
Fernando Alonso has again proved his mastery of wet conditions by claiming his second wet pole position in a row in qualifying at the German Grand Prix overnight.
Only a light sprinkling of rain fell in Q1, in which all drivers used slick tyres, but as the rain increased so did the level of wet weather tyres; intermediates in Q2 and full wets in Q3. Which means the weather conspired to ensure each qualifying period was slower than the previous.
Alonso’s time in Q3 was 1:40.621 and he needed to find every ounce of speed in his Ferrari F2012 to head off the challenge from Red Bull. For a while Michael Schumacher (1:42.459) had his Mercedes on provisional pole. Webber, carrying the burden of a five-place grid penalty for an early gearbox change, was the first to knock him off when he lapped Hockenheim in 1:41.496. Ultimately, though, in improving conditions Alonso was good enough to best that time twice and at the death Vettel (1:41.026) also eclipsed his teammate.
Thanks to Webber’s penalty, which moves him to P8, Michael Schumacher will start the race from P3. Although, the seven-time world champion can consider himself lucky on more than one count after he only progressed into Q2 by displacing Jean-Eric Vergne after the chequered flag had dropped.
Despite starting from P8 Webber remains confident: “We’ve got to aim to come forward, I mean that’s what we’ve got to do. It’s not the best position to start the grand prix, that’s clear.
“We’ve had limited running in the dry, there’s been snapshots of information for the teams to get some information. I’m positive going into the race and will try to pick some people off over the course of the grand prix.”
Daniel Ricciardo posted his best qualifying result for some time. He’ll start from P11 after narrowly missing entry in Q3 by five hundredths of a second.
Romain Grosjean and Nico Rosberg join Webber with grid penalties and the revised starting order can be seen here. A full transcript from the post-qualifying press conference can be read below, with thanks to the FIA.
[Pics: Ferrari, Red Bull/Getty Images]