Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton seized pole position at the Spanish Grand Prix on Saturday in a Mercedes one-two that ended Sebastian Vettel's bid for a fourth in a row.
Hamilton, leading his Ferrari rival by four points after four races, put in two blistering final laps at an overcast Circuit de Catalunya to take the top slot in a track record one minute 16.173 seconds.
Valtteri Bottas was second, in 1:16.213, with Vettel third and 0.132 off the pace.
“I needed this pole, I haven’t had a pole for a while. It’s a Mercedes one-two,” said Hamilton, whose last pole was in the Australian season-opener in March. The four-time world champion’s time, on a track that has been smoothed and resurfaced since last year, was nearly three seconds quicker than his 2017 time of 1:19.149.
Hamilton has now been on pole in Spain for three years in a row and four of the last five. Saturday’s was the record 74th of his career and came at a track that has historically favoured the top qualifier.
Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen qualified fourth with the Red Bull pairing of Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo lining up fifth and sixth for their first race since they collided in Azerbaijan two weekends ago.
Vettel said: “I was happy with the lap . . . I was feeling good. I looked at the tower and I saw my name didn’t go up, but we expected Mercedes to be strong so we will see what happens tomorrow.”
Kevin Magnussen qualified seventh for Haas, ahead of Fernando Alonso and Carlos Sainz for McLaren and Renault respectively.
That marked the first time Sainz had outqualified his German team mate Nico Hulkenberg this season and left Alonso as the only driver on the grid with a 5-0 record over his team mate, Stoffel Vandoorne.
It was also the first time a McLaren, now with Renault engines and with an eye-catching new nose and front wing, had reached the decisive final session this season.
Frenchman Romain Grosjean rounded out the top 10 for Haas.
Brendon Hartley did not take part in qualifying for Toro Rosso after crashing heavily in final practice.
His absence saved former champions Williams the embarrassment of filling the back row of the grid with Sergey Sirotkin and Lance Stroll in 18th and 19th.