferrari, started on pole and cantered to his second win in a row ahead of Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya. Briton Jenson Button came third for the first podium of his career. Australian Mark Webber made his first front row start for Jaguar.
Circuit details...
Laid out by German circuit designer Hermann Tilke, Sepang is an elegant track with a flowing grandstand roof built to resemble a hibiscus flower.
The track, built near Kuala Lumpur's international airport, has a gentle uphill start with 15 turns and parallel straights, the Kuala Lumpur pit straight and Penang back straight. High humidity, plus a climate that can change rapidly from sun to rain, makes this a strength-sapping race.