Singapore,
21
September
2019
|
17:11
Europe/Amsterdam

2019 Singapore Grand Prix – Qualifying

Singapore, September 21, 2019 – Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc claimed pole position under the lights for the Singapore Grand Prix, in a typically warm and humid qualifying session with track temperatures that remained in the region of 33 degrees centigrade. Leclerc set his pole time on the Red soft tyre: the compound he also used to get through Q2, with all the top 10 on the grid all starting on this tyre tomorrow.
Leclerc also picked up his third consecutive Pirelli Pole Position Award straight after qualifying. The prize-givers were Steve Angello and Sebastian Ingrosso: two members of the world-famous house music trio Swedish House Mafia.

POSSIBLE RACE STRATEGIES

The theoretically fastest strategy for the 61-lap Singapore Grand Prix, which is likely to go to the full two hours, is a one-stopper – but with 18 safety cars since the first race was held here in 2008, anything can happen.
In a perfect world, the best way is to start on the soft for 16 to 20 laps and then switch to the medium. An alternative strategy (for those starting outside the top 10), which is very closely matched on time, is to start on the medium tyre for 28 to 32 laps, and then go to hard. The slowest one-stopper is soft to hard, changing after 14 to 18 laps.
On paper, a two-stopper is definitely slower, but the way to do it would be two stints on the soft of 12 to 14 laps each, and a final run to the flag on medium.
In reality, the race circumstances often tend to be dictated by opportunities presented by the safety car. With a long and unpredictable grand prix, this is one of the hardest races of the year to predict a strategy for.

KEEP AN EYE ON

  • Safety cars. We’ve said it before, but this has often been the key influencer at Singapore, with more than one safety car in the race also a common occurrence.
  • Strategy. The top 10 will all be starting on the soft tyres but there’s scope for those further down the grid to start on the medium and run an alternative strategy. All three nominated compounds are solid race tyres.

MARIO ISOLA - HEAD OF F1 AND CAR RACING

A bit like the actual grand prix, this was an exciting qualifying session from start to finish. In the end, with considerably more than a second between the medium and the soft, everyone chose to get through Q2 on the soft tyre, so the top 10 will all start the race on this compound tomorrow. When it came down to the final Q3 runs, getting the timing right was crucial, with Leclerc maximising the window of opportunity and delivering an incredible lap. In theory, starting on the soft tyre forms the beginning of the optimal race strategy tomorrow, but in practice we’ve seen in the past that absolutely anything can happen in Singapore. So it’s definitely a very tough race where drivers can do well even starting further down the grid order.

FREE PRACTICE 3 – TOP 3 TIMES

DRIVER TIME COMPOUND
Leclerc 1m38.192s SOFT C5 NEW
Hamilton 1m38.399s SOFT C5 NEW
Vettel 1m38.811s SOFT C5 NEW

QUALIFYING TOP 10

DRIVER TIME COMPOUND
Leclerc 1m36.217s SOFT C5 NEW
Hamilton 1m36.408s SOFT C5 NEW
Vettel 1m36.437s SOFT C5 NEW
Verstappen 1m36.813s SOFT C5 NEW
Bottas 1m37.146s SOFT C5 NEW
Albon 1m37.411s SOFT C5 NEW
Sainz 1m37.818s SOFT C5 NEW
Ricciardo 1m38.095s SOFT C5 NEW
Hulkenberg 1m38.264s SOFT C5 NEW
Norris 1m38.329s SOFT C5 NEW

MOST LAPS BY COMPOUND SO FAR

COMPOUND DRIVER LAPS
HARD C3 Gasly 20
MEDIUM C4 Bottas, Russell 18
SOFT C5 Albon 22

BEST TIME BY COMPOUND SO FAR

COMPOUND DRIVER TIME
HARD C3 Verstappen 1m40.694s
MEDIUM C4 Bottas 1m38.623s
SOFT C5 Leclerc 1m36.217s