OFFICIAL GRID: Zhou to start from pit lane at Marina Bay as Stroll is withdrawn

SINGAPORE, SINGAPORE - SEPTEMBER 14: Zhou Guanyu of China and Alfa Romeo F1 walks in the PaddockSINGAPORE, SINGAPORE - SEPTEMBER 14: Zhou Guanyu of China and Alfa Romeo F1 walks in the Paddock during previews ahead of the F1 Grand Prix of Singapore at Marina Bay Street Circuit on September 14, 2023 in Singapore, Singapore. (Photo by Clive Rose/Getty Images)

Saturday in Singapore provided one of the season’s most extraordinary qualifying sessions, with neither Red Bull making the Q3 cut and Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz edging out the Mercedes of George Russell to take his second consecutive pole position.

With less than a tenth of a second covering the top three, Charles Leclerc heads the second row in the sister Ferrari, alongside the McLaren of Lando Norris. Lewis Hamilton starts fifth for Mercedes, followed by Kevin Magnussen in a spectacular sixth place for Haas.

REPORT: Sainz pips Russell and Leclerc in ultra-tight qualifying battle in Singapore after shock double Q2 exit for Red Bull

Another standout performance was from Daniel Ricciardo stand-in Liam Lawson, who put his AlphaTauri tenth – and immediately ahead of world champion Max Verstappen. In the second Red Bull, Sergio Perez starts 13th.

Moving to the rear of the grid, Zhou Guanyu will start from the pit lane – rather than his P19 qualifying position – after changes were made to his Alfa Romeo car. Finally, Aston Martin have chosen to withdraw Lance Stroll from the race after his heavy crash at the end of Q1 on Saturday.

Starting Grid

FORMULA 1 SINGAPORE AIRLINES SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX 2023

Pos.DriverTime
1Carlos SainzSAI1:30.984
2George RussellRUS1:31.056
3Charles LeclercLEC1:31.063
4Lando NorrisNOR1:31.270
5Lewis HamiltonHAM1:31.485
6Kevin MagnussenMAG1:31.575
7Fernando AlonsoALO1:31.615
8Esteban OconOCO1:31.673
9Nico HulkenbergHUL1:31.808
10Liam LawsonLAW1:32.268
View all standings

The 2023 Singapore Grand Prix starts at 2000 local time. Be sure to join our live coverage from 1900 here.