Ricciardo's sad response to F1 qualifying flop

Daniel Ricciardo has qualified 11th for the F1 Hungarian Grand Prix, missing the final session and again trailing his McLaren teammate Lando Norris.

While Norris snared sixth on the grid, Ricciardo was again far slower. He had a simple, sad reaction when told over team radio where he had placed in Q2.

"OK, all right … F–k."

When commentator David Croft apologised for the language, former world champion Nico Rosberg chimed in: "Yeah but it's the right word." Rosberg added: "It's another really, really bad day for Daniel."

The weight of Ricciardo's struggles for his new team are clearly becoming entrenched. He is five spots and 63 points behind Norris in the driver standings heading into this weekend's race.

Lewis Hamilton's 101st pole position in Formula One snapped a six-race barren run and set him up perfectly for a shot at a 100th career win.

The British driver holds F1 records for wins and poles and has a record eight wins at the Hungarian GP, including the last three.

While Silverstone is his home track — he has also won there eight times — Hamilton feels right at home at the Hungaroring.

He first won here in 2007, just the third win in his glittering career. His first Mercedes win in 2013 was also on this sunlit track, set amid the rolling hills and countryside of Mogyorod about 20km from Budapest.

Hamilton had not been on pole since the Spanish GP in early May. Ferrari's Charles Leclerc took the next two poles and Red Bull's Max Verstappen clinched four in a row as he soared ahead in the championship.

But Hamilton's controversial victory two weeks ago at the British GP trimmed Verstappen's lead from 33 points to eight. Hamilton could even move ahead in the final race before the mid-season break.

Hamilton, who was .315 seconds ahead of Bottas and .421 clear of Verstappen in third place, was in a musical mood.

"I just had the song 'YMCA' in my head the whole time," Hamilton said afterward, laughing in reference to the Village People's cheesy 1970s anthem. "No idea why, but it's a great song."

"It was an amazing qualifying lap," Hamilton said on track as some sections of the crowd jeered him, perhaps because he was ruled at fault for the crash which sent Verstappen out of the British GP.

Hamilton did not let it bother him.

"It's sport, right? And people act wild. I don't take it to heart," he said. "I must be doing something right to be up front."

But Bottas was upset by those booing his teammate, saying, "These people need to question themselves, it's not right."

Verstappen, who leads Hamilton 5-4 for wins and 5-3 for poles, said it was "not correct" but drivers should be immune to it.

"We shouldn't get disturbed by these kind of things," he said. "It's not nice but it shouldn't influence us."

Yet, moments later, he was disturbed by a question in the news conference about the first-lap crash last week at Silverstone.

Interrupting the conference host's question mid-sentence, Verstappen said "Can we stop about this?" He then used several expletives in an angry outburst, two days after talking at length about what he called Hamilton's "disrespectful" victory celebrations at Silverstone.

His teammate Sergio Perez placed fourth.

Verstappen led Q1 — the first section of qualifying — from Hamilton and Q2 from Norris. The orange-shirted Dutch fans in one section of the main grandstand roared every time he zoomed past.

But Hamilton and Bottas were quicker than Verstappen on their first runs in Q3.

Pole could prove crucial given that the sinewy and tight 4.4km circuit is arguably the hardest track to overtake on after Monaco.

About halfway through Q2, Carlos Sainz Jr lost the rear of his Ferrari and slid off into a wall. The front wing dropped under the front tyres. The Spaniard will start from a lowly 15th on Sunday.

Leclerc qualified in seventh behind Norris and AlphaTauri driver Pierre Gasly.

Mick Schumacher starts from 20th and last place. He sat out qualifying after crashing in the final practice and his Haas team was unable to repair his car in time.

Earlier, Hamilton clocked the fastest time in the third and final practice, followed by Verstappen and Bottas.

The session was interrupted with about 15 minutes left when Schumacher — son of seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher — flew off track into a tire wall. He was unharmed but damaged the left side and lost the front wing on his Haas car, which was taken off track by a crane.

There was a near miss in the pit lane shortly after as Alfa Romeo driver Antonio Giovinazzi pulled out of the garage just as Aston Martin's Lance Stroll was coming past. Stroll slightly clipped the front wing of Giovinazzi's Alfa Romeo but there was no damage.

On Friday, Verstappen topped the first practice and Bottas led the second one.

Following Hungary, the season will resume on August 29 at the Belgian GP in Spa.

F1 HUNGARIAN GP QUALIFYING RESULTS

1. Lewis Hamilton, Great Britain, Mercedes, 1 minute, 15.419 seconds.

2. Valtteri Bottas, Finland, Mercedes, 1:15.734.

3. Max Verstappen, Netherlands, Red Bull Racing, 1:15.840.

4. Sergio Perez, Mexico, Red Bull Racing, 1:16.421.

5. Pierre Gasly, France, Alphatauri, 1:16.483.

6. Lando Norris, Great Britain, McLaren, 1:16.489.

7. Charles Leclerc, Monaco, Ferrari, 1:16.496.

8. Esteban Ocon, France, Alpine, 1:16.653.

9. Fernando Alonso, Spain, Alpine, 1:16.715.

10. Sebastian Vettel, Germany, Aston Martin, 1:16.750.

Eliminated after second session

11. Daniel Ricciardo, Australia, McLaren, 1:16.871.

12. Lance Stroll, Canada, Aston Martin, 1:16.893.

13. Kimi Raikkonen, Finland, Alfa Romeo Racing, 1:17.564.

14. Antonio Giovinazzi, Italy, Alfa Romeo Racing, 1:17.583.

Eliminated after first session

15. Antonio Giovinazzi, Italy, Alfa Romeo Racing, 1:17.776.

16. Yuki Tsunoda, Japan, Alphatauri, 1:17.919.

17. George Russell, Great Britain, Williams, 1:17.944.

18. Nicholas Latifi, Canada, Williams, 1:18.036.

19. Nikita Mazepin, Russia, Haas F1 Team, 1:18.922.

20. Mick Schumacher, Germany, Haas F1 Team (did not start)

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