Pole position
In motorsports, pole position refers to the first-place starting spot on the grid, located on the inside of the front row, which is awarded to the competitor who records the fastest lap time during qualifying sessions and is widely regarded as the most strategically advantageous launch point due to its shorter distance to the first turn.[1] The term "pole position" originated in 19th-century horse racing, where the top-qualifying horse was positioned closest to a marking pole along the inside rail of the track to minimize its racing distance, a practice that transitioned into early automobile and motorcycle racing in the 20th century as a way to denote the prime starting slot.[2][3] In Formula 1 (F1), securing pole position provides a substantial edge, with historical data from 1950 to 2013 showing that drivers starting from pole have approximately a 10 percentage point higher probability of winning the race compared to others, often translating to an average finishing position advantage of about two spots ahead, though factors like track layout, tire strategy, and overtaking opportunities can influence outcomes.[4] The concept extends across various motorsport disciplines, including NASCAR, where the pole is the lead position on the front row determined by qualifying speed, offering drivers an initial lead but varying in value on ovals versus road courses due to drafting and pack racing dynamics.[5] In IndyCar, pole position earns a single championship point and is particularly prestigious at events like the Indianapolis 500, where it highlights superior single-lap pace amid high-speed oval competition.[6] It also applies in motorcycle Grand Prix racing and other series, underscoring qualifying performance as a key determinant of race-day success.Overview
Definition
In motorsport, pole position denotes the foremost starting spot on the racing grid, specifically the innermost position on the front row, granted to the competitor who records the fastest lap during qualifying sessions.[1] This placement is universally regarded as the optimal launch point for a race, minimizing initial congestion and maximizing early momentum.[7] The grid layout in most motorsport disciplines features vehicles aligned in pairs across the track's width, with pole positioned on the side that best follows the ideal racing line into the first turn, offering superior grip and the cleanest trajectory to avoid wheelspin or off-track excursions.[2] In contrast to midfield slots, which place entrants several rows back amid denser traffic and longer paths to contention, the front row—led by pole—ensures a direct route ahead, though the second spot on that row introduces a slight lateral offset.[8]Strategic importance
Securing pole position provides several tactical benefits that can significantly influence the early stages of a race. The driver starts from the inside of the front row, offering the cleanest racing line into the first corner and access to undisturbed air, which minimizes drag and allows for optimal acceleration without immediate interference from other vehicles.[9] This positioning also reduces the risk of contact during the chaotic start, as the pole sitter avoids the congestion and potential pile-ups that often affect midfield runners at the initial turn.[10] Additionally, achieving pole imparts a psychological edge, boosting the driver's confidence and potentially unsettling competitors who must chase from behind.[11] Statistically, pole position correlates with a strong likelihood of victory, for example in Formula One where drivers starting from pole have historically converted to wins in approximately 43% of races as of 2025, underscoring its role in dictating race outcomes. This advantage stems from the ability to control the race pace from the lead, though the exact figure varies by track characteristics and series regulations.[12] Teams and drivers tailor strategies around pole position to maximize its benefits, often prioritizing qualifying performance over pure race pace during setup. Car configurations may emphasize single-lap speed—such as stiffer suspensions for better cornering response—while accepting minor compromises in long-run stability.[13] In the race, tire management becomes paramount; leading from pole enables controlled pacing to preserve rubber, avoiding the excessive wear caused by defensive driving or traffic battles further back on the grid.[13] Despite these advantages, risks accompany pole position, particularly the intense pressure of the standing start where a suboptimal launch can allow rivals to capitalize immediately. Poor traction off the line—exacerbated by track conditions or the "dirty" side of the grid—may negate the positional edge, turning a potential lead into an early deficit that is difficult to recover in overtaking-limited formats.[14]History
Origins
