It was an important statement for Norris, who has been overshadowed by Piastri this season and the Briton trails his team-mate by 13 points heading into the race. It was his first pole since the opening race of the season back in March.
Norris said: “It’s been a long time coming. I feel good. I don’t think you realise how good this feels through quite a few struggles over the last few months, especially here; Monaco is a beautiful track to do it especially up against the hometown hero. Very pleased.
“It was a nice lap, a well put-together lap. It feels good when it all comes together.”
Leclerc, disappointed to miss out on pole, rued traffic on his first lap of final qualifying, which he said meant he went into his final run blind.
“There is always more to be done but this was the best we could do,” he said.
“The lap was really good. We know we don’t quite have the car to go for wins this year but this weekend the car felt good, starting second here it is going to be tricky to take that first place.”
Piastri said: “Intense, as it always is around here. It was quite reminiscent of last year. My first lap felt good and then the second I made a mistake in the harbour chicane and left a little bit there.
“Still pretty happy, it’s been a pretty messy weekend so far so come out with a lap I thought was pretty good and third, I’m pretty happy with.
“I think I’ve hit more walls this weekend than in my whole career. I’ve just been struggling to get into the groove. We have been doing some digging this weekend and to come out with a third is pretty good.”
Hamilton’s fourth place, 0.319secs off Leclerc, was his best qualifying result of the season apart from taking pole for the sprint in China.
He faces an investigation for impeding Verstappen in the first part of qualifying, and if he is found guilty would get a grid penalty.
Verstappen was 0.606secs off pole and faces a difficult race, even with the mandatory minimum two-step strategy imposed on all teams this year in an attempt to add extra intrigue and interest to the race.
Mercedes’ George Russell qualified only 14th after his car broke down in the tunnel at the start of the second session, with a suspected battery problem.
And his team-mate Kimi Antonelli crashed at the end of the first session after hitting the inside wall at the chicane, and will start 15th.
Briton Oliver Bearman qualified 17th in his Haas but has a 10-place penalty for impeding in Friday practice and will start from the very back as a consequence.
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