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Japanese GP Qualifying: Lewis Hamilton breaks Suzuka lap record as he claims pole position

Hamilton claims first-ever Suzuka pole; Vettel to start on front row; Race underway at 6am, exclusively live on Sky Sports F1

Lewis Hamilton set a new lap record at Suzuka as the Mercedes driver strengthened his grip on the F1 title race by claiming a dominant pole position for Sunday's Japanese GP.

Hamilton's pole lap of 1:27.319 was over 1.5 seconds faster than the previous record, a 1:28.954 held by Michael Schumacher.

Remarkably, Hamilton's pole position was the first of his career at Suzuka and means he has claimed pole at every circuit currently on the F1 calendar.

"I was very much on it," said Hamilton. "I didn't make one mistake and each lap got better and better.

"It's been 10 years trying to get that pole position!"

Despite being half a second slower than Hamilton, Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel will start the race alongside his world championship rival on the front row.

Hamilton relieved by Suzuka pole
WATCH: Rosberg analyses Hamilton's pole lap

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Valtteri Bottas was second quickest in the session, three tenths down on Hamilton, but will start from sixth due to a gearbox-related grid penalty.

"I tried everything on that last lap as I knew I had to take a bit more risks, it didn't work," said Vettel, who trails Hamilton by 34 points in the standings.

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Sky F1's guest for the Japan GP weekend is World Champion Nico Rosberg and he joins Ant Davidson at the Skypad to review Lewis Hamilton's Suzuka pole.

Hamilton in a class of one
After Mercedes' struggles in Singapore and Malaysia, the world champions have found their groove again in Japan - with Hamilton very much to the fore.

Such was Hamilton's confidence and outright speed that he was fastest in Q1 on the slower soft tyre. Only Vettel was able to enjoy the same luxury of saving up a set of supersofts but in a tell-tale giveaway of their relative speeds, Hamilton was instantly three tenths quicker than his rival.

How the Japanese GP grid will line up
WATCH: Ted's Qualifying Notebook

After bolting on the supersofts for Q2, the Mercedes driver immediately broke Schumacher's lap record, which had stood for 11 years, and then improved again at the start of Q3 when the Silver Arrows are able to deploy a power boost that Red Bull reckon is worth up to eight tenths of a second.

"It's just incredible to come here with this car," said Hamilton. "This track is one of the greatest circuits and with this car it's mind-blowing. It's insane the speeds this car is throwing us around inside and the way you can throw the car around is like the craziest roller-coaster ride."

When's the Japanese GP
When's the Japanese GP

Race-day coverage from 4.30am with Sunday's race underway at 6am

Back to reality for Red Bull
Also benefiting from Bottas' demotions, Red Bull pair Daniel Ricciardo and Max Verstappen will form the second row with the Australian fractionally quicker than last week's victor at the Malaysia GP.

The final grid for the race will be heavily revised with Bottas joining Kimi Raikkonen, Fernando Alonso, Carlos Sainz and Jolyon Palmer in being hit by a penalty.

The Suzuka stewards also investigated Force India's Sergio Perez for impeding Williams' Lance Stroll during Q1 but decided that no further action was required.

Alonso made it through to the top ten at the expense of McLaren team-mate Stoffel Vandoorne but the pair were separated by less than a tenth and the Spaniard's demotion means the youngster will carry the team's best hope of a points-scoring result on Sunday.

Renault's Jolyon Palmer was knocked out in Q2 and remains the only driver yet to out-qualify his team-mate in any qualifying session this term.

The Englishman announced on Saturday night that Japan will be his last race for the team, with Carlos Sainz of Toro Rosso, already appointed Palmer's 2018 successor, taking his place from this month's United States GP.

Palmer out at Renault, Sainz in early

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Ted Kravitz gives his thoughts on Saturday's qualifying session at the Japanese Grand Prix.

Raikkonen, Bottas and Grosjean caught out
Suzuka is recognised as posing one of the sternest tests on the entire calendar and the circuit bared its teeth on Saturday with first Bottas and Raikkonen crashing in Practice Three before Romain Grosjean also hit the barriers at the start of qualifying as Haas' struggles continued.

While Bottas' Mercedes suffered only minor damage, Raikkonen's accident was more severe and required a new gearbox to be fitted to his Ferrari car - triggering a five place demotion that will relegate the Finn to tenth.

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Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen crashes during Practice Three

For Grosjean, the incident bore an unwelcome familiarity - just a week ago, the Frenchman was pitched into the barriers at Sepang during qualifying after running over a broken drain.

"The car just went on a massive snap," he said. "It's a shame because I thought we could have made the top ten."

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The Q1 session at Suzuka was red-flagged after Haas driver Romain Grosjean slammed into the barrier.

Japanese Grand Prix Qualifying

Driver Team Time
1) Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:27.319
2) Valtteri Bottas * Mercedes 1:27.651
3) Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:27.791
4) Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull 1:28.306
5) Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:28.332
6) Kimi Raikkonen * Ferrari 1:28.498
7) Esteban Ocon Force India 1:29.111
8) Sergio Perez Force India 1:29.260
9) Felipe Massa Williams 1:29.480
10) Fernando Alonso * McLaren 1:29.480
Out in Q2
11) Stoffel Vandoorne McLaren
12) Nico Hulkenberg Renault
13) Kevin Magnussen Haas
14) Jolyon Palmer * Renault
15) Carlos Sainz * Toro Rosso
Out in Q1
16) Romain Grosjean Haas
17) Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso
18) Lance Stroll Williams
19) Marcus Ericsson Sauber
20) Pascal Wehrlein Sauber
* Alonso, Bottas, Palmer, Raikkonen and Sainz will take grid penalties

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