The term "pole position" originated in 19th-century American horse racing, where it denoted the starting spot immediately adjacent to the inner rail or "pole" marker on oval tracks, providing a slight advantage in distance and positioning for the favored horse.[15] This placement was intended to ensure fairness, with the starter often positioned beside the pole to monitor the alignment of horses and prevent any undue bias in the breakaway. The concept emphasized the inner lane's strategic edge on curved courses, where even minor positional differences could influence race outcomes. As horse racing standardized starting procedures in the late 1800s, pole position became a key element in qualifying the fastest entrants, reflecting the sport's growing emphasis on merit-based grids rather than random draws. By the turn of the century, this terminology and its underlying principle of rewarding superior performance had permeated racing culture, setting the stage for its adoption in emerging motorsports. The transition to automobile racing occurred in the early 20th century, as organizers borrowed from equestrian traditions to structure competitive starts on similar oval and road courses. The term gained formal traction in motorsport with the inaugural Indianapolis 500 in 1911, where the pole position was awarded to the first-entered qualifier, Lewis Strang in a Case, establishing it as the premier grid spot in auto racing.[16] This adoption underscored the shared heritage between horse and motor racing, prioritizing the inside line for tactical superiority at the green flag.Evolution in motorsport
The concept of pole position, denoting the starting position earned through the fastest qualifying time, gained prominence in American motorsport during the 1910s and 1920s, particularly in board track racing and at the Indianapolis 500. Board track venues, popular from 1910 onward, often determined grid order via time trials on their high-banked wooden ovals, shifting away from earlier handicap systems based on engine displacement that had favored slower cars in some events. At the Indianapolis 500, formal qualifying was introduced in 1912 when Gil Anderson set the pole at 80.93 mph, marking an early transition to merit-based starting positions through speed trials rather than handicaps. By 1920, the event standardized four-lap (10-mile) qualifying runs to establish the grid, a format that emphasized raw speed and became a cornerstone of the race's identity.[17] In the mid-20th century, the Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) played a key role in standardizing pole position practices with the launch of the Formula One World Championship in 1950. Qualifying consisted of two untimed practice sessions on Thursday and Friday, where the overall fastest lap time secured pole, promoting a focus on single-lap performance within those windows. This format, emphasizing precision over endurance, was applied consistently across Grands Prix and set a global benchmark for open-wheel racing.[18] Technological advancements further refined qualifying throughout the latter half of the century. Electronic timing systems, introduced in the 1970s by TAG Heuer, replaced manual stopwatches with greater accuracy.[19] By the 1970s, sessions evolved to allow multiple laps per driver across extended practice periods, giving teams more opportunities to optimize setups for peak single-lap speed. The 1980s and 1990s saw incremental tweaks, including the adoption of transponders in the early 1990s for automated lap timing, but the early 2000s marked a shift to "one-shot" formats, such as the 2003 single-flying-lap rule on Friday and Saturday with race fuel loads, intensifying the pressure on drivers to deliver flawless performances for pole.[18] The pole position concept spread globally beyond open-wheel racing, including to stock cars and motorcycles. In NASCAR's inaugural Strictly Stock race on June 19, 1949, at Charlotte Speedway, Bob Flock claimed pole with a speed of 67.958 mph, establishing time trials as the grid-setting method for the series from its outset. Similarly, Grand Prix motorcycle racing adopted qualifying for pole positions with the FIM World Championship's debut in 1949, where fastest laps in practice sessions determined starting order, a practice that solidified in the 1950s across classes like 500cc.[20] As of 2025, recent trends in Formula One have introduced hybrid formats to enhance excitement, such as sprint qualifying debuted in 2021 at select events. This adds a short 100km sprint race on Saturday to set the Grand Prix grid, with dedicated qualifying on Friday, and has continued annually, featuring six venues in 2025 including Shanghai, Miami, and São Paulo.[21]Qualification Methods
General procedures
