Formula One leader Kimi Antonelli has swept to pole position for Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix with Red Bull's Max Verstappen joining him on the front row and Mercedes teammate and title rival George Russell right behind.
McLaren's reigning world champion Lando Norris was third fastest but has a 10-place grid drop, promoting Russell to that slot instead with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc, winner of the previous race at Silverstone, starting fourth.
Mercedes has taken pole for all 10 races so far this season, and 19-year-old Italian Antonelli has provided six of them.
"It's great to be on pole," said Antonelli, whose father Marco was also celebrating his 61st birthday. "It was not a very straightforward session; the track changed a lot.
"But tomorrow is another day and obviously I have Max starting next to me so it's going to be important to get a good start and then be ahead into Turn Five."
Antonelli has won five races so far and leads Russell by 25 points in the championship. The Italian is hungry for another win to stretch that advantage after failing to score in two of the last three races.
Norris had been on provisional pole after the first flying laps but then Verstappen and Antonelli went faster, the latter producing a one minute and 44.361 second effort around the longest and second-fastest lap on the calendar.
"It is nice to be standing here, it is not nice knowing I have to go 10 places back tomorrow," commented Norris.
"It is unfortunate that it is not where we will be starting tomorrow because it would be nice to have a little fight with these guys but we made the most of it."
Verstappen had been given an aerodynamic tow by teammate Isack Hadjar, who has a 30-place grid drop for an engine and multiple component changes, but the four-time world champion's time was still 0.317 slower than Antonelli's best.
"It was definitely helping me, otherwise I would not be standing here," the Belgian-born Dutch driver said of the tow. "Otherwise I think I would be like P6, or something.
"Tomorrow I think I'll be looking in my mirrors at the people around me, but at least today we had a really good result."
Ferrari's Lewis Hamilton, chasing a record sixth Belgian GP win, will start fifth with McLaren's Oscar Piastri sixth and Racing Bulls' British rookie Arvid Lindblad seventh in the team's only upgraded car.
Audi's Gabriel Bortoleto qualified eighth with Racing Bulls' Liam Lawson set to start ninth, despite failing to make the final phase, and Alpine's Pierre Gasly 10th.

Spain cancels final World Cup tuneup, Argentina practice after weather delay
FIFA detects 7 million abusive comments aimed at players, staff during World Cup
Antonelli fastest, Hamilton crashes in final Belgian GP practice
Frustrations abound as France, England face off in third-place match
