If you ever doubted that Formula 1 is a sport of cruel ironies and poetic justice, the 2025 Las Vegas Grand Prix qualifying session has delivered a masterclass. In a city built on luck, the gods of racing rolled their dice and, for once, the house did not win. Instead, the rain – that rarest of Nevada visitors – turned the Strip into a stage for heartbreak, redemption, and a little bit of history. Lando Norris claimed pole in treacherous conditions, while Lewis Hamilton, the man who has made a career out of defying the odds, found himself staring at the back of the grid for the first time in his storied career.
- Rain in the Desert: When Las Vegas Became Monaco
- Norris Rolls the Dice – And Wins
- The Starting Grid: A Table of Surprises
- Hamilton’s Humiliation: The End of an Era?
- Sainz Shines, Williams Reborn
- The Young Guns and the Nearly Men
- The Ones Who Gambled and Lost
- History Repeats – Or Does It?
- The Numbers Don’t Lie
- The Human Drama: Quotes from the Eye of the Storm
- What Happens in Vegas… Might Just Change the Championship
- Waste a bit more time
Let’s take a walk down the sodden pit lane and see how the drama unfolded.
Rain in the Desert: When Las Vegas Became Monaco
Las Vegas is not supposed to be wet. The last time the city saw this much water, it was probably in a Cirque du Soleil pool. Yet, as qualifying began, the heavens opened and the Strip Circuit was transformed from a glitzy playground into a treacherous, low-grip nightmare.
Historically, wet qualifying sessions at street circuits are the stuff of legend – think Monaco 1984, when a young Ayrton Senna announced himself to the world, or Singapore 2017, when chaos reigned. But Las Vegas? Never. Not in the Caesars Palace parking lot days of the early 1980s, and certainly not in the modern era. This was uncharted territory, and the drivers knew it.
As the session began, full wet tyres were the order of the day. The bravest – or perhaps the most desperate – tried intermediates, but the track bit back. The result? A grid that looks like it was drawn from a hat by a mischievous croupier.
Norris Rolls the Dice – And Wins
Lando Norris, the man who has made a habit of flirting with pole positions, finally delivered a lap for the ages. His 1:47.934 was not just quick; it was a statement. Beating Max Verstappen by 0.323 seconds in these conditions is no mean feat, especially when you consider that Verstappen has made a career out of thriving in chaos.
This was Norris’s 11th career pole, and, for the statisticians among you, he had converted five of his previous ten into wins. The odds are improving, and with the championship lead in his pocket, Norris is starting to look less like the nearly-man of McLaren and more like the real deal.
Lando Norris stormed to pole position for the Las Vegas Grand Prix in treacherous conditions, beating Max Verstappen by three-tenths of a second.
RacingNews365
For those who missed the session, you can relive the drama here: 2025 F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix – Qualifying results
The Starting Grid: A Table of Surprises
Here’s how the grid lines up for Sunday’s race:
| Pos | Driver | Team | Q3 Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lando Norris | McLaren F1 Team | 1:47.934 |
| 2 | Max Verstappen | Oracle Red Bull Racing | 1:48.257 |
| 3 | Carlos Sainz | Atlassian Williams Racing | 1:48.296 |
| 4 | George Russell | Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 | 1:48.803 |
| 5 | Oscar Piastri | McLaren F1 Team | 1:48.961 |
| 6 | Liam Lawson | Visa Cash App Racing Bulls | 1:49.062 |
| 7 | Fernando Alonso | Aston Martin Aramco F1 | 1:49.466 |
| 8 | Isack Hadjar | Visa Cash App Racing Bulls | 1:49.554 |
| 9 | Charles Leclerc | Scuderia Ferrari HP | 1:49.872 |
| 10 | Pierre Gasly | BWT Alpine F1 Team | 1:51.540 |
| 11 | Nico Hulkenberg | Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber | — |
| 12 | Lance Stroll | Aston Martin Aramco F1 | — |
| 13 | Esteban Ocon | MoneyGram Haas F1 Team | — |
| 14 | Oliver Bearman | MoneyGram Haas F1 Team | — |
| 15 | Franco Colapinto | BWT Alpine F1 Team | — |
| 16 | Alex Albon | Atlassian Williams Racing | — |
| 17 | Kimi Antonelli | Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 | — |
| 18 | Gabriel Bortoleto | Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber | — |
| 19 | Yuki Tsunoda | Oracle Red Bull Racing | — |
| 20 | Lewis Hamilton | Scuderia Ferrari HP | — |
Source: Crash.net Qualifying Results
Hamilton’s Humiliation: The End of an Era?
Let’s not mince words: Lewis Hamilton’s qualifying performance was a disaster. For the first time in his career – and yes, I checked the records, all 18 years’ worth – Hamilton will start a Grand Prix from dead last. Not 18th, not 19th, but 20th. The seven-time world champion, the man who has more pole positions than anyone in history, was undone by a bollard that became lodged under his Ferrari SF-25 at the worst possible moment.