Pole position in motorsports is typically determined through time trial qualifying sessions, where competitors complete laps on the circuit to record the fastest possible time, with the quickest lap securing the front starting position on the grid. These sessions are governed by the FIA International Sporting Code and event-specific supplementary regulations, ensuring a standardized approach across international championships while allowing flexibility for series requirements. The core objective is to rank participants based on performance under controlled conditions, promoting fair competition.[22] Qualifying session formats vary but commonly include open timed sessions allowing multiple laps to set a best time, single-lap shootouts for high-pressure attempts, multi-lap averages to account for consistency, or knockout stages that progressively eliminate slower drivers. For instance, multi-stage knockout formats, such as those dividing sessions into preliminary and final rounds (e.g., Q1, Q2, Q3 in certain series), narrow the field to determine the top positions, with the overall fastest time awarding pole. These structures are outlined in the event's timetable, overseen by the race director, who can interrupt or modify sessions as needed.[23] Lap times are measured using electronic transponders fitted to each vehicle, which transmit signals to trackside timing loops for precise recording to the thousandth of a second as the competitor crosses the start/finish line.[24] Track limits—defined by white lines delineating the circuit boundaries—are strictly enforced during qualifying; any lap where all four wheels exceed these limits is typically deleted, invalidating the time for grid positioning. Weather conditions, such as rain, can influence sessions by reducing grip and prompting red flags for safety, potentially leading to delayed or abbreviated runs, though classifications proceed based on valid times recorded. In cases of tied fastest lap times, tiebreakers commonly prioritize the competitor's second-best lap time, the order in which the equal time was achieved, or, in rare instances, prior race results or a drawing of lots, as specified by series regulations.[25] These resolutions ensure unambiguous grid assignment without re-running sessions. Safety and regulatory protocols mandate preceding free practice sessions to familiarize competitors with the circuit, allowing setup adjustments under similar oversight to qualifying. All sessions require FIA-homologated circuits, mandatory safety equipment like helmets and fire-resistant clothing, and the presence of medical personnel, marshals, and a safety car; stewards may exclude vehicles deemed unsafe, and the race director holds authority to halt proceedings if conditions warrant.[23] Post-session, vehicles enter parc fermé to prevent modifications, maintaining integrity until the race start.[23]Variations across disciplines
In open-wheel racing disciplines, such as Formula 1 and IndyCar, qualification for pole position typically involves either knockout-style sessions or aggregated lap times to account for sustained speed and setup optimization. In Formula 1, the process uses a three-stage knockout format where the top 10 cars in the final Q3 segment compete for 12 minutes to set their fastest single lap, with the overall quickest time securing pole.[26] By contrast, IndyCar employs a segmented approach on road courses with a Firestone Fast Six shootout for the top six, where the single fastest lap determines pole, while ovals (except the Indianapolis 500) use the average of two consecutive laps to emphasize consistency at high speeds.[27] Stock car racing, exemplified by NASCAR, diverges by prioritizing single-vehicle runs or group sessions tailored to track type, often without the multi-stage eliminations common in open-wheel. For oval tracks in 2025, pole is awarded based on the fastest single lap in a one-round time trial, with qualifying order reversed by performance metrics to promote fairness. Short tracks use the best of two laps, while road courses feature 20-minute group qualifying where the quickest lap within each group sets the pole. This metric-influenced approach can indirectly affect pole contention through stage points from prior races, blending pure speed with seasonal performance.[28] Motorcycle racing adaptations reflect the unique dynamics of two-wheeled machines, incorporating shorter sessions and weather contingencies like flag-to-flag rules that may interrupt qualifying. In MotoGP, a two-stage format mirrors open-wheel knockouts: Q1 advances the top two from non-top-10 practice riders to Q2, where the 12 participants' fastest laps in a 15-minute window determine pole for both sprint and main races, often using soft tires for maximum grip.[29] Superbike series like WorldSBK use a dedicated Tissot Superpole—a single 15- to 20-minute session where lap times directly set the Race 1 grid and pole, with top-nine finishers in a subsequent Superpole Race earning head-to-head positioning for Race 2.[30] Qualifying on ovals versus road courses highlights track-specific demands, with ovals favoring raw acceleration and minimal traffic interference during solo runs at speeds exceeding 220 mph, as in NASCAR or IndyCar ovals where bump drafting is prohibited but pace-setting influences strategy. Road courses, conversely, require precise lines through corners and elevation changes, often allowing multiple cars on track in groups or segments to simulate race traffic, as seen in NASCAR's 20-minute sessions or IndyCar's timed groups emphasizing technical skill over straight-line speed.[27] As of 2025 regulations, most disciplines rely on time-based lap records, but non-traditional elements like head-to-head formats appear in select cases, such as WorldSBK's Superpole Race for top grid spots or IndyCar's Fast Six, shifting from pure timing to direct competition among leaders. In electric series like Formula E, qualifying incorporates duels in the final stages for added competition.[30][27][31]Formula One
