Max Verstappen stormed to pole position for the season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. The reigning champion was challenged more closely than expected by Leclerc through the hour, with just 0.059s separating them after their first laps of Q3 despite the Monegasque using used tires for his initial attempt. Pole seemed sure to go down to the wire, but Leclerc failed to improve as expected with new rubber bolted to his car, finding only 0.073s on his second lap. It paved the way for Verstappen to snare top spot with a sizzling time of 1m 29.179s with his new Red Bull — slower than Leclerc had managed in Q2 but enough for the Dutchman to end qualifying unbeaten. “To really get everything out of it in Q3 was a little bit more difficult,” he said. “But of course I’m very happy to be on pole. “To be honest, I was a little bit unexpected, but luckily in qualifying the car came to us. I’m confident that we can have a strong race.” Leclerc ended up 0.228s behind Verstappen, and though he was buoyed by Ferrari’s competitiveness, he was frustrated not to have strung together the pole lap. “I’m a bit disappointed, but we did a good qualifying,” he said. “It’s been a tricky weekend until now. I think we lost a little bit the rhythm with the used set of in Q3. “We really think that Red Bull is still ahead by quite a bit in the race. We’ll see. If there’s an opportunity, as always I’ll go for it.” George Russell was pleased to validate Mercedes’s off-season improvements, though he didn’t think Verstappen could be caught in race trim. “We’ve obviously made a big step forward in single-lap and with quali pace,” he said. “We hope we haven’t compromised the race pace at all. I think it’ll be a close fight between everybody other than Max.” Carlos Sainz qualified 0.022s behind Russell to join him on the second row of the grid. Sergio Perez and Fernando Alonso will share the third row of the grid, the Mexican pipping the Spaniard by only 0.005s. McLaren teammates Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri ended the session closely matched, with just 0.069s splitting them on the fourth row. Lewis Hamilton was more than 0.2s down on teammate Russell to qualifying ninth, while Nico Hulkenberg was 10th for Haas, the German left with only used tires after unexpectedly making it through to Q3. Yuki Tsunoda will lead the way for RB from 11th on the grid after being pipped for a spot in the top 10 by just 0.007s. Lance Stroll was only fractionally behind for 12th on the grid, but that amounted to more than 0.3s behind teammate Alonso. Alex Albon will line up 13th for Williams ahead of Daniel Ricciardo in the second RB, while Kevin Magnussen was a whopping 0.678s slower than teammate Hulkenberg to claim 15th on the grid. Valtteri Bottas led Sauber teammates Zhou Guanyu in 16th and 17th, the pair split by just 0.001s and just over 0.1s outside of a Q2 berth. Logan Sargeant streak of qualifying defeats to teammate Albon continued into a second season, the American qualifying 18th, some 10 places and 0.373s behind the sister car. Alpine’s poor start to the season was confirmed, with Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly locked onto the back row of the grid, 01.47s and 0.302s respectively off progression.