It’s been 18,880 days since a New Zealander last stood on a Formula One podium. That could change as early as Monday morning, though, as Liam Lawson qualified third for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
More than 51 years on from Denny Hulme winning the Argentine Grand Prix in 1974, Lawson will start on the second row at the Baku City Circuit, as the best qualifying result of his Formula One career so far.
In a chaotic qualifying session that saw a record six red flags, Lawson didn’t put a foot wrong, and bettered his Racing Bulls teammate, Isack Hadjar, who qualified eighth.
That chaos, though, played into Lawson’s hands, as he was able to set a banker lap on used tyres in the third and final qualifying session (Q3), before resuming after the last red flag on a new set of softs, and better his time on an improving track.
“The car’s been good all weekend,” Lawson told Sky Sports UK post-qualifying.
“When it needed to be in quali, it was good. Massive thanks to the guys and girls, the team’s been amazing this weekend so far.
“But, obviously, tomorrow is the important day.
“It’s going to be a very hard race, for sure. We have a great starting position, but we’re aware of who we’re fighting around us.
“That’s what we’ll be focussed on.”
The Racing Bulls driver had finished inside the top 10 in all three of the weekend’s practice sessions, but went even better in qualifying to earn his third place.
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Red Bull stablemate Max Verstappen claimed pole position, with a best lap of 1m 41.117s, 0.590s quicker than Lawson, while Carlos Sainz of Williams took second.
Lawson is joined on the second row by Mercedes’ Kimi Antonelli, who could face punishment for not following orders behind a red flag, and see his starting position altered.
On a weekend where they can seal the constructors championship, McLaren’s Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri will start seventh and ninth respectively, while Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton took 10th and 12th.
Baku is the only circuit remaining on this year’s calendar that Lawson has not raced on in Formula One, however he did score a podium finish on his last visit, during the 2022 Formula Two season.
And at a time where he fights to secure his Formula One future, Lawson couldn’t ask for a better chance at earning another podium on the streets of Baku.
As all 20 drivers left the garage at the earliest opportunity, given the high winds and risk of rain, it became imperative that Lawson set an early banker lap, to at the very least ensure a mark to put forward in the hunt for the top 10.
That first effort, 1m 42.448s, temporarily saw Lawson top the leaderboard in Q1, which had become fourth by the time the first session was red flagged as Williams’ Alex Albon hit the wall at turn one.
Still, with 18 drivers having set a lap time at that point, Lawson was 1.4s clear of the drop zone with less than 12 minutes remaining.
Five minutes after the resumption, a second red flag was triggered when Sauber’s Nico Hulkenberg hit the wall at turn four, as Lawson had fallen to seventh, and 0.799s clear of elimination.
In the final minutes, Lawson was able to improve his lap time to 1m 42.257s despite brushing the wall, before Alpine’s Franco Colapinto hit the wall at turn four, and triggered the third red flag of Q1.
Into the second session, another red flag was triggered by Haas’ Ollie Bearman making contact with the barrier at the exit of turn two before any driver could set a lap time.
After another delay, Lawson’s first lap of 1m 41.807s temporarily had him second, but fell to eighth by the time he started his last effort, 0.160s clear of elimination.
Lawson was able to improve again, setting a lap time of 1m 41.537 to move seventh, and into Q3 with 0.320s to spare over Fernando Alonso.
Liam Lawson in practice for the Azerbaijan Grand Prix. Photo / Red Bull
With all four Red Bull-backed cars into Q3, the rain that was forecast began to arrive, as Lawson was able to post a time on slick tyres as drivers further back battled low grip.
Seeking a fifth-straight pole position in Baku, Leclerc triggered the fifth red flag when he hit the wall at turn 15.
And after tying the record for most red flags in a single qualifying session, Baku 2025 claimed it outright when Piastri hit the wall at turn three, with just under four minutes left in the session.
At the time, Lawson and Hadjar sat second and third respectively, and both with a new set of soft tyres to try and better their lap times.
Lawson did better his time, and managed a lap of 1m 41.707s, but was knocked off the front row by Verstappen, as Hadjar qualified eighth.
Earlier, despite spending the majority of FP3 on the hard tyres to replicate race conditions, Lawson posted the ninth fastest time of the day’s first session.
The Kiwi’s best lap of 1m 42.146s was down on his 1m 41.989s from FP2 on Friday, but was able to add another 20 laps to his weekend’s work.
Norris set the fastest time of FP3, with a lap of 1m 41.223s, 0.923s quicker than Lawson, and 0.254s ahead of teammate Piastri.
Lawson’s mark was 0.121s quicker than Hadjar, seeing the Kiwi better his teammate in all three practice sessions.
The only hairy moment came at turn 16, where Lawson spun into the left-hander, and was seen with flat spots on his front tyres as a result.
The Azerbaijan Grand Prix begins at 11pm on Sunday.
Azerbaijan Grand Prix starting grid
- Max Verstappen - Red Bull
- Carlos Sainz - Williams
- Liam Lawson - Racing Bulls
- Kimi Antonelli - Mercedes
- George Russell - Mercedes
- Yuki Tsunoda - Racing Bulls
- Lando Norris - McLaren
- Isack Hadjar - Racing Bulls
- Oscar Piastri - McLaren
- Charles Leclerc - Ferrari
- Fernando Alonso - Aston Martin
- Lewis Hamilton - Ferrari
- Gabriel Bortoleto - Sauber
- Lance Stroll - Aston Martin
- Ollie Bearman - Haas
- Franco Colapinto - Alpine
- Nico Hulkenberg - Sauber
- Esteban Ocon - Haas
- Pierre Gasly - Alpine
- Alex Albon - Williams
Alex Powell is a sports journalist for the NZ Herald. He has been a sports journalist since 2016.
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