Qualification process
The qualification process in Formula One determines the starting grid for each Grand Prix race through a series of knockout sessions held on the Saturday of a standard race weekend, typically following free practice sessions. As of 2025, the format consists of three stages: Q1 lasting 18 minutes, during which the five slowest drivers are eliminated and ranked from 16th to 20th based on their best lap times; Q2 running for 15 minutes, eliminating the next five slowest from 11th to 15th; and Q3 spanning 12 minutes, where the remaining ten drivers compete for the top ten positions, with the fastest lap securing pole position.[26] Drivers are limited to a maximum of 12 laps in Q1 and Q2—comprising in-laps, out-laps, and flying laps—to manage tyre wear within the weekend's allocation of 13 dry tyre sets per driver, while Q3 has no such restriction to encourage maximum performance. Track limits are strictly enforced, with any lap exceeding defined boundaries at designated corners declared void, potentially forcing drivers to complete additional runs within the session time.[32] On sprint weekends, which feature six to eight events per season in 2025, an additional sprint shootout qualifying (SQ1, SQ2, SQ3) occurs on Friday to set the grid for Saturday's sprint race, using shortened durations of 12, 10, and 8 minutes respectively, followed by standard Q1-Q3 on Saturday afternoon to determine the Grand Prix grid. This format, introduced in 2021, awards championship points based on sprint results but keeps the main race qualifying independent.[26][33] Technological aids play a key role, with the Drag Reduction System (DRS) enabled in designated zones during all qualifying sessions since its introduction in 2011 to facilitate overtaking and faster laps under controlled conditions. Hybrid power deployment is regulated to limit energy use from the MGU-K and MGU-H systems, ensuring qualifying simulations align with race constraints and preventing excessive battery drain, as outlined in the technical regulations.[26][34] For 2025, no major structural changes to the qualification process occurred from 2024, though the FIA emphasized sustainability through optimized session scheduling to reduce overall track time and fuel consumption across the 24-race calendar.[35][36]All-time records
In Formula One, Lewis Hamilton holds the all-time record for the most pole positions with 104, achieved across his career with McLaren and Mercedes.[37] Michael Schumacher follows with 68 poles, primarily during his dominant Ferrari era in the early 2000s, while Ayrton Senna secured 65 poles over his legendary tenure that included three world titles.[37] The following table summarizes the top ten drivers for Formula One pole positions as of November 2025:| Rank | Driver | Pole Positions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lewis Hamilton | 104 |
| 2 | Michael Schumacher | 68 |
| 3 | Ayrton Senna | 65 |
| 4 | Sebastian Vettel | 57 |
| 5 | Max Verstappen | 47 |
| 6 | Alain Prost | 33 |
| 7 | Jim Clark | 33 |
| 8 | Nigel Mansell | 32 |
| 9 | Niki Lauda | 24 |
| 10 | Nelson Piquet | 24 |
Pole position trophy
The Pirelli Pole Position Award is a distinctive trophy presented to the Formula 1 driver who achieves pole position at each Grand Prix, recognizing their qualifying performance since its inception in 2018. It replaced the earlier FIA Pole Trophy, which had been awarded annually to the season's top polesitter from 2014 to 2017. The award symbolizes the precision and skill involved in setting the fastest lap, underscoring Pirelli's role as the series' exclusive tyre supplier.[40] The trophy consists of a 60% scaled-down replica of a Pirelli wind tunnel tyre, handcrafted from materials used in aerodynamic testing by F1 teams and engraved with the recipient's name, the pole lap time, and the tyre compound utilized. It is presented immediately following the qualifying session, typically on the pit lane or trackside by a special guest such as a celebrity or Pirelli representative, before being packaged and delivered to the driver's team for permanent display, often in their headquarters or motorhome. This per-race honor is kept separate from the Constructors' or Drivers' Championship trophies, as well as the race winner's laurel wreath, focusing solely on qualifying excellence. All pole positions earned during the 2025 season remain eligible for this award, with presentations continuing through the campaign's remaining events.[41][40][42] Lewis Hamilton was the inaugural recipient, claiming the award for his pole at the 2018 Australian Grand Prix. Among notable recipients, Hamilton leads with the most career pole positions at 104, many secured post-2018 and thus earning the Pirelli trophy; in the 2025 season alone, Max Verstappen has added 7 to his tally. The award's design has seen no major changes since 2018, maintaining its focus on celebrating the synergy of driver talent, team strategy, and tyre performance.[40][43][39]IndyCar
