1. Massa – Ferrari – 1m21.421s
2. Alonso – McLaren – 1m21.451s
3. Raikkonen – Ferrari – 1m21.723s
4. Hamilton – McLaren – 1m21.785s
5. Kubica – BMW – 1m22.253s
6. Trulli – Toyota – 1m22.324s
7. Heidfeld – BMW – 1m22.389s
8. Kovalainen – Renault – 1m22.508s
9. Coulthard – Red Bull Racing – 1m22.749s
10. Fisichella – Renault – 1m22.881s
11. Rosberg – Williams – 1m21.968s
12. Barrichello – Honda – 1m22.097s
13. Sato – Super Aguri – 1m22.115s
14. Button – Honda – 1m22.120s
15. Davidson – Super Aguri – 1m22.295s
16. Liuzzi – Toro Rosso – 1m22.508s
17. Schumacher – Toyota – 1m22.666s
18. Wurz – Williams – 1m22.769s
19. Webber – Red Bull Racing – 1m23.398s
20. Sutil – Spyker – 1m23.811s
21. Albers – Spyker – 1m23.990s
22. Speed – Toro Rosso – No Time Set
[…] The usual bad luck and unreliability that has dogged much of the Scot’s career was this time transferred to the equally unlucky Mark Webber, who had some mechanical troubles in the first round of qualifying and ended up in 19th position. In a post-qualifying interview Webber tried to dampen any thoughts of him repeating DC’s feat of driving through the field in the last race, claiming the Spanish track is much harder to overtake on than Bahrain – not sure if he was really playing down his hopes or if Webber was trying to take some of the shine off his team-mate’s drive in the last race! The complete grid for today’s race can be seen in this post on BlogF1. […]