Brawn wants pole awarded on Friday at F1 sprint race weekends

Pole position should be awarded to the fastest Formula One driver in Friday qualifying on those weekends when a Saturday sprint race is held, according to the sport's managing director Ross Brawn.

Published : Nov 02, 2021 08:51 IST , LONDON

Pole position should be awarded to the fastest Formula One driver in Friday qualifying on those weekends when a Saturday sprint race is held, according to the sport's managing director Ross Brawn.

The subject has been much debated after a trial of the sprint format this season at three grands prix, with six under discussion for 2022.

Pole position for regular races is decided in qualifying on Saturday, with the fastest lap in the final phase taking the top slot.

Under the sprint format, qualifying is on Friday and sets the grid for a 100km Saturday race whose winner starts Sunday's main event from pole position.

READ: Every F1 grand prix promoter wants a sprint race, says Brawn

"It’s been a consistent comment amongst fans and media and drivers that the person who does the fastest single lap with low fuel in that competition is the pole position holder," Brawn told reporters on Monday.

"I guess we hadn’t really considered that, if I'm honest, when we set out this new format.

"Personally I would like to see a reversion to that being pole position but these things are decided with the (governing) FIA and the teams.

"There is broad opinion that Friday should be (counted as) pole position for the sprint weekends, so that's something I would hope we can get through for next year... I'm optimistic on that one."

Four-times world champion Sebastian Vettel, who has 57 career poles and ranks fourth in the all-time lists, was critical of the statistics recording a race win as a pole position when it was tried out for the first time at Silverstone in July.

So too was retired 2016 world champion Nico Rosberg, who achieved 30 poles.

"Pole 100% has to go to the fastest guy in qualifying. The sprint race winner should not be awarded pole position. That will totally cannibalise the historic F1 statistics," Rosberg said at the time on Twitter.

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