Series-wide qualification
The standard qualifying format for the NTT IndyCar Series, applicable to all non-Indy 500 events, divides the field into two groups of approximately 10 to 12 cars each for the initial segment, with groups determined by the fastest lap times from the preceding practice session. Each group runs a 10-minute session where drivers complete multiple laps, and the best individual lap time determines advancement, with the top six from each group (12 cars total) progressing to the second segment. The second segment features a 10-minute session for those 12 cars, again using the best lap time to select the top six for the Firestone Fast Six final round, a six-minute session where the single best lap time sets the pole position and top six starting spots. Positions not advancing are filled based on their best lap times from the last completed segment, or by entrant championship points standings if no segments are finished.[44][45] Qualifying procedures differ between oval and road/street courses to account for track characteristics. On ovals, excluding the Indianapolis 500, each driver receives one guaranteed attempt consisting of two consecutive timed laps following two warm-up laps, with the average time of those two laps determining the qualifying speed and starting position; for doubleheader events like those at Iowa Speedway, the first lap sets the grid for Race 1 and the second for Race 2. On road and street courses, the group-based segments emphasize the single best lap time from multiple laps run during each timed session, rather than averages, to reward outright pace on twistier layouts. These distinctions have been in place since the mid-2010s, with oval qualifying shortened to two laps in 2010 to accommodate larger fields and session efficiency.[44][45][46] In the event of tied qualifying times, ties are broken first by the competitor's second-best lap time, then by position in the entrant championship points standings prior to the event. The hybrid energy recovery systems, introduced in 2024 and providing up to 60 additional horsepower via deployable energy, continue to influence power delivery strategies during sessions in the 2025 season, requiring drivers to manage energy deployment for optimal lap times without exceeding per-lap limits. Refueling is prohibited during all qualifying sessions, a rule in effect since 2012 to enhance safety and streamline procedures, while warm-up laps in practice sessions directly feed into group assignments, ensuring competitive balance.[45][47][44][48]Indianapolis 500 specifics
The qualifying process for the Indianapolis 500, while building on broader IndyCar series procedures, emphasizes a multi-day format tailored to the 2.5-mile oval's demands, culminating in four-lap average speed runs to determine the starting grid.[49] Qualifying typically spans a weekend in mid-May, preceded by Carb Day practice on the Friday before, where teams fine-tune setups under race-like conditions. On Saturday, all entered cars (up to 34) attempt four-lap qualifying runs from 11:00 a.m. to 5:50 p.m. ET, setting provisional positions 1-30 based on the fastest averages; slower cars may make additional attempts to improve or avoid bumping if the field exceeds 33. The 12 quickest from Saturday advance to Sunday's Top 12 session, while positions 13-30 are locked in from Saturday results.[50] If more than 33 cars qualify, Sunday's Last Chance Qualifying—often referred to as Bump Day—allows bumped drivers multiple attempts to displace the 33rd position, ensuring a full field.[49] The pole position is decided in an intense shootout on Sunday afternoon. The Top 12 session, starting at 4:05 p.m. ET, sees the Saturday qualifiers run four laps each in order from slowest to fastest, determining positions 7-12 and advancing the top six to the Firestone Fast Six. In the Fast Six, held from 6:25 p.m. to 6:55 p.m. ET, the remaining drivers attempt single four-lap runs, with the fastest securing pole and the inside front-row starting spot; the next five fill rows one and two. These sessions highlight the track's high banks, where average speeds routinely exceed 230 mph, demanding precise throttle control and aerodynamic balance to maximize speed without instability.[44] The pole winner receives the NTT P1 Award, including a $100,000 cash prize and a perpetual trophy, plus the strategic advantage of leading the field to the green flag.