Lewis Hamilton dominated qualifying for
Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix ahead of McLaren-Mercedes team-mate
Heikki Kovalainen as he seeks his third successive Formula One victory.
The 23-year-old Briton set a best time of 1 minute 20.899 seconds,
0.242 seconds ahead of Finland's Kovalainen to capture his fourth pole
position of the season and the 10th of his Formula One career.
Ferrari rivals Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen were left trailing in third and sixth positions respectively.
'It's a great day to have me and Heikki one-two - it's about time we did that for the team,' Hamilton said.
On a track in which overtaking is difficult, Hamilton is now well
placed to become the first man since Michael Schumacher in 2006 to
complete a hat-trick of Formula One victories, after winning the last
two races in Britain and Germany.
Fourth was Robert Kubica of Poland in a BMW Sauber, with Timo Glock
of Germany in a Toyota fifth ahead of defending world champion
Raikkonen, who was 0.617 seconds behind Hamilton.
Renault's Fernando Alonso of Spain claimed seventh place ahead of
Red Bull's Mark Webber of Australia with Toyota's Jarno Trulli of Italy
and Renault's Nelson Piquet Jnr completing the top 10.
BMW Sauber's Nick Heidfeld missed the cut after the first of the
three qualifying stints after he was blocked by traffic on his final
flying lap.
The German, lying fifth in the standings on 41 points, was impeded
by Toro Rosso driver Sebastein Bourdais to finish initially 16th.
Race commissioners later imposed a five-place grid penalty on French
driver Bourdais who will now start 19th, while Heidfeld moved up a
place to 15th.
'I am totally disappointed. On my last lap I had four cars in the
way. Most at least tried to room for me but Bourdais was completely
blocking the way,' Heidfeld said.
Hamilton, who leads the drivers' championship with 58 points, will
boost his chances of winning the drivers' championships if he can claim
a third successive Grand Prix victory in Sunday's race at the
4.381-kilometre Hungaroring circuit.
He won at the circuit in his debut season last year but it was an
acrimonious affair for the team with the Briton locking horns with
former team-mate Alonso, who impeded the Briton in a pit-lane incident
and was stripped of his pole position as a result.
'There was a lot of activity here last year, all of it unpleasant,
and it's a bit different this year,' said team boss Ron Dennis. 'We
haven't had team orders, and we won't have them here.'
Hamilton who was fastest in the second practice on Friday and was
again quickest in Saturday morning's last practice session, never
looked in trouble in qualifying and will be confident of extending his
overall lead.
'The team had done a good job in improving the car even from the last race,' he said
Hamilton opted for the harder tyres in steamy conditions with
temperatures around 31 degrees Celsius, with the hot weather expected
to continue Sunday.
'We made the right choice (of tyres) in the end,' he said.
'We had planned to use the soft tyre for the third part of qualifying but it was the safer option to use the hard.
'The pace of the car is great and I've still got a little bit of time in the bag.'
Kovalainen said: 'The car has been feeling strong in the last few
races. We have been improving the package more and it was just a matter
of nailing it in qualifying...It's a great effort from everybody.'
Massa said he was 'not 100 per cent happy with my laps' after being caught in traffic but remained optimistic.
'We are pretty strong. We didn't seem to be strong until this
morning but looking at the lap times on Q1 and Q2 (the first two
qualifying sessions) I think we are there,' he said.
'We are pushing pretty hard and I am sure we are going to push hard from this race and the rest of the season.'
Massa lies second on 54 points in the drivers' standings, followed by Raikkonen on 51 and Kubica on 48.