Lewis Hamilton suffers F1 career first humiliation in Las Vegas qualifying.
RacingNews365
It’s not the first time a world champion has been humbled in qualifying. Senna at Monaco in 1984, Schumacher at Brazil in 2017, Vettel at Bahrain in 2019 – the list goes on. But for Hamilton, a man who has built his legacy on relentless excellence, this is a new kind of pain. Ferrari’s radio communication was, as ever, a source of confusion, and one wonders how many more times we’ll see Hamilton in red before he decides enough is enough.
For a full breakdown of Hamilton’s qualifying woes, see: Lewis Hamilton last at Las Vegas GP as Ferrari nightmare continues
Sainz Shines, Williams Reborn
If you’re looking for a feel-good story, look no further than Carlos Sainz and Williams. The Spaniard put his car third on the grid, just 0.362 seconds off Norris’s pole time. For a team that spent much of the last decade as Formula 1’s punchline, this is a remarkable turnaround.
Sainz’s performance was not without controversy – he’s under investigation for an alleged unsafe rejoin in Q1 – but on pure pace, he was sensational. Williams, once the home of legends like Mansell and Prost, is finally showing signs of life. Perhaps Frank Williams is smiling somewhere.
The Young Guns and the Nearly Men
Behind the front-runners, the grid is a fascinating mix of youth and experience. Oscar Piastri, Norris’s McLaren teammate and title rival, could only manage fifth after a mistake on his final lap. Liam Lawson, the Kiwi sensation, put his Racing Bulls car sixth, ahead of the evergreen Fernando Alonso.
Isack Hadjar, another Racing Bulls driver, made it two cars in the top eight – a result that will have the team’s marketing department working overtime. Charles Leclerc and Pierre Gasly rounded out the top ten, both ruing what might have been.
Norris mastered tricky conditions to take his third consecutive F1 pole, beating Max Verstappen to top spot in qualifying. Heavy rain affected the entirety of the session, forcing all of the grid to run on full wets initially.
Crash.net
The Ones Who Gambled and Lost
Not everyone was a winner. Lance Stroll, ever the optimist, gambled on intermediates in Q2. It didn’t pay off, and he missed out on Q3. Alex Albon, Sainz’s Williams teammate, clipped the wall in Q1 and could only manage 16th. Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli and Ferrari’s Hamilton were the big names to drop out early, a reminder that in Formula 1, reputation counts for nothing when the rain falls.
History Repeats – Or Does It?
For those of us who have watched this sport for decades, today’s qualifying session was a reminder of how quickly fortunes can change. In 1984, a young Senna used the rain to announce his arrival. In 2025, Norris used it to cement his status as a title favourite. Hamilton, meanwhile, joins a long list of champions who have been humbled by the elements.
But there’s a twist. Never before has Las Vegas seen a wet qualifying session. The city’s climate makes such events almost impossible. Yet here we are, with a grid that looks more like Monaco than Nevada. If you’re looking for omens, remember this: in wet qualifying sessions at street circuits, chaos is the norm and the race is rarely won from pole. Norris would do well to remember that.
The Numbers Don’t Lie
Let’s indulge in a little statistical analysis, shall we? Before today, Norris had started from pole ten times and won five of those races. Verstappen, his nearest rival, has a conversion rate that would make most drivers weep. Hamilton, for all his records, had never started last – until now.
And then there’s Williams. The last time they started this high up the grid in a wet qualifying session? You’d have to go back to the days of Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve. For a team that has spent years in the wilderness, today’s result is nothing short of miraculous.
The Human Drama: Quotes from the Eye of the Storm
The best stories in Formula 1 are not written in lap times, but in the words of those who live them. Here are some of the most telling quotes from today’s session:
Lando Norris reveals ‘oh crap’ moment ahead of Las Vegas masterclass.
RacingNews365
Lewis Hamilton delivers Ferrari season hammer blow after ‘horrible’ P20 result.
RacingNews365
What Happens in Vegas… Might Just Change the Championship
As we look ahead to Sunday’s race, the stage is set for a classic. Norris has the chance to extend his championship lead, Verstappen will be desperate to spoil the party, and Hamilton – well, stranger things have happened than a champion fighting through the field. But in Las Vegas, nothing is certain. The only guarantee is that the race will be one to remember.
For those who want to relive the qualifying drama, here’s a must-watch: LIVE: Reaction as Norris roars to stunning Las Vegas pole; Piastri fifth, Hamilton last
Waste a bit more time
If you’re not yet tired of the drama, here are some links to keep you entertained:
- 2025 F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix – Qualifying results
- Starting grid for 2025 F1 Las Vegas Grand Prix: Who starts where?
- Las Vegas Grand Prix qualifying 2025: Q3 results
- Lewis Hamilton last at Las Vegas GP as Ferrari nightmare continues
- Lando Norris masters soaked Las Vegas for pole as Lewis Hamilton hits all-time low
- LIVE: Reaction as Norris roars to stunning Las Vegas pole; Piastri fifth, Hamilton last