[51] Qualifying at the Indianapolis 500 has been a cornerstone tradition since the inaugural race in 1911, when time trials first established the starting order based on lap speeds rather than entry lotteries used in prior events.[52] Over the decades, the format has evolved from single-lap attempts to the current multi-lap averages for safety and accuracy, with notable quirks like the 1911 pole going to Ralph Mulford at an average of 93.22 mph on unpaved bricks. In 2025, rookie Robert Shwartzman of PREMA Racing claimed pole with a record four-lap average of 232.790 mph, becoming only the third debutant to achieve the feat and the first since Teo Fabi in 1983.[53][54] Weather frequently influences the weekend, with May's variable Midwest conditions leading to delays or shortened sessions; in 2025, rain postponed the opening practice and caused intermittent holds during qualifying attempts, though the pole shootout proceeded under mostly dry skies.[55][56]All-time records
In the NTT IndyCar Series, Will Power holds the all-time record for the most pole positions with 71, achieved primarily during his tenure with Team Penske across multiple seasons. Mario Andretti follows with 67 poles from his illustrious career spanning the 1960s to the 1990s. These figures underscore the importance of qualifying prowess in IndyCar, where single-lap speed and setup optimization are critical amid varying track types and strategies.[57][58] The following table summarizes the top six drivers for IndyCar pole positions as of the end of the 2025 season:| Rank | Driver | Pole Positions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Will Power | 71 |
| 2 | Mario Andretti | 67 |
| 3 | A.J. Foyt | 56 |
| 4 | Helio Castroneves | 50 |
| 5 | Bobby Unser | 49 |
| 6 | Rick Mears | 40 |
Motorcycle Racing
Grand Prix procedures
In Grand Prix motorcycle racing, particularly the MotoGP class, the qualifying process to determine pole position occurs over a weekend structured around practice and timed sessions. Riders participate in four free practice sessions—FP1 and FP2 on Friday, followed by FP3 and FP4 on Saturday morning—where they refine setups and record lap times. The combined fastest times from these sessions determine direct advancement: the top 10 riders proceed straight to Qualifying 2 (Q2), while the remaining competitors enter Qualifying 1 (Q1), a 15-minute session held on Saturday afternoon. In Q1, only the two fastest riders advance to join the top 10 in Q2, creating a 12-rider shootout for the prime grid positions.[29] Q2, also lasting 15 minutes, is the decisive phase where riders push for their single best lap time, with the overall fastest time securing pole position on the starting grid for both the Sprint race (introduced in 2023) and the full Grand Prix on Sunday. This format emphasizes precision and speed under pressure, as the pole sitter gains a strategic advantage at the standing start, positioning them ideally for the first corner. Unlike earlier systems, the current Q1/Q2 structure was formalized in 2013 to heighten competition by filtering participants more selectively.[29][60] Since the shift to four-stroke engines in 2002, when the MotoGP class replaced the 500cc two-stroke category with 990cc prototypes, qualifying procedures have unified across the premier class, eliminating the multi-class disparities of the prior 125cc and 250cc eras that featured separate sessions and engine-specific rules. This transition standardized lap timing and grid determination, focusing on outright performance in a single prototype category. For the 2025 season, rules permit adjustments for inclement weather during qualifying, such as tire changes under white flag conditions signaling rain, though bike swaps (flag-to-flag) remain reserved primarily for races. Electronics are governed by a mandatory single ECU specification to promote fairness, limiting manufacturer-specific aids and ensuring parity in engine management.[61][62] Safety measures in qualifying include enforced minimum tire pressures, monitored via mandatory Tire Pressure Monitoring Systems (TPMS) on all bikes, to prevent failures and maintain handling integrity during high-speed laps—typically requiring compliance similar to race standards of 1.8 bar front and 1.68 bar rear, though allocations allow extra tires for Q1/Q2 participants. These regulations, updated iteratively, underscore the emphasis on rider protection without altering the core timed-lap format.[62][63]World Superbike format
