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Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) will start from pole position for
the Japanese Grand Prix after using Bridgestone's soft compound Potenza tyre
to lap the 4.56km Fuji Speedway over two tenths ahead of his nearest rival.
Hamilton's lap time - a 1min 18.404secs - shaded the 1min 18.644secs
achieved by Kimi Raikkonen (Scuderia Ferrari), who was second fastest, also
using the soft tyre. Heikki Kovalainen (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) and
Fernando Alonso (ING Renault F1 Team) set the third and fourth fastest
times.
Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) was fifth fastest and Robert Kubica (BMW
Sauber F1 Team) will start alongside him. Panasonic Toyota Racing team-mates
Jarno Trulli and Timo Glock will line up on the fourth row, whilst the final
drivers to qualify in the top ten were Scuderia Toro Rosso team-mates
Sebastian Vettel and Sebastien Bourdais.
In the morning practice session Kubica topped the times with a 1min
25.087secs lap, set on the wet tyre. He was eight hundredths quicker than
Glock. Nelson Piquet was third fastest. The track surface was wet for this
session and the wet and extreme wet tyres were both used. Today's fastest
lap time, a 1min 17.287secs, was set by Massa, using the soft tyre in Q2.
Hirohide Hamashima - Director of Bridgestone Motorsport Tyre Development,
said:
"It was good to have a dry qualifying session here at Fuji, compared to the
wet and foggy conditions we saw here last season, and it was an exciting
session too. We saw interesting differences between the Q2 and Q3 times from
competitors, so I think tomorrow there will be a range of different
strategies. Today was interesting for Bridgestone as all of our range of
tyres were used, with the wet and extreme wet tyres used this morning and
the medium and soft compounds used this afternoon.
This means teams have a lot of data when they look to the skies to consider
their options for tomorrow's race. Rear tyre degradation will be at the
forefront of drivers' minds and how they manage this will be the key point
for a strong result. There is still some room for improvement from the track
if we do not see any more rain. For those watching the race, how our green
grooves disappear from
the tyres as they are used will illustrate the differences between the cars,
set-ups and drivers. The challenges of the Fuji track means the outer
grooves are likely to wear first, as opposed to most circuits where it is
the inner grooves which suffer more." |