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Kevin Magnussen shocks F1 world in never-before seen moment

Kevin Magnussen was over the moon after grabbing the first pole position of his F1 career at the Brazilian GP. Pic: Getty/Twitter
Kevin Magnussen was over the moon after grabbing the first pole position of his F1 career at the Brazilian GP. Pic: Getty/Twitter

Kevin Magnussen has left the Formula One world in a state of disbelief after springing a massive shock to claim the first pole position of his career, at the Brazilian Grand Prix.

Ahead of his 100th race, the Haas driver stunned his more fancied rivals in Friday qualifying to set the quickest time before Saturday's sprint race in Sao Paulo.

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For Haas, the extraordinary feat represents the first time the F1 team has ever had one of its drivers claim pole position during their time in the sport.

The Dane was fastest just before George Russell spun his Mercedes into the gravel at Interlagos, bringing out the red flags with eight minutes remaining and the weather deteriorating.

There was no chance of anyone else going faster than Magnussen's time of one minute and 11.674 seconds, during the rain-affected qualifying session.

"I don't know what to say. The team put me out on the track on the exact right moment. We were the first out in the pitlane and did a pretty decent lap and we are on pole. It's incredible," Magnussen said.

Red Bull's double world champion Max Verstappen will join Magnussen on the front row for Saturday's sprint race at Interlagos while Russell still qualified third.

"You're kidding," a shocked Magnussen said over the team radio when told he was fastest when the red flags were waved. "I've never, ever felt like this in my life. Don't celebrate yet, guys."

He did not have to wait long, with the team garage erupting in joy at the end of the session and Magnussen emerging from his parked car to hug jubilant principal Guenther Steiner and his pit crew.

Viewers could also not believe what they had just witnessed as social media lit up with stunned responses to Magnussen's historic moment.

Max Verstappen aiming for hat-trick of sprint wins

Under the sprint format, the driver who sets the fastest lap in Friday qualifying claims pole position for the record books even if he does not start Sunday's grand prix from the front of the grid.

That final grid is decided by Saturday's 100km sprint race, which also awards points to the top eight.

Saturday will be the third sprint of the season, with Verstappen winning the two previous ones at Imola and Austria.

Seen here, Red Bull's world champion Max Verstappen looking on in the garage during qualifying ahead of the Brazilian GP.
Red Bull's world champion Max Verstappen looks on in the garage during qualifying ahead of the Brazilian GP. Pic: Getty (Mark Thompson via Getty Images)

The hour-long session started in damp conditions after a light drizzle with drivers heading out on intermediate tyres and then switching to slicks as the track dried and threatened rain held off.

McLaren's Lando Norris, who qualified fourth, was fastest in that frantic first phase - 0.297 quicker than Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton who had gone from the depths of the danger zone to top with his final flying effort.

Seven-times world champion Hamilton will start the sprint in eighth place.

Williams' Nicholas Latifi, Alfa Romeo's Valtteri Bottas and Guanyu Zhou, AlphaTauri's Yuki Tsunoda and Haas's Mick Schumacher all failed to make it through to phase two.

Australian Daniel Ricciardo was eliminated in the second session of qualifying.

The sky became a darker grey and the rain returned during the second phase, with Verstappen top of the timesheets ahead of Sainz and Leclerc.

Leclerc started the final phase as the only driver on intermediates - a puzzling gamble on immediate rain that failed and meant he had to then pit for softs before he could set a time.

The Monegasque will start 10th on Saturday.

with AAP

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