Fisichella stuns with Force India pole in Spa

Brawn's Button qualifies 14th

Giancarlo Fisichella gave Force India an astonishing first pole position while Formula One championship leader Jenson Button qualified only 14th for the Belgian Grand Prix yesterday.

The Force India team have yet to score a point in 29 races while the 36-year-old Roman last started on pole with Renault in Malaysia in 2006.

"It's amazing. It's fantastic. I'm so happy about that... I didn't expect that result," said the Italian, who side-stepped a suggestion that his car might be fuelled lighter than those behind him.

"This is one of my favourite circuits. But I didn't expect to be on pole. We made a big step forward from the last race," he added of his fourth career pole.

Toyota's Jarno Trulli made it the first all-Italian front row since Australia in 2005 with Germany's Nick Heidfeld third for struggling BMW-Sauber.

Brawn's Button failed to make it into the top 10 for the first time this season and will have a fight on his hands to come away with any points today.

Brawn GP team-mate and closest title rival Rubens Barrichello, who is 18 points adrift with six races remaining after winning the previous race in Valencia last weekend, qualified fourth.

Red Bull's Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, third and fourth in the standings respectively, filled the ninth and eighth places on the grid.

Italian Luca Badoer's days as stand-in for injured Ferrari driver Felipe Massa looked numbered when the 38-year-old spun into the gravel and qualified last for the second race in a row. Team-mate Kimi Raikkonen starts sixth.

Fisichella has already made it clear that he would love to take Badoer's place.

"It's a dream for a driver in Formula One to drive for Ferrari, especially for an Italian like me... but I'm just concentrating on Force India and the race," he told a news conference.

"For sure my result is something incredible. It's a great day, but I want to do the best and just concentrate on the race."

While Force India were the quickest of the Mercedes-powered teams, McLaren endured a nightmare afternoon at a circuit that has favoured them heavily in the past.

World champion Lewis Hamilton qualified 12th with Finnish team-mate Heikki Kovalainen 15th.

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