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Mexican GP, Qualifying: Sebastian Vettel leaves it late to beat Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton

Last-gasp effort from Ferrari driver takes pole position by less than a tenth of a second from Verstappen as Mercedes struggle; Sunday's race exclusively live on Sky F1 and underway at 7pm

Sebastian Vettel will start the Mexican GP on pole position after edging out Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton in a breathless finish to qualifying.

Hamilton, who will secure the title on Sunday if he finishes in fifth place or higher, will start from third.

Vettel's pole position was the 50th of his career and a welcome fillip to a Ferrari team reeling from a run of disastrous results since the summer break and still searching for their first win since July.

A week after he was controversially demoted from the US GP podium, Red Bull driver Verstappen faced another investigation for allegedly impeding Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas but the stewards ruled no further action was required.

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Max Verstappen had to visit the stewards again after it was alleged he had wrecked Valtteri Bottas’ first pole attempt during qualifying for the Mexican GP.

The 20-year-old had appeared set to become the sport's youngest-ever pole sitter when he set the pace in Q2 and at the start of the top-ten shoot-out. But Verstappen was unable to improve on his second flying lap, opening the door for Vettel to snatch pole by less than a tenth of a second as the Ferrari driver set a new track record just before the chequered flag fell.

"I'm super annoyed," bemoaned Verstappen. "In Q3 it got a bit more difficult and couldn't get the tyres to work. Second is good but not given the way it went. I really wanted that pole position."

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By their lofty 2017 standards, Mercedes have struggled at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez this weekend and Hamilton was nearly half a second shy of pole.

"I gave it everything I could," Hamilton said. "I think the last lap could have been a couple of tenths quicker but it wouldn't have been enough. I'm hoping I get to have at least a battle with one of them."

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Sky Sports F1 pundit Paul di Resta analyses Sebastian Vettel's pole position lap in Qualifying for the Mexican GP.

The start to Sunday's race - exclusively live on Sky Sports F1 and underway at 7pm - will be eagerly anticipated. While Hamilton has the most to lose, it is Verstappen and Vettel who have history after their collision last month in Singapore.

"It's a long way down to Turn 1, so we should have some fun tomorrow," predicted Hamilton.

Drivers' Championship title permutations in Mexico

Result
Hamilton fifth or higher Hamilton is champion
Vettel second Hamilton is champion if he finishes ninth or higher
Vettel third or lower Hamilton is champion

The excellence of Vettel and Verstappen's efforts was put in context by the lack of pace of their team-mates with Kimi Raikkonen and Daniel Ricciardo nearly a full second adrift.

Ricciardo's struggle to dial in his Red Bull allowed Esteban Ocon to snatch sixth, four places clear of Force India team-mate and home favourite Sergio Perez.

Fernando Alonso offered a tantalising glimpse of his true pace when he wrestled his McLaren to within two tenths of the lead Q1 pace. But with yet more engine-related grid drops looming, the Spaniard sat out Q2 alongside Stoffel Vandoorne.

At the other end of the grid, Toro Rosso endured a torrid day. After Pierre Gasly's engine blew on the youngster's first lap of the day in Practice Three, team-mate Brendon Hartley suffered a turbo failure at the start of Q2. The team are currently supplied by Renault but will switch to Honda next term.

Both Haas cars will also line-up alongside the demoted McLarens and stricken Toro Rossos after neither Kevin Magnussen nor Romain Grosjean made it through Q1. "It's a wake-up call," said a frustrated Grosjean.

Mexican GP Qualifying Timesheet

Driver Team Time
1) Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:16.488
2) Max Verstappen Red Bull + 0.086
3) Lewis Hamilton Mercedes + 0.446
4) Valtteri Bottas Mercedes + 0.470
5) Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari + 0.750
6) Esteban Ocon Force India + 0.949
7) Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull + 0.959
8) Nico Hulkenberg Renault + 0.978
9) Carlos Sainz Renault + 1.306
10) Sergio Perez Force India + 1.319
Out in Q2
11) Felipe Massa Williams 1:18.099
12) Lance Stroll Williams 1:19.159
13) Brendon Hartley Toro Rosso No time set
14) Fernando Alonso * McLaren No time set
15) Stoffel Vandoorne * McLaren No time set
Out in Q1
16) Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:19.176
17) Pascal Wehrlein Sauber 1:19.333
18) Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:19.443
19) Romain Grosjean Haas 1:19.473
20) Pierre Gasly* Toro Rosso No time set
* Grid penalties to be taken

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