Alonso rides his luck for Silverstone pole position
2012 British Grand Prix qualifying
Fernando Alonso came perilously close to being eliminated during the second part of qualifying for the British Grand Prix.
But after a lengthy rain delay he returned to the track in time to claim a place in the final ten – despite a close call on a yellow flag.
He edged Mark Webber by less than five-hundredths of a second to claim his first pole position since Singapore 2010.
Q1
Rain had begun to fall before Q1 started so a string of cars were lined up at the exit of the pits waiting for the green light.
When it began, Kamui Kobayashi led them out and set the quickest time while others grappled with traffic. Kimi Raikkonen had to take avoiding action and drive off the track while trying to overtake team mate Romain Grosjean.
The rain soon eased leaving all the drivers on-track gradually improving their times on the intermediate tyres. But there was a sting in the tail: the rain returned at the end of the session, forcing some to make extra runs.
They included the two McLaren drivers, who queued up in the pits for a second set of intermediate tyres with two-and-a-half minutes to go. Lewis Hamilton set the fastest middle sector time but was unable to improve on 14th.
But it was worse for his team mate: Jenson Button was on course to improve before he reached the slippery final sector. But the track had caught out Timo Glock, who spun at the start/finish straight, bringing out the yellow flags. That left Button 18th and out of qualifying.
“I can normally drive a racing car in the wet but not today,” he rued afterwards, adding that at least he had a supply of fresher tyres for the race.
Drivers eliminated in Q1
| 18 | Jenson Button | McLaren-Mercedes | 1’48.044 |
| 19 | Vitaly Petrov | Caterham-Renault | 1’49.027 |
| 20 | Heikki Kovalainen | Caterham-Renault | 1’49.477 |
| 21 | Timo Glock | Marussia-Cosworth | 1’51.618 |
| 22 | Pedro de la Rosa | HRT-Cosworth | 1’52.742 |
| 23 | Narain Karthikeyan | HRT-Cosworth | 1’53.040 |
| 24 | Charles Pic | Marussia-Cosworth | 1’54.143 |
Q2
By the time the second part of qualifying had begun the rain had worsened. Once again all the cars were queued up at the exit of the pit lane, only this time with full wet weather tyres on.
There were three significant exceptions – the Ferrari pair and Bruno Senna left the pits on intermediate tyres and instantly regretted the decision. They tip-toed around as the rain hammered down before returning to the pits for full wet tyres.
The damage was already done, however. After the likes of Sergio Perez and Lewis Hamilton scraped in sub-two minute laps, Alonso and Massa found it difficult just to keep their cars on the track.
Alonso caught a lurid slide at the exit of Chapel, narrowly missing the barriers. Massa also went off and Schumacher had multiple off-track excursions. With not just Alonso, but also Hamilton saying the conditions were too dangerous, the session was red-flagged.
It took over an hour and a half for the session to be restarted. When it did, most of the cars resumed on wet-weather tyres.
Sergio Perez was one driver who stuck with intermediates for the restart. It cost him dearly. Having sat at the top of the times during the suspension he ended up 17th and slowest.
A late effort by Paul di Resta put him ninth and when Romain Grosjean spun at Vale it looked like the Force India driver was safe.
But late improvements by Alonso and Vettel dropped him out of the final ten. Replays showed Alonso had passed through the yellow flag sector on his best lap, but it remains to be seen whether the stewards will agree he slowed sufficiently.
Drivers eliminated in Q2
| 11 | Paul di Resta | Force India-Mercedes | 1’57.009 |
| 12 | Kamui Kobayashi | Sauber-Ferrari | 1’57.071 |
| 13 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 1’57.108 |
| 14 | Daniel Ricciardo | Toro Rosso-Ferrari | 1’57.132 |
| 15 | Bruno Senna | Williams-Renault | 1’57.426 |
| 16 | Jean-Eric Vergne | Toro Rosso-Ferrari | 1’57.719 |
| 17 | Sergio Perez | Sauber-Ferrari | 1’57.895 |
Q3
As the track continued to dry out the top ten shootout was conducted with most drivers on intermediate tyres.
Hamilton started the session on wets but quickly switched them for intermediates. But he never seemed to have the pace to challenge for pole position and was fighting the McLaren around ever millimetre of Silverstone tarmac.
Michael Schumacher also began with full wet tyres and briefly went fastest before switching to intermediates.
While he headed for the pits Mark Webber and Alonso took over the contest for pole position. Alonso claimed the fastest time back with his last effort but in the meantime Webber was charging into the final sector.
Webber crossed the line less than five-hundredths of a second slower than the Ferrari. He later told his team he’d been held up “by Di Resta” – presumably having mistaken Nico Hulkenberg for the other Force India.
Schumacher got his intermediate tyres up to temperature quickly enough to qualify where he finished the last race – third. Vettel, who was also on course for a quick lap before losing time in the final sector, took fourth.
Top ten in Q3
| 1 | Fernando Alonso | Ferrari | 1’51.746 |
| 2 | Mark Webber | Red Bull-Renault | 1’51.793 |
| 3 | Michael Schumacher | Mercedes | 1’52.020 |
| 4 | Sebastian Vettel | Red Bull-Renault | 1’52.199 |
| 5 | Felipe Massa | Ferrari | 1’53.065 |
| 6 | Kimi Raikkonen | Lotus-Renault | 1’53.290 |
| 7 | Pastor Maldonado | Williams-Renault | 1’53.539 |
| 8 | Lewis Hamilton | McLaren-Mercedes | 1’53.543 |
| 9 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India-Mercedes | 1’54.382 |
| 10 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus-Renault |
2012 British Grand Prix
- Second Driver of the Weekend win for Mark Webber
- Rate the race result: 2012 British Grand Prix
- Hamilton’s doughnut and more fans’ videos from Silverstone
- Silverstone fans’ mixed views on the rain-hit weekend
- Top three tie in British predictions round
Image © Ferrari spa/Ercole Colombo




AdrianMorse (@adrianmorse) said on 7th July 2012, 21:26
Good title, by the way, @keithcollantine; as much as Button’s story of the season is switching on his tyres, Alonso’s is capitalizing on things that come his way, IMO.
AndrewTanner (@andrewtanner) said on 7th July 2012, 22:19
What a completely mad session…and subsequent comments following qualifying. Honestly, don’t get how some people think. Button was unlucky and Alonso displayed brilliant control for his pole lap.
Anyways, yeah, great session. We had a different result from Caterham with an impressive .4s gap between Petrov and Kovalainen. Pity they couldn’t take advantage in the wet so I’m keen to see how their upgrades will fare up in the future. I was kinda hoping for the sun to shine as soon as Button went out, that way people would start to scrub their dry tyres and he would benefit from virgin rubber tomorrow.
Shame that Sauber suffered so much after the resumption of Q2. Just realised that Kobayashi beat Perez so well done to him.
Q1 was just crazy! The right man put it on pole, he didn’t benefit from others misfortune, he got in tune with the track and made only 1 slight mistake. Looking forward to watching it again tomorrow.