Norris Breaks Mercedes’ Qualifying Streak with Miami Sprint Pole

Mercedes’ streak of qualifying dominance in 2026 ended in Miami as Lando Norris took pole for the sprint race.

The McLaren driver outpaced championship leader Andrea Kimi Antonelli, while Oscar Piastri’s strong run ensured Mercedes-powered cars occupied three of the top four grid slots.

George Russell could manage only sixth in the other Mercedes, lined up behind Charles Leclerc and Max Verstappen.

SQ1

Lando Norris’s practice simulation had already been compromised when he met Alexander Albon at turn 17, and his first flying lap in SQ1 suffered the same fate. Norris abandoned that opening attempt after yellow flags were shown for Lance Stroll, who had locked up and stopped at the corner with an apparent technical issue.

With Norris sidelined temporarily, Charles Leclerc posted the early benchmark of 1’29.290, with Andrea Kimi Antonelli right on his heels. When Norris completed a clean lap he jumped to the top, setting a 1’28.723. Leclerc’s second run brought him within a hundredth of Norris’s time.

The remainder of the order saw team-mates from the leading squads fill the next positions, with Mercedes again split by their drivers: Antonelli ahead while George Russell struggled to match the pace. Liam Lawson and Esteban Ocon failed to progress after lock-ups at turn one, and Stroll set no time after his earlier lock-up. The Cadillac pair also bowed out in the team’s first home race.

Both Williams drivers initially advanced to SQ2. Race control approved Alexander Albon’s lap despite a track-limits flirt at turn seven, but stewards later opened an investigation during Q3. That review came too late to affect whether Lawson should have been promoted to the second round.

SQ1 result

P. # Driver Team Model Time Gap
1 1 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’28.723
2 16 Charles Leclerc Ferrari SF-26 1’28.733 0.010
3 81 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’29.169 0.446
4 44 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari SF-26 1’29.255 0.532
5 12 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes W17 1’29.312 0.589
6 63 George Russell Mercedes W17 1’29.659 0.936
7 3 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’29.801 1.078
8 10 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’29.984 1.261
9 27 Nico Hulkenberg Audi R26 1’30.270 1.547
10 6 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’30.352 1.629
11 43 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’30.386 1.663
12 5 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi R26 1’30.561 1.838
13 87 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari VF-26 1’30.614 1.891
14 41 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Red Bull-Ford 03 1’30.872 2.149
15 55 Carlos Sainz Jnr Williams-Mercedes FW48 1’30.987 2.264
16 23 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes FW48 1’30.988 2.265
17 30 Liam Lawson Racing Bulls-Red Bull-Ford 03 1’31.043 2.320
18 31 Esteban Ocon Haas-Ferrari VF-26 1’31.245 2.522
19 11 Sergio Perez Cadillac-Ferrari MAC-26 1’31.255 2.532
20 77 Valtteri Bottas Cadillac-Ferrari MAC-26 1’31.826 3.103
21 14 Fernando Alonso Aston Martin-Honda AMR26 1’41.311 12.588
22 18 Lance Stroll Aston Martin-Honda AMR26 No time

SQ2

In SQ2 Norris battled oversteer and couldn’t match his earlier pace, dropping to seventh and more than a second off Charles Leclerc’s improved time. Leclerc found roughly four tenths during his run to lead the session.

Oscar Piastri produced a smooth lap to split the Ferraris and progress in second. George Russell had a stronger run and finished ahead of Antonelli, who reported heavy brake locking, while Max Verstappen also posted a quicker time than the Mercedes rookie.

Isack Hadjar secured a place in the top 10 despite encountering Gabriel Bortoleto at the end of his lap. Bortoleto narrowly missed out on advancing by just two hundredths of a second but still outpaced his experienced team-mate.

That left Alpine with both cars in the shoot-out alongside Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes and Red Bull. Both Williams drivers were eliminated, as was Oliver Bearman.

SQ2 result

P. # Driver Team Model Time Gap
1 16 Charles Leclerc Ferrari SF-26 1’28.333
2 81 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’28.506 0.173
3 44 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari SF-26 1’28.841 0.508
4 63 George Russell Mercedes W17 1’28.903 0.570
5 3 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’29.093 0.760
6 12 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes W17 1’29.209 0.876
7 1 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’29.366 1.033
8 43 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’29.527 1.194
9 6 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’29.750 1.417
10 10 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’29.973 1.640
11 5 Gabriel Bortoleto Audi R26 1’29.994 1.661
12 27 Nico Hulkenberg Audi R26 1’30.019 1.686
13 87 Oliver Bearman Haas-Ferrari VF-26 1’30.116 1.783
14 23 Alexander Albon Williams-Mercedes FW48 1’30.216 1.883
15 55 Carlos Sainz Jnr Williams-Mercedes FW48 1’30.224 1.891
16 41 Arvid Lindblad Racing Bulls-Red Bull-Ford 03 1’30.573 2.240

SQ3

In the final shoot-out Norris, Leclerc and Hamilton traded fastest sector times early on as the top ten began their single soft-tyre runs. Norris was first to set a complete lap, delivering a 1’27.869 that proved decisive.

Norris’s middle sector was particularly strong. Leclerc made a correction at turn 11 and could not match the McLaren, ending almost four tenths slower. Hamilton produced a scruffy lap and crossed the line around three-quarters of a second adrift.

Oscar Piastri secured a front-row slot alongside Norris, while Antonelli left his run late and posted the quickest middle sector but ultimately had to settle for second on the grid. For the first time this season no Mercedes chassis claimed pole.

Verstappen put the updated Red Bull in a solid fifth place, ahead of Russell and Hamilton. Isack Hadjar finished ninth for Red Bull, with Alpine’s Franco Colapinto impressively out-qualifying his team-mate.

SQ3 result

P. # Driver Team Model Time Gap
1 1 Lando Norris McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’27.869
2 12 Andrea Kimi Antonelli Mercedes W17 1’28.091 0.222
3 81 Oscar Piastri McLaren-Mercedes MCL40 1’28.108 0.239
4 16 Charles Leclerc Ferrari SF-26 1’28.239 0.370
5 3 Max Verstappen Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’28.461 0.592
6 63 George Russell Mercedes W17 1’28.493 0.624
7 44 Lewis Hamilton Ferrari SF-26 1’28.618 0.749
8 43 Franco Colapinto Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’29.320 1.451
9 6 Isack Hadjar Red Bull-Red Bull-Ford RB22 1’29.422 1.553
10 10 Pierre Gasly Alpine-Mercedes A526 1’29.474 1.605

2026 Miami Grand Prix

  • Miami stats: Mercedes have now won at every track on the F1 calendar – so far
  • F1 drivers say they are still at the mercy of their power units over a flying lap
  • McLaren’s Miami GP radio messages show the scars of Qatar GP tactical error
  • ‘This is not the level F1 should be’: Norris tells F1 to ‘ditch the battery’
  • Lawson was right: Racing Bulls should not have ordered him to let Verstappen past

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