Carlos Sainz put a Ferrari on pole position at the Italian Grand Prix after edging out Max Verstappen for the top spot in a thrilling qualifying hour in Monza.

The Scuderia looked down for the count in the earlier qualifying segments, when revised rules mandated drivers use the hard and medium tires on the way to Q3, but the margins closed to practically nothing once the softs broke cover, and the tight picture was resumed.

Ferrari gave the packed grandstands hope after the first runs, with Sainz leading Charles Leclerc for a provisional front-row lockout with Verstappen in third, but the trio was split by just 0.099s — and Verstappen had had his best lap compromised by running marginally wide and onto the gravel exiting the Roggia chicane.

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Carlos Sainz pipped Max Verstappen to top spot of final practice at the Italian Grand Prix to set up an intriguing qualifying session in Monza.

The third practice hour was mostly sedate, with teams preserving what ties they have left under Pirelli’s reduced allocation rules, but the session came alive in the final quarter with a flurry of qualifying simulation laps.

Verstappen rocketed to top spot first, but Sainz usurped him atop the order shortly afterwards with a best time of 1m 20.912s, pipping the Dutchman by only 0.086s.

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Someone other than Max Verstappen tops practice, with Carlos Sainz giving the home fans something to cheer about on a good day for the Ferrari.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz edged McLaren’s Lando Norris to top spot of second practice at the Italian Grand Prix after Sergio Perez crashed out of the session with 10 minutes remaining.

Perez was deep into a long run on medium tires when he understeered through Parabolica and dipped his left wheels into the gravel. The stones sucked the car into the run-off area, where the Mexican lost control and was helpless but to brace for contact with the barrier at the far end of the gravel trap, near the exit of the corner.

He made rear-end contact with the barrier, and the speed of his trip through the gravel will likely have caused floor damage too.

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Max Verstappen topped opening practice at the Italian Grand Prix ahead of Carlos Sainz in a closely contested session between Red Bull Racing and Ferrari.

Verstappen undertook three stints on the hard tire on his way to a fastest time of 1m22.657s, pipping Sainz by just 0.045s, the Ferrari driver on a four-stint hard-tire plan.

Sergio Perez and Charles Leclerc followed, the pair respectively 0.177s and 0.309s off the pace, with George Russell completing a top five all exclusively on hards.

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Formula 1 sends off the European season at one of world motorsport’s oldest and most famous circuits.

Max Verstappen has won a record-equalling ninth grand prix that one Red Bull boss says ranks him among the all-time greats. And what’s Daniel Ricciardo’s outlook after breaking his hand, and what does it mean for his 2024 chances?

We play a new round of Full Race of Five-minute Highlights, and David Croft is rumoured to be considering a full-time switch to tennis.

Max Verstappen wins his ninth consecutive race to equal the record set by Sebastian Vettel in 2013.

Max Verstappen has won his home Dutch Grand Prix on a chaotic mixed-weather afternoon for a record-equaling ninth consecutive race victory.

Verstappen started on pole position and held the lead off the line, but his win was far from assured by the time he got to the final corner, where the heavens had opened to dump heavy rain onto the circuit.

Though rain was on the radar, it hadn’t been forecast to arrive for another half-hour, catching teams and drivers by surprise. Barely a handful of drivers responded by pitting for intermediate tires immediately. Sergio Perez, having started seventh, was the first among those to enter pit lane.

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Max Verstappen sweeps to pole at home by more than half a second in a tricky mixed-conditions qualifying ahead of Lando Norris.

Daniel Ricciardo is out of the Dutch Grand Prix after breaking his left hand in an unfortunate crash in second practice, suspending the Aussie’s comeback after just two races.

Formula 1 is back from its midseason break for Max Verstappen’s rowdy and raucous home race in Zandvoort. Can anyone stop the Dutchman from winning nine in a row?

We receive some alarming mail about an unkept promise, and Peter McGinley finally opens up on the devil’s parma.

Can Red Bull Racing sweep the season, or will we get a new winner in 2023? Michael and Ian preview four storylines they’re looking forward to in the final 10 rounds of the campaign, starting with this weekend’s Dutch Grand Prix.

In lieu of a genuine midseason break, we get a brief tour of Peter McGinley’s house and call out for your questions ahead of F1’s return next week.

Michael and Mat rank the top 10 (plus one) drivers of the season so far, including an obvious favourite, some disputed midfield bolters and an Aussie in the top 10.

RANKINGSMichael Lamonato

Max Verstappen Fernando Alonso Lewis Hamilton Lando Norris Oscar Piastri Charles Leclerc George Russell Carlos Sainz Alex Albon Yuki Tsunoda Daniel Ricciardo

Mat Coch

Max Verstappen Fernando Alonso Alex Albon Lewis Hamilton Lando Norris Zhou Guanyu George Russell Charles Leclerc Carlos Sainz Esteban Ocon Nico Hulkenberg

A special guest joins Michael and Rob to answer your questions. GSTK.