Norris takes wet Vegas pole; Hamilton last on grid

Key Takeaways(TL;DR):

  • Lando Norris takes pole in Las Vegas with a 1:47.934 on intermediates in wet, slippery conditions.
  • Max Verstappen starts second, just 0.3s behind; Carlos Sainz is third for Williams and under investigation.
  • George Russell lines up fourth; Oscar Piastri fifth as he chases Norris in the title fight.
  • Championship picture: Piastri is 24 points behind Norris; Verstappen is 49 points back.
  • Lewis Hamilton qualifies 20th for Ferrari, calling his car balance “horrible” and expecting a hard recovery drive.
  • FIA made multiple track repairs after practice safety issues; rain and a cold snap could shake up race strategy.

Lando Norris owned the Las Vegas night when it mattered most. In a wet and wild qualifying session that turned the Strip into a slick maze, the McLaren star delivered a fearless lap for pole position at the 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix. His 1:47.934 on intermediate tyres was part control, part courage, and a major statement in a season where every point now counts.

At the other end of the grid sits Lewis Hamilton, who suffered a shock last-place result in his Ferrari. He called the balance of his car “horrible” and admitted he’s bracing for a “really hard recovery drive.” In one session, we saw the title leader at full force and a seven-time champion at a low ebb—proof that Las Vegas still knows how to deal out drama.

A pole won on the edge

The circuit was soaked by a downpour just before qualifying, and while it began to dry, it stayed slippery and punishing. Drivers had to read the road like a puzzle, moving from damp patches to thin dry lines lap by lap. Pole changed hands in the final minutes, but Norris kept the nerve McLaren has come to trust.

He even admitted the finer margins: “I got away with it,” Norris said of a late error in the final sector. He had a big slide in the final corners, the kind that usually ruins a lap. This time, it didn’t. He kept it tidy enough to stay purple when it mattered. That is what separates pole from the pack on nights like these.

Max Verstappen pushed hard and will start second, only 0.3 seconds off the mark. That gap is tiny in this weather and hints at a fierce opening stint, especially if the track is still green on Sunday.

“Norris didn’t just survive the wet—he attacked it.”

Verstappen, Sainz and a grid full of storylines

The top five is packed with implications. Behind Verstappen, Carlos Sainz put Williams third, a headline on its own. His lap is under investigation for a possible rules infringement in qualifying, so there’s a layer of suspense over the final order. George Russell will start fourth for Mercedes, steady in the rain and well-placed to pounce if chaos returns.

Oscar Piastri starts fifth and remains the closest challenger to Norris in the championship. He trails by 24 points. Verstappen is 49 points back. With those margins, both men need to attack on Sunday. Starting behind Norris puts even more pressure on getting the start right and nailing the pit calls.

  • P1: Lando Norris (McLaren) — 1:47.934, intermediates
  • P2: Max Verstappen (Red Bull) — +0.3s
  • P3: Carlos Sainz (Williams) — under investigation
  • P4: George Russell (Mercedes)
  • P5: Oscar Piastri (McLaren)

These spots may look simple on paper, but in the wet each row is a risk. Rubbered-in lines vanish. Braking points move. One bold move at Turn 1 could swing the race picture fast.

“If it rains again, pole is a shield—but not armor.”

Hamilton’s all-time low qualifying and Ferrari’s long Sunday

Hamilton’s P20 is a jolt. The Ferrari looked out of shape from the start, sliding when others found grip. He described the balance as “horrible,” and that showed. On a night where confidence wins, he never found it. For a driver who built a career on control in tough conditions, this was as tough as it gets.

What now? Starting last on a street track in mixed weather means patience and smart calls. He’ll need a clean first lap, undercut or overcut chances, and maybe a Safety Car to open doors. He knows it, too, calling his Sunday a “really hard recovery drive.” Points are still possible, but they’ll have to be earned the hard way.

“Ferrari last in Vegas—strategy, not speed, must save them.”

Las Vegas under the microscope

Beyond the timesheets, the track itself is a talking point. The FIA confirmed multiple repairs were needed after safety issues in practice, including loose track infrastructure that forced red flags. It’s not the headline the event wanted, especially in a city that prides itself on showmanship.

The race was scheduled earlier this year to aim for different temperatures, but a cold snap changed the plan. Add rain to the mix and the Strip turned into a tricky surface with low grip and long straights. Drivers were frustrated, and many were cautious about how the race might unfold if the weather refuses to let up.

Norris offered a blunt warning about what could come next, calling the challenge “pretty nasty” and even “insane” if the rain sticks around. That is the mood in the paddock: focused, wary, and respectful of a circuit that can bite back.

How the title fight shifts from here

Qualifying is only half the story, but this half matters. Norris’s pole gives him clean air and control over the opening stint. He can manage his tyres, manage the spray if it’s wet, and force others to play catch-up. That favors him, especially with Piastri fifth and Verstappen second but still chasing a 49-point hole.

For Piastri, the mission is clear: stay close, apply pressure, and keep the points gap from growing. For Verstappen, the mindset is similar but sharper. He needs wins now. A smart launch off the line and the right call on tyres could flip the script. Street races in mixed weather tend to punish hesitation.

Strategy notes for Sunday

There are three big variables for teams to juggle:

  • Weather: Intermediates or full wets if the rain returns, quick switch to slicks if a dry line holds.
  • Safety Cars: Likely in these conditions. They can set up cheap pit stops and reset gaps.
  • Track evolution: The grip level can change lap to lap, so in-lap and out-lap timing will be vital.

In simple terms, the drivers who trust the car and commit will move forward. The ones who hesitate will slide back. Norris showed he can dance on the limit. Now he has to do it for a race distance.

The bottom line

On a cold, wet night in Las Vegas, Norris grabbed control of the weekend and tightened his grip on the championship lead. Verstappen lurks, Piastri is still in range, and Sainz’s strong Williams run adds spice—pending the stewards’ call. Hamilton’s P20, meanwhile, sets up a fight through the field that will test every bit of his race craft.

It may rain. It may be dry. Either way, the Strip has already picked its storylines. Now the grid has to live with them—and maybe rewrite them—under the lights on Sunday.