Vettel takes pole at Bahrain; Schumacher 7th

Ap
Saturday 13 March 2010 10:50 EST
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Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull will start Formula One's season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix from pole position, while Michael Schumacher's comeback with Mercedes will start from a disappointing seventh place.

Vettel set a fastest time of 1 minute, 54.101 seconds on Saturday to edge Ferrari pair Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso, who have both triumphed at the desert track previously.

Lewis Hamilton of McLaren will start fourth ahead of Nico Rosberg of Mercedes and Red Bull driver Mark Webber.

Seven-time champion Schumacher, racing for the first time in three years, was 1.423 seconds off of Vettel's pace to start ahead of defending champion Jenson Button, who was eighth for McLaren.

Red Bull had tested less than its competitors but predictions over the Austrian car's speed was confirmed as Vettel edged Massa — racing for the first time since a near-fatal crash in July — by just over one-tenth of a second and Alonso by half a second.

"It was a big surprise," said Vettel, who is going for win No. 6 from his sixth career pole. "Yesterday I have to admit we were not very happy. I knew there was potential in the car, we just had to put it together. It was really close."

Ferrari was buoyed by the results as it looks to make a strong start after taking only one point from the past two opening races at Melbourne.

"If you look at what happened last season with us, it's a good start to the season," said Massa before turning his attention to his comeback. "I'm here 100 percent and ready to fight. After watching on TV, it's much nicer to be back in the car."

Alonso was happy to be back in the top three and the 2005 and 2006 Bahrain winner said he was not disappointed after looking so strong all winter.

"It's such a long lap and the conditions — it's such a warm condition — it's very difficult to complete that lap without any mistakes or problems," the Spanish driver said of a course that has been stretched by nearly one kilometer (0.62 miles). "So far, everything has been great. This is a big boost for the team."

Schumacher and Button both squeezed into the final qualifying session following quick final laps in the second elimination stint, but Williams and Sauber both missed out.

However, the final result proved disappointing for both former champions, who have triumphed here before — Schumacher in 2004 and Button last year for Brawn GP, which turned into Mercedes.

With spraring their tires in mind, most teams went all out only on their final laps since the top-10 must use exactly same set-up Sunday. Alonso called the changes — which include a ban on refueling — "unknown territory."

"This year the challenge is not attacking and pushing every lap to go as fast as you can," said Vettel, who was runner-up to Button last year. "It's not going to be a sprint tomorrow, it's going to be an endurance competition. So you have to take care of your tires."

Robert Kubica of Renault will start ninth while Force India's Adrian Sutil goes from 10th on the 24-car grid.

Timo Glock of Virgin Racing was fastest of the three new teams, none of which advanced from the first qualifying session.

Karun Chandhok will be on the grid on Sunday after Hispania Racing got the Indian driver's car ready after failing to make it on the circuit for the three practice sessions. Chandhok will start last.

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