In a qualifying session that swung from frustration to euphoria in the blink of an eye, George Russell produced a final-lap masterstroke that he says “came from nowhere” to seize Canadian Grand Prix pole.
After already lighting up the weekend with Sprint pole and a controlled Sprint victory against teammate Kimi Antonelli, Russell arrived in qualifying as a favourite – but quickly found himself battling more than just rivals.
Grip evaded him early on, rhythm never fully arrived, and the McLarens and Ferraris frequently looked sharper across the opening runs.
Yet in true Montreal fashion, everything changed when it mattered most.
From struggle to shock: Russell’s final-lap turnaround
Russell admitted even he was taken aback by how abruptly his pole-winning lap materialised after a scrappy session that had offered few clues of a breakthrough.
"It was always challenging coming back from the sprint race," said Russell.
"The car feels very different. You're obviously into the qualifying format, and we made some changes as a team.
"We need to review if that was the right direction, but that last lap sort of came from nowhere, and it's such a great feeling where it was such a challenging session, and then to pull it all together on that last lap to throw yourself up the leaderboard was epic."
That “came from nowhere” moment proved decisive, as Russell stitched together a final attempt that stunned the paddock and flipped the order at the very death of Q3.
Setup gamble, late redemption
Behind the scenes, Mercedes had rolled the dice ahead of changing weather expectations for Sunday’s race, a decision that left both drivers wrestling with balance issues throughout qualifying.
Russell was candid about the compromise – and the discomfort it created across the garage.
"We made some changes based on the forecast for tomorrow," he said.
"It may have hurt us a little bit for now. It just took the car out of sync a little bit, and both of us; Kimi was definitely more competitive than I in that session, but we weren't as clear ahead of everyone else as we were yesterday.
"So it was definitely a challenge, but I just managed to redial my driving in for that last lap and put it together."
The result was a dramatic turnaround: a driver who had looked on the back foot suddenly found himself on top of the timing screens when it mattered most.
Russell’s pole adds another twist to a weekend already shaped by intra-team intensity and shifting momentum between him and Antonelli.
After their sprint battle and strategic recalibration following it, Mercedes heads into Sunday with both cars firmly in the fight – starting from the front row once again.
For Russell, though, Saturday’s defining moment was less about expectation and more about instinct under pressure. One lap, one opportunity – and, by his own admission, one that arrived almost out of thin air.
Canadian Grand Prix - Qualifying results
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