In the World Superbike Championship, pole position for Race 1 and the subsequent Superpole Race is determined through a single 15-minute qualifying session known as the Tissot Superpole, held on Saturday mornings following free practice sessions.[64] All riders participate in this session, setting timed laps to establish the grid order based on the fastest lap time achieved, with the pole sitter starting from the front of the grid for Race 1.[30] Riders must complete at least one lap within 105% of the fastest time to qualify for the races; failure to do so results in starting from the back of the grid or exclusion, emphasizing the need for consistent performance under pressure.[64] The Superpole format contrasts with the multi-session approach used in Grand Prix motorcycle racing by streamlining qualification into one high-stakes session, which heightens the intensity as riders push their machines to the limit in a condensed timeframe.[65] In the event of tied lap times, positions are resolved by the rider's second-best or subsequent best lap time; if times remain identical, the FIM stewards may consider prior free practice results or other relevant factors to break the deadlock.[64] As production-based motorcycles derived from road-legal models, World Superbike bikes incorporate homologation rules that limit modifications, influencing qualifying strategies to prioritize tire conservation, suspension tuning for track-specific demands, and adherence to balance-of-performance measures like fuel flow limits introduced in 2025 (capped at 47 kg/h with a 2 g/lap tolerance).[65][66] This setup demands riders adapt setups from stock components, focusing on reliability and setup optimization rather than the bespoke engineering of prototype machinery, which can lead to more conservative early laps to build confidence before a final push.[67] The 2025 season features 12 rounds across international circuits, with each event weekend awarding a pole position via Superpole for the opening race, underscoring the format's role in setting the competitive tone for the triple-race structure (Race 1 on Saturday, Superpole Race on Sunday morning, and Race 2 on Sunday afternoon).[68] A notable example occurred at the Estoril round on October 11, 2025, where Toprak Razgatlıoğlu secured pole by shattering the lap record with a time of 1:34.203 on his BMW M 1000 RR, highlighting how track evolution and machine fine-tuning can yield significant gains in this format.[69]All-time records
In the MotoGP class (premier class including 500cc era), Marc Márquez holds the all-time record for the most pole positions with 70 as of the end of the 2025 season, achieved across his career spanning multiple teams. Valentino Rossi follows with 65 poles over his legendary tenure that included nine world titles, while Mick Doohan secured 51 poles primarily during his dominant era on Honda machinery in the 1990s.[70] The following table summarizes the top ten riders for MotoGP pole positions as of the end of the 2025 season:| Rank | Rider | Pole Positions |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marc Márquez | 70 |
| 2 | Valentino Rossi | 65 |
| 3 | Jorge Lorenzo | 44 |
| 4 | Mick Doohan | 51 |
| 5 | Casey Stoner | 39 |
| 6 | Giacomo Agostini | 23 |
| 7 | Eddie Lawson | 22 |
| 8 | Wayne Rainey | 21 |
| 9 | Kevin Schwantz | 20 |
| 10 | Nicky Hayden | 19 |
NASCAR
Cup Series poles
In the NASCAR Cup Series, pole positions are determined through structured qualifying sessions designed to fairly assess vehicle speeds while accommodating track characteristics. For most oval tracks, including intermediates and short tracks, the format involves single-lap time trials, with the best of two laps at short tracks determining the qualifying speed; the overall fastest 10 cars set positions 1 through 10, with remaining starters ordered by their times. Road courses utilize a group qualifying approach, splitting the field into two 20-minute sessions (Group A and Group B), from which the top performers advance to set the lineup. Superspeedways, such as Daytona and Talladega, employ a two-round format with single laps to mitigate risks associated with high-speed drafting, where the 10 fastest from the first round advance to the final. This pole position offers a critical starting advantage, influencing track position, stage points, and overall strategy, particularly in playoff races where every position can impact advancement. The 2025 season featured these revised qualifying procedures, implemented to streamline sessions across the 36-race schedule. Superspeedway two-round qualifying remained a staple to promote safer pack formations during time trials. While pole awards do not directly clinch playoff berths—those are secured via race wins or points standings—the starting spot earned through qualifying can provide bonus stage points and tactical edges in contention-heavy events.[28] Richard Petty holds the all-time record for most Cup Series pole positions with 123, a mark set primarily during his dominant 1960s and 1970s tenure with Petty Enterprises. David Pearson ranks second with 113 poles, many achieved in his Wood Brothers Racing campaigns. Jeff Gordon follows with 81, bolstered by his Hendrick Motorsports era successes. The complete top 10 all-time leaders reflect the sport's historical depth:| Rank | Driver | Poles |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Richard Petty | 123 |
| 2 | David Pearson | 113 |
| 3 | Jeff Gordon | 81 |
| 4 | Cale Yarborough | 69 |
| 5 | Bobby Allison | 58 |
| 6 | Mark Martin | 56 |
| 7 | Bill Elliott | 55 |
| 8 | Ryan Newman | 51 |
| 9 | Darrell Waltrip | 50 |
| 10 | Bobby Isaac